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To the Editor of the Argonaut--Sir:
A firm of stationers in San Francisco has published a map of the city upon
which that part of San Francisco destroyed by the fire of April 18-21st, 1906, is
fittingly printed in the brilliant red of flame, the part which remains represented
by white space. One looking at this map is instantly impressed by curious dots,
flecks and irregular lines of white scattered over the otherwise unbroken area
that stretches from Market Street north to the waters of the Bay, from Van Ness
Avenue eastward to the docks and wharves; and one is irresistibly impelled to
inquire by what strange chance, by what seeming miracle, these detached and
isolated structures still stand unscathed amid the surrounding desolation. Was it
here, one asks, that San Francisco's valiant firemen, wearied by days and nights
of monstrous toll, faint from lack of food, with smoke-
Sir, in consideration of the fact that the conflagration through which the city
has just passed is the greatest of all times, it seems that perchance the results of
some slight inquiry regarding the means whereby this property, of the value of
some millions of dollars, although in the immediate path of the flames, was
saved from destruction may be of sufficient general interest to warrant their
inclusion in your valued columns. The result of this inquiry may, indeed, serve
as a lesson valuable to other cities at some future time to be visited by similar
disaster, and they cannot fall to command the attention of those so vitally
concerned. If to the firemen of San Francisco is due the credit, let theirs be the
praise. If the soldiers under the command of Brigadier-
But to the facts.
One of the dots of white amid the flaming red upon the map represents the
residence of O. D. Baldwin, one of San Francisco's prominent citizens. This
house of brick stands at the corner of Green and Jones Streets, the only
remaining structure in what was prior to Friday, the 20th of April, a solid block
of houses. Within it are costly furnishings, pictures, statuary, delicate china,
and all other appointments of a luxurious home. These are unharmed by the
fire, untouched by the flames. The house itself is not of fire-
Baldwin was there. He was there to fight. Though no longer young in years, he
determined to save his home if it could be saved.
On the morning of the first day, Mrs. Baldwin had instructed her servants to
fill with water all available vessels--
"Mr. Baldwin!-
"Drive out this rabble," said Baldwin, "and help me."
At the point of a pistol, the soldier drove from the house the men (looters shall
we say?) who had poured into it, and in a short space of time the fire was
extinguished, the house saved. Every window in the building was broken by the
heat; furniture which stood in the center of large rooms shows blisters on its
polished surface. Yet the house stands, a monument to the courage of its owner
and defender.
On that flame-
Rather early Friday morning, the fire which was moving steadily from south to
north along Leavenworth Street and along Jones Street attacked the
southernmost line of houses in the block in question. The residents of the
houses upon the north line of the block, perceiving that the flames were
advancing slowly, determined at least to make a fight for their homes.
Prominent among these men was Dr. J. K. Plincz, a young surgeon, and Mr.
Kirk Harris, formerly of the staff of the San Francisco Chronicle. These
two men with a few others, some passers-
But do you think that these men, laboring thus heroically, thus simply, thus
effectively, in the defense of their homes, were permitted to accomplish their
admirable work without interference from that soldiery whose brutal hand for
three long days grasped our fair and vanished city by the throat? Not so. But
soldiers are also men. Not infrequently they hesitated at carrying out the
unlawful orders which went far to work the destruction of our city. And so it
was here. Dr. Plincz, laboring to save that fine old octagonal house that stands
at 1027 Green Street was ordered by a soldier to leave it. A little persuasion, a
diplomatically assumed air of camaraderie, a few glasses of good
wine--
Well, in a few minutes these houses will be up in the air."
What!" said Harris.
"Yes," responded the youth, "we have decided to dynamite this block."
"But surely," said Harris, "you fellows are trying to save property with your
dynamite. I know that you are not trying to destroy property. And these houses,
as you see, are already out of danger, and are not dangerous to any houses
anywhere."
"Well, we've decided to dynamite them," remarked the youth, "and
they are going to be dynamited."
And then it was that Harris hung about the man's neck, and brought his
neighbors to labor with the youth, and after long minutes of argument and
appeal won the boy's grudging consent not to raze utterly these homes that had
so heroically been saved from fire. With infinite relief they watched his
departure to sate elsewhere his lust of destruction.
Another blotch of white upon the map of red represents the houses that stand
on Russian Hill. Here are the residences of Mr. Stone, of Mr. Morgan Shepard,
of Mr. Richardson, of the Rev. Joseph Worcester, of Mr. Livingston Jenks, of
Eli Shepard, the three-
The fact that these houses stand is owing only in a slight degree to their
situation. It is owing not at all to any fireman. It is, for the most part, in despite
of the military. A score of times these buildings were on fire. A score of times
the men of the hill, evading or resisting the efforts of the military to expel them
from their homes, extinguished the flames. Thursday night, not far from eight
o'clock, the soldiers swarmed upon the hill. They ordered everyone to depart.
Mr. Norman Livermore, who had collected for the defense of the Livermore
residence perhaps a barrel of water, eluded the man with the gun who went
tramping through his residence, and, when he had gone returned to it. An hour
later a row of wooden houses on the crest of the hill, separated from his
residence only by a narrow alley, were burning fiercely to its constant peril.
Had he been absent a heap of ashes would mark the spot where the house now
stands. and once again, before day dawned, Mr. Livermore was ordered to
desist from remaining in the vicinity of his house, and was compelled to return
to it, without knowledge of the military, by devious ways.
It is to be feared that the readers of these lines will weary of the monotony of
this narrative. For the story of the saving from the fire of this little group of
citizens of San Francisco is in every instance the story of the heroism of the
plain citizens of our city, of the absence of any organized endeavor on the part
of the fire department of San Francisco to stay the progress of the fire and of
the attempt of the soldiers to execute the incredible orders of their superiors. It
might be narrated in detail how Livingston Jenks was driven at the point of a
pistol from the roof of his mansion where he had intrenched himself; it might be
narrated at length how the house of Mrs. Morgan Shepard, through that long,
intolerable night, was invaded by soldier after soldier who commanded her to
depart, and whom by feminine tact and diplomacy she managed to restrain from
violence, and thus remained beneath the shelter of her roof throughout the fire;
it might be told with circumstance how Mr. Richardson and his wife were
forced at the rifle's point to leave the hill, abandoning their homes to the
flames, and returning to find
it scorched indeed, but saved from destruction through the efforts of their
neighboring friends. But what profits it? The stories have but one beginning and
one end. They begin with the criminal idiocy of the military; they end with the
surmounting heroism of the citizen.
It was different on Telegraph Hill. Here the men of the hill had only to fight the
fire--
Nor was it an easy task. Let him who believes that the houses on Telegraph
Hill were saved by their situation stand at the corner of Union Street and
Montgomery and see how the flame like a crested wave swept up the hill till by
some heroic effort it was halted between curb and curb, leaving a row of
wooden houses, scorched but intact, fronting upon square miles of desolation.
Or let him make his way by precipitous paths to the center of the block on
Filbert Street between Kearny and Montgomery and behold the house of Widow
Hanley, half burned and no more. An extra-
But the historian of the conflagration will never be able to quote the testimony
of "prominent citizens" concerning the happenings on the hill that wild, windy
Friday night when the great heaps of yellow pine that lay at the foot of the long
slope to the bay burned with infinite fury, and the wharves themselves were
consumed, and eager little tongues of flame creeping warily down the last slimy
piles perished with a subtle hiss in the waters of the bay. For it was the boys of
the hill that saved the hill.
It was Toby Irwin, the prizefighter, and Tim O"Brien who works in the
warehouse at the foot of the hill, and his brother Joe, who works in a
lumberyard, and the Dougherty boys, and the Volse boys, and Herman, the
grocery clerk--
Do you know what was the most terrible sight in the burning city? It was the
streets by night, vacant, deserted, dreadful; empty of all human sound; lighted
only by the hideous glare of oncoming horror; homes of men, standing dumb
and helpless, with blank, staring windows through which none should ever
look; with doors swinging in the wind through which none should ever pass;
long, terrible streets toward which the fire approached with no hand lifted to its
hindering; streets from which the soldiery had driven all men who might desire
to fight bravely to the last in their homes' defense; streets whose awful silence
was even as a cry of agony before impending doom.
A citizen of this city, Mr. Osgood Putnam, has told how on the night of
Thursday he passed along the line of fire from Russian Hill to Sansome Street
and back again along that fiery path. He has told of these long, vacant streets;
of the utter silence save for the roaring of the fire, of the inaction of the
soldiery, the absence of any firemen. Thus even then the throttling grip of the
military was upon this part of the city, filling men with fear of violence,
breeding deadly apathy and dumb despair, dooming thereby to utter ruin a
hundred blocks of homes that then lay untouched between the Terror and the
Bay.
It has been shown in the foregoing that the group of houses on Green Street
were saved by the citizens; it was shown that the houses on Russian Hill (with
one exception) were saved by the citizens; it has been shown that Telegraph
Hill was saved by the dwellers thereupon. But let not for a moment be supposed
that these were the only successful achievements of citizens who fought to stay
the northward progress of the fire. Perhaps more notable than all of these was
the conquest of the conflagration by the citizens on Friday morning. At this
time the flames had destroyed very structure south of Green Street which they
were to destroy--
Two fire extinguishers were found in the building, and heartened by the belief
that victory was at hand, the men bent to their final work like the heroes that
they were. At length the walls of the opposite building fell; the heat sensibly
diminished; the building upon which they were began to take fire less
frequently; then it ceased to catch fire at all; in the hearts of these fighting men
joy began to spring and grow,; still watchful, they wiped from their foreheads
the grimy sweat; and then, in sudden realization that victory was theirs, they
broke into a cheer. Van Wyck fired his exultant pistol in the air. The
flat-
Alas for human hopes!
Alas for the belief that the dynamiters in their seeming passion to destroy
would be restrained from setting fire to a district as free from flame as Market
Street today! All the morning innumerable automobiles bearing
important-
But, sir, this letter is already too long. Saved from the fire in this corner of the
city are some fifteen blocks of houses, and the story of their rescue would be
long in the telling. Suffice it then to say that here, for the most part, the
military appears to have graciously permitted the citizens to fight the fire
without greatly hindering them. For example, McGowan, who lives on the
southeast corner of Chestnut Street and Leavenworth, was allowed unharassed
to labor in his home's defense. To the west, across the street, the buildings
burned; to the south, in the same block, the Canopa mansion was utterly
consumed; to the east, across a narrow lot, the buildings were destroyed. And
yet McGowan, with blanket and bucket and a little water from the tank on his
roof, saved his home. Strange contrast this to Van Ness Avenue that afternoon
where with plenty of water and many willing hands the authorities found it
necessary to employ dynamite in order to prevent the fire from crossing that
wide street against a steady wind--
North of McGowan's place is a three-
But nearby there were houses that were not so fortunate. From the Durbrow
house which still stands at the corner of Leavenworth and Francisco Streets the
soldiers drove its defenders, saying that the house was to be destroyed by
dynamite (in this case a crime unspeakable), and when, hours later, they
returned, they found a man in the uniform of a United States marine who had
ransacked the place. He had taken money from a purse that in the haste of
departure had been forgotten. But the soldiers refused to arrest him; he was
permitted to escape. Next door lives a Mr. Marples, who also was ordered from
his home, and who also, when he returned to it, found a looting
soldier--
Such, then, are the facts regarding the salvation from the fire of nearly a
thousand homes--
A few weeks ago the Argonaut printed an article, bearing my signature, on
"The Management of the Fire." In that article, written a few days after the
disaster, embodying merely the conclusions from personal observation during
the three nights and days of the conflagration, I made certain criticisms of the
military authorities. Today, after months have passed, after continued inquiry,
after no slight I investigation, I have, in the foregoing, and do here once more,
repeat and emphasize every conclusion at which I then arrived concerning the
section north of Market Street and east of Van Ness, of the conditions in which
district alone I have spoken or pretend to speak.
In the Argonaut for July 7th is printed a letter signed Frederick Funston which
apparently in the opinion of its author is in the nature of a reply to the article in
question. So far as its involved and tortuous English will permit of judgment it
raises no question of fact. General Funston denies no specific statement that I
affirmed, affirms no specific statement that I deny.
On the contrary, with evident consciousness that facts will not serve his
purpose, that argument will not help his case, he seizes at once upon the
weapon which has ever been the favorite of men who know too well the
weakness of their position--
I believe it is some half dozen times that General Funston accuses me of
ignorance and misinformation. He speaks of the influence of the article upon
others as "misinformed" as I. He says that the article is "unique in the lack of
information" shown by its author "as to the difficulties encountered by those
engaged in fighting" the fire. He speaks of what I stated that I saw and affirmed
that I observed as "mental gymnastics and fairy tales." He refers to the article as
"ignorant" and also as a "cowardly" attack. And finally be refers to it as what I
"did not see and do not know."
If General Funston is right, the article in question must indeed have been a very
miracle of ignorance, cowardice, and misinformation. But also, if General
Funston is right, the foregoing article must be incredibly more ignorant, of
cowardice inconceivable, quite infinitely misinformed. For herein I have but
repeated and emphasized the conclusions of the prior article; I have but added
to the number, not in the least altered the character, of the facts (supposedly
facts) of which it is composed. And obviously, even to a simple intelligence, if
the statement of one fact (allegedly fact) of a certain nature and kind indicates
ignorance and misinformation then the statement of ten facts of the same nature
and identical kind must indicate tenfold the ignorance, tenfold the
misinformation. In truth, if this present article has no other distinction, I can at
least claim for it that (in the opinion of General Funston) it has the unique
distinction of being the most misinformed and absolutely ignorant article ever
printed within the borders of the State of California. And not only this, but
consider what an extraordinary conspiracy must exist among the citizens who
saved their homes between Market and the Bay to maintain in me that state of
utter ignorance, to establish and continue so remarkable a condition of entire
misinformation.
General Funston, I have with you but one concluding word. The conflagration
through. which the city of San Francisco has but just passed is, as you justly
remark, the greatest conflagration of modern times, if not of all times since the
beginning of the world. It presents to the gaze of all the nations of the earth and
to the historian of the future a phenomenon unique and of its kind unparalleled.
Sir, are you so lost to reason as for a moment to suppose that if your acts,
lawful or unlawful, during those days of peril need defense that you can serve
your cause or help your case by abuse or ridicule of anyone who bears public
and truthful witness concerning the conduct of your soldiery? Till that awful
night of Thursday when, from the northern hills of the city that I love, I saw the
Beast of the Fire gnawing at the city's heart with no hand of man uplifted in
defense--
NOTES
The comment may be made that possibly the cessation of any considerable
effort to control the fire in its march northward was due to the concentration of
the firemen and military at Van Ness Avenue where vastly more was at stake.
Those who entertain such opinions may be interested in the following statement
of Mr. Frank Hittell:
"On Thursday afternoon persons to me unknown set fire to the east side of Van
Ness Avenue for the purpose of preventing the fire from crossing the avenue to
the west. At this time all south of Turk Street had, been burned and the wind
was from the northwest. Instead of setting fire to the buildings on the east side
of Van Ness near Turk, and permitting the fire to work slowly to the north
against the wind, some incompetent person set fire to the buildings far to the
north, and the flames came roaring down, gaining in volume as they
progressed, till soon the structures on the west side of Van Ness began to catch
fire. At this time, I was in Lafayette Square. A man came rushing up with a call
for volunteers, and I dropped my work and followed, him. As I approached
Van Ness Avenue, a soldier rushed up and struck me with the side of his gun
barrel, and ordered me back. I was angry at the blow, and refused to go. At this
moment, Captain Helms, head of a private detective agency, a man with an air
of authority, came up and was ordered back. In vivid language he told the
soldier that he would not be stopped, gun or no gun, displayed his own
weapon, and a badge he wore, and the soldier, overawed, allowed us to
proceed. Other volunteers behind us got through somehow, and as we began to
work efficiently on the fire, the military cordon relax sufficiently to permit
several hundred citizens to act as volunteer firemen.
There were at this time two lines of hose on Van Ness Avenue, and two
engines, one of which was manned by a donkey-
"About nine o'clock I returned to the vicinity of Gough and California Streets,
and witnessed the dynamiting of various buildings in the vicinity in an effort to
prevent the fire from crossing Franklin Street. I believe this dynamiting to have
been of great assistance in stopping the conflagration at this point. The
dynamite squad was assisted by a great number of citizen volunteers, there
being one hose with a supply of water at this time. These men carried the hose
bodily from one point to another as each became the seat of danger. I saw no
firemen, and I should say that it was largely Owing to the efforts of citizen
volunteers that the fire was checked at this point."
The Appraisers' Building stands, of course, because it was occupied not by
citizens over whom the military assumed authority, and who would have been
driven forth that the building, might burn, but by officials of the United States
Government, over whom no authority was assumed, and whom, on the
contrary, the military did everything in its power to aid. As a consequence, the
windows were manned by men with buckets; the roof was kept clear of blazing
brands, and the building was saved without difficulty, though, on Wednesday,
when all the fronting buildings on the south side of Washington Street burned to
the ground the wind blew the flames directly toward the structure. The
Postoffice Sub-
But as for the entire block in which is the warehouse of A. P. Hotaling & Co.,
it seems to have been saved principally by the efforts of this firm.
The military, contrary to its nature in other parts of the city, was here
susceptible to reason, and granted permission to the manager of the firm to
remain with his men. It even permitted him to remove from the warehouse on
Thursday over one thousand barrels of whisky which were placed under guard
in the excavation to the east of the Appraisers' Building. The employees of this
firm were further permitted to bring from the pool in this excavation four or
five 60-
In striking contrast with the case of A. P. Hotaling & Co., in which the
military exercised the most unusual good sense and wisdom is that of the Globe
Mills, at the foot of Montgomery Street. Mr. W. E. Keller, President of the
Company, after relating his unsuccessful efforts to obtain assistance for the
protection of his property from General Funston, the mayor, or the fire
department, stated as follows:
"Late on Wednesday I was at the corner of Gough Street and Golden Gate
Avenue when a fireman approached a crowd of men who were being kept back
by the military, and asked for volunteers. So thoroughly cowed were the
citizens by the soldiers that no one responded, although I knew that every man
of them was willing to help. I went forward and was stopped by a soldier who
ordered me back. I refused to go back, informed him that I was responding to
the call of a fireman for volunteers, and finally, after prolonged argument, was
permitted to pass. The firemen inquired why more men did not come, and I told
them that they were willing enough, but were afraid of the soldiers. They urged
me to try to get volunteers through the lines. I went back, and was told by a
soldier that I could not again pass the lines. I replied that I should not only
again pass the lines, but that I should bring twenty men with me as volunteers.
The soldier said that he would not permit them to pass. I got the volunteers
without difficulty, and returned to the line established by the military when we
were stopped. After a long parley, the firemen coming back and imploring the
soldiers to permit these volunteers to pass, we were finally permitted to do so.
At this time, an inconsiderable number of firemen were fighting this fire. They
had, they told me, been at work since one o'clock in the morning, having been
called out on the "cannery fire" in the vicinity of Telegraph Hill, which
preceded the earthquake. Without the assistance of these volunteers, which, as
time passed, augmented in numbers, despite the resistance of the military, these
exhausted firemen could never have stopped the westward advance of the
flames from Gough and Golden Gate, and the Western Addition would have
been destroyed by this fire. As it was, the citizens turned the fire back
to the east. The fire was effectually stopped. Only by resistance to the military
authorities was this result achieved.
The statement of Mr. Fairfax Whelan may also be quoted in this connection:
"I
was in the vicinity of California and Franklin Streets on Thursday afternoon
from two until about half past four o'clock. I saw the fire destroy the St.
Dunstan's and other large buildings in its vicinity on the east side of Van Ness
Avenue, and also saw the flames cross Van Ness Avenue in the vicinity of
California. At this time nothing whatever was being done at this point to check
the fire. Neither firemen, citizens, nor the military were at guard in work. No
dynamite was being used at this time. The fire was permitted to burn
unimpeded.
A striking contrast between what was achieved with the aid of the military and
what loss resulted through military opposition is furnished, respectively, by the
Globe Mills, at the foot of Montgomery Street, and A.P. Hotaling & Co.,
Wholesale Liquors, 431 Jackson Street. As is well known, the only structures
used for business purposes that stood unharmed in the entire district north of
Market are the Montgomery Block, the Appraisers' Building, the Jackson Street
Sub-
"We believed our building to be entirely fireproof. It is protected on the west
and south by Telegraph Hill. The roof was metal, the walls of brick, and the
window casings were of metal also. The doors were of iron, very heavy. Within
the building were twelve fire extinguishers, and a salt water tank, of unlimited
capacity, connects with the bay. The building stands apart, and virtually the
only inflammable material was the 10,000 barrels of flour and 4,500 tons of
wheat which it contained. Wheat, though it makes a very hot and fierce fire, is
difficult to ignite, as fire started on its surface is easily smothered, and flour is
also not easily ignited. For the reason that we believed the building could not
burn, we carried no insurance. On Friday afternoon, as the flames approached,
we got together ten of our men, and were confident of success in saving the
mill. At four o'clock in the afternoon, soldiers appeared and ordered us out,
threatening to shoot us if we did not go. Arguments and explanations were of
no avail. We were ordered to go or be shot. We left the building, and late at
night, after being exposed for many hours to the heat of burning lumber yards
to the north and east, windows in the east front at length broke, and bins of
wheat thus directly exposed to the heat, were ignited. There is of course no
doubt whatever that one man could have saved the structure had he been
permitted to remain. Our loss was $220,000.00."