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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
May 31, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Tuesday, May 31, 2005
The June 6, 1940 Fire That Destroyed the George M. Reynolds Mansion
(Part I of II)
On June 6, 1940, a tragic fire entirely destroyed the George M. Reynolds
mansion located along Boston Post Road at the Esplanade behind Huguenot
Memorial Church. Out of the tragedy came some good. The site subsequently
was cleared and became today's Martha Emmons Weihman Memorial Park.
Today's Blog posting will provide the first half of a newspaper article
that appeared the day after the fire in The Pelham Sun giving an
account of the fire. The remainder of the article will appear in
tomorrow's Blog Posting.
“$75,000 Manor Apartment House Fire
Nine-Family Three-Story Apartment House Total Loss; Was Remodeled Mansion
and One of Pelham Manor’s Oldest Buildings; Entirely of Frame Construction
and Regarded as Pelham Manor’s No. 1 Fire Hazard.
-----
FLAMES SPREAD SO RAPIDLY TENANTS LOST EVERYTHING
-----
Building Furnished With All Appointments of High-Class Residential Hotel –
More Than One Hundred Firemen in Battle; Three Firemen Injured; Building
Owned by Bowery Savings Bank, Leased by James Riley Macon.
-----
A $75,000 fire which last night threatened to destroy the nine-family
three-story apartment house building at the corner of Boston Post Road and
the Esplanade, Pelham Manor was fought by firemen of Pelham Manor, New
Rochelle and North Pelham for an hour before being brought under control.
Fire damage was confined to the upper stories which were gutted.
The apartment house was of frame construction and was regarded for many
years as Pelham Manor’s No. 1 fire hazard.
The alarm was turned in at 10:38 p.m., by Patrolman William Hamilton. Mont
D. Rogers of Pelham Manor, was driving by when he noticed the glare of
flames in an upper apartment tenanted by Mrs. L. Ogden Thompson. He
notified the patrolman. Acting Chief Arthur Fawcett realized the hazard in
the frame building, immediately called for assistance from New Rochelle. A
police call brought the North Pelham department to the scene. At one time
more than one hundred firemen were fighting the blaze.
‘The entire house seemed to be ablaze,’ Hamilton relates, ‘I ran across
the street and went through all the rooms that I could get into, shouting
a warning. I think there were three persons in the house, and they got out
before I got through the building. One woman wanted me to get her jewels,
but there wasn’t any time to stop for anything.’
Superintendent Smelled Smoke
William Tegeter, superintendent of the building, lives with his wife in a
building originally a coachhouse in the rear of the mansion. This was not
damaged.
‘I banked the fires for the night at 9:00 o’clock, Tegeter told The Pelham
Sun. ‘A carpenter had been doing some work around the house and there were
some shavings mixed in with the coal. A few minutes later I smelled smoke,
but I thought that it must be the shavings. I went into the basement, and
there was nothing wrong. A half hour later when Mrs. Macon and I were in
the workshop near the stable, Mrs. Geddes came and said that the odor of
smoke in the house was strong. When she went to investigate, my wife came
running out of our house yelling ‘The house is on fire.’ The flames were
shooting out from the second floor porch between Mrs. Geddes’ and Mrs.
Thompson’s apartments. I telephoned to the fire house, but someone else
had turned in the alarm.’
Mrs. Geddes was in her apartment when she smelled smoke. ‘I went through
the building, and although the smoke smell persisted, I didn’t find
anything wrong,’ she told The Pelham Sun. ‘I went down to get Mr. Tegeter,
and when we came out of the workshop, the entire rear of the building was
in flames.’
When the first alarm brought the Pelham Manor firemen to the scene at
10:38 o’clock, a column of flame was pouring out of the center section of
the roof. The glare from the blaze could be scene from the farthest
sections of Pelham Manor. Even before the firemen reached the scene, the
Boston Post Road was choked with traffic and people. The first few lines
of hose had no sooner been stretched than it became necessary to divert
the traffic. Police sent east-bound cars around the Esplanade to
Pelhamdale Avenue and then back to the Post Road, while west-bound
vehicles were forced to turn right at Pelhamdale avenue."
Source: $75,000 Manor Apartment House Fire, The Pelham Sun, Vol.
30, No. 10, Jun. 7, 1940, p. 1, col. 1.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:55 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
May 31, 2005.
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