Today, The Grangers and The Grandma have assisted to an interesting talk in the New York Public Library about the Great New York City Fire of 1845, that started on Saturday, July 19, 1845 causing a great catastrophe.
Before this interesting talk, the family has been practising some English vocabulary about Places and Jobs.
The Great New York City Fire of 1845 broke out on July 19, 1845.
 The fire started in a whale-oil and candle manufacturing establishment 
and quickly spread to other wooden structures in the neighbourhood. It 
reached a warehouse on Broad Street where combustible saltpeter was 
stored and caused a massive explosion that spread the fire even farther.
The fire started at about 2:30 a.m. on Saturday, July 19, 1845, on the third floor of J. L. Van Doren, Oil Merchant and Stearin Candle Manufacturer, known as a seller of whale oil, at 34 New Street in Manhattan, and spread quickly to adjoining buildings. The City Hall alarm bell began to ring at about 3:00 a.m., summoning firefighters.
Firefighters from the Fire Department of the City of New York
 (FDNY), at that time a volunteer organization, arrived under the 
command of Chief Engineer Cornelius Anderson. As the fire grew, the FDNY
 personnel were joined by retired fire chiefs from the city and 
firefighting crews from Brooklyn, Newark, and Williamsburg.
 Firemen battling the blaze were aided by water flowing from the Croton 
aqueduct, which had been completed in 1842. The fire either weakened in 
intensity or had been subdued by firefighters by 1:00 p.m. that day.
During the 
ten and a half hours that it burned, the fire had destroyed buildings 
from Broad Street below Wall Street to Stone Street, up Whitehall Street
 to Bowling Green, and up Broadway to Exchange Place. Four firefighters 
and 26 civilians lost their lives, and buildings were reported destroyed
 on Broadway, New Street, Broad Street, Exchange Place, Beaver Street, 
Marketfield Street, Whitehall Street, and South William Street. 
There were 
multiple reports of looting during the fire and in its aftermath, both 
of businesses and private residences. At least two elderly women 
reported being approached by young men who offered to help them move 
their belongings from their damaged buildings, only to have their 
valuables stolen.
The Great New York City Fire of 1845 was the last of three particularly devastating fires that affected the heart of Manhattan, the other two occurring in 1776 and 1835. While very destructive, the 1845 fire confirmed the value of building codes restricting wood-frame construction.
In 1815, city officials had banned new construction of 
wood-frame structures in the densest areas of the city. The 1845 fire 
demonstrated the efficacy of these restrictions, as the progress of the 
fire was checked when it spread toward areas rebuilt after the 1835 fire
 with such materials as stone, masonry, and iron roofs and shutters. In 
spite of general improvements, the 1845 fire prompted public calls for a
 more proactive stance in fire prevention and firefighting.
To strengthen the city's firefighting capabilities, the city established a reserve unit called the Exempt Fireman's Company,
 so called because it was made up of firemen who were exempt from 
militia and jury duty. The company was led by veteran fireman Zophar 
Mills, who had helped stop the great 1835 fire from crossing Wall 
Street.
More information: Untapped Cities 
Nature is impersonal, 
awe-inspiring, elegant, eternal. 
It's
 geometrically perfect. 
It's tiny and gigantic. 
You can travel far to be 
in a beautiful natural setting, 
or you can observe it in your backyard 
or, 
in my case, in the trees lining New York City sidewalks, 
or in the 
clouds above skyscrapers. 
Gretchen Rubin
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