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Ask the average New Yorker to
name the first thing that comes to mind when you say the words
“fire disaster” and you will probably hear a range
of answers. Those who have not experienced its destruction
firsthand might recount the litany of nightly news reports
that tell of tragic home blazes, uncontrollable Western forest
fires, or the rare, criminal arsonist. Others might offer
stories about wartime -- the fire bombing of Dresden, Germany
during World War II, perhaps -- or angry riots like those
that occurred in Harlem in the summer of 1964 during which
several businesses and homes were burned out. While all will
remember the flames that enveloped portions of the World Trade
Center on September 11, 2001, few will say that the conflagration
itself seemed a citywide threat. In 21st-century New York,
Fires can be identified and controlled; in this age, they
are hardly the stuff of widespread, unharnessable, urban disaster.
In 1835, however, this was not the case. Because of its
lethality, fire could not have been more dreaded. With residents
crowded into narrow, bustling areas; a preponderance of rickety,
wooden buildings; imperfect access to water; and a mostly
non-professional firefighting force, 19th century American
cities existed in constant fear, held hostage to the destructive
potential of a single, stray spark. Such a spark ignited New
York City’s Great Fire of 1835. The Great Fire, which
raged for _ days, tested the ability of the city to organize
necessary public services and ensure the safety of its residents.
Like other extreme events in New York, it also helped to magnify
social antagonisms and structural weaknesses that so lay just
below the surface of the otherwise vital, increasingly prosperous
metropolis.
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