Morning after the. Tent on S.E. Corner of Cordova and Carrall Street.
–
From The Great Fire of 1886 – Chuck Davis, the Great Vancouver Book
Vancouver, a city of about 1,000 wooden buildings was destroyed in less than 45 minutes, some say as little as 20. Details vary in the accounts of eyewitnesses, but all agree it happened with stunning suddenness. “Vancouver didn’t burn,” said one eyewitness, “it exploded.”
It was June 13th, 1886, a Sunday. A small crew of Canadian Pacific Railway men was keeping an eye on clearing fires set the day before when a sudden wind blew up and the fire got away from them. The death toll is uncertain. A figure as high as 28 has been cited, but an informal inquest held the next day noted only eight confirmed deaths. Many dead could have been burned without a trace and the nature of the town was such that there were many transients, whose names would not have been known.
Someone who was the ominous and rising clouds of smoke began furiously ringing the bell of St. James’ Church at Powell and Westminster Road (what is now Main Street). For many that was the first warning of the fire. Then came the alarmed shouts of men, running ahead of the flames to escape and warn the town. But the fire overtook them, leaping from treetop to treetop and descended with a roar on the defenceless little town.
Men dropped before their companions’ eyes and were consumed in the fire. The heat was so ferocious the bell of St. James church which had warned so many, was turned into molten slag when the church in its turn burst into flame. (The melted bell can be seen today at the Vancouver Museum).
The ship Robert Kerr was blown from its mooring and came to at the foot of Dunlevy Street where it served as a refuge for people jumping into the inlet to escape the fury of the fire.
Help from the surrounding towns was swift and generous. In Vancouver, Milltown to Metropolis Alan Morley writes: “Doctors and women collected medical supplies and bandages, food, clothing and household goods were donated, and by 6 o’clock in the evening an unending relief caravan was making its way to Vancouver. By 3 o’clock in the morning, lumber wagons were jolting in from the Fraser communities; nails and tools were unloaded by the light of lanterns and the flickering of still-burning stumps. By daylight, tents and building frames stood in the dawn, with the smoke curling around them and the ashes puffing wherever a man trod. “In 20 minutes, Vancouver had been wiped off the earth. In 12 hours, it was rising again.
Date: 1886
Improvised city Hall (tent) at the foot of Carrall Street – City Council at meeting after the fire. Council members are standing(L to R): Alderman J. Griffiths, Alderman R Balfour, Alderman Thos. Dunn, City Solicitor J.J. Blake, Alderman Jos. Humphreys, City Treasurer G.F. Baldwin, city Corner Dr. W. J. McGuigan. Seated (L to R): Alderman C.A. Coldwell, alderman E.P. Hamilton, Alderman J. Northcott, Mayor M.A. McLean, Alderman L.A. Hamilton, Alderman Peter Cordiner, City Clerk T.F. McGuigan.
Date: 1886
A group of men in front of the Tremont Hotel on Carrall Street which was built within 24 hours after the June 13, 1886 Fire. This is now the location of The Irish Heather.