The Great Fire
of London began on the night of September 2, 1666, as a small fire on Pudding
Lane, in the bakeshop of Thomas Farynor, baker to King Charles II. At one
o'clock in the morning, a servant woke to find the house aflame, and the baker
and his family escaped, but a fear-struck maid perished in the blaze.
At this time,
most London houses were of wood and pitch construction, dangerously flammable,
and it did not take long for the fire to expand. The fire leapt to the hay and
feed piles on the yard of the Star Inn at Fish Street Hill, and spread to the
Inn. The strong wind that blew that night sent sparks that next ignited the
Church of St. Margaret, and then spread to Thames Street, with its riverside
warehouses and wharves filled with food for the flames: hemp, oil, tallow, hay,
timber, coal and spirits along with other combustibles. The citizen
firefighting brigades had little success in containing the fire with their
buckets of water from the river. By eight o'clock in the morning, the fire had
spread halfway across London Bridge. The only thing that stopped the fire from
spreading to Southwark, on the other side of the river, was the gap that had
been caused by the fire of 1633.
The standard procedure to stop a fire from
spreading had always been to destroy the houses on the path of the flames,
creating “fire-breaks”, to deprive a fire from fuel. Lord Mayor Bludworth,
however, was hesitant, worrying about the cost of rebuilding. By the time a
Royal command came down, carried by Samuel Pepys, the fire was too out of
control to stop. The Trained Bands of London were called in to demolish houses
by gunpowder, but often the rubble was too much to be cleared before the fire
was at hand, and only eased the fire's way onward. The fire blazed unchecked
for another three days, until it halted near Temple Church. Then, it suddenly
sprang to life again, continuing towards Westminster. The Duke of York (later
King James II) had the presence of mind to order the Paper House demolished to
create a fire break, and the fire finally died down.
Although the loss of life was minimal
(some sources say only sixteen perished), the magnitude of the property loss
was staggering. Some 430 acres, as much as 80% of the city proper was
destroyed, including 13,000 houses, 89 churches, and 52 Guild Halls. Thousands
of citizens found themselves homeless and financially ruined. The Great Fire,
and the fire of 1676, which destroyed over 600 houses south of the river,
changed the face of London forever. The one positive effect of the Great Fire
of London was that the plague, which had ravished London since 1665, diminished
greatly, due to the mass death of the plague-carrying rats in the blaze.
Charles II
appointed six Commissioners to redesign the city. The plan provided for wider
streets and buildings of brick, rather than timber. By 1671, 9000 houses and
public buildings had been completed. Sir Christopher Wren was commissioned to
design and oversee the construction of nearly 50 churches, not least of them a
new St. Paul's Cathedral, construction of which began in 1675. The King also
had Wren design a monument to the Great Fire, which stands still today at the
site of the bakery which started it all, on a street now named Monument Street.
Source: Luminarium.org and Wikipedia
Source: Luminarium.org and Wikipedia
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