Robert Frank Brown, "Front
Street, New Castle DE: Architecture and Buildng Practices" 1961, U.
Delaware Library NA9999 1961 .B879, Chapter 5
FIRE OF 1824 AND BUILDINGS ERECTED
AFTER IT
At three on
Monday afternoon, April 26, 1824, a fire broke out in the stable or store‑room
(the Accounts vary) belonging to James Riddle, a merchant in New Castle since
1798. It quickly spread from Bank Lot 1, on which the mercantile buildings were
located, to his adjoining house, on Bank Lot 2. According to one newspaper
account, "...the wind was blowing fresh from the south which sent the
flames northward to Jeremiah Bowman's lumberyard and from there continued
north, consuming the remaining houses, stores, and the Union Line Hotel before
being stopped by the 120 feet wide vacant lot opposite the mansion of George
Read. Thus all the buildings on the water or bank side of Front Street were
destroyed or badly damaged.
The fire
crossed the street midway on its northward course along the east side of Front
Street and worked its way north on the west side, beginning at the house and
store of Samuel Cooper (Couper), built in 1824 by his father* Dr. James Couper (the present #14 The Strand). The
rest of the progress of the fire can be traced from the detailed account which
appeared soon afterward in a Wilmington newspaper.
...thence to two houses adjoining, one of which was occupied as a bakery 47; from thence it communicated
to Mr. /Thomas/ Janvier’s large dwelling /Lot 5/, thence to a small
house belonging to the Steam Boat Company /Lot
5/; thence to Mr. Saxton’s /Richard Sexton/ brick dwelling and stables /Lot
6/, thence to a brick dwelling, and the stores and dwelling ‑ of Mr.
Raynow /Lot 6/, thence to Mr. M’Cullough’s /James McCullough/ dwellinghouse /Lot
7/, thence to a brick house occupied as a dwelling and dry goods store /Lot
7/; also owned by McCullough ...
At this
point the account becomes confusing, because the names of two property owners,
one deceased, are confused:
... thence to the large dwelling house of Geo. Reed /sic/ Jr Esq. with back building &c. and here happily the progress of the flames were arrested, between 6 and 7 o'clock in the evening, by Mr. Geo Reed /sic/ senior's large house, the roof of which being kept extremely wet by a hose which was constantly playing, prevented the fire from going farther ...
The
reporter confuses, for us at least, the home bought by George Read, Sr., in
1798 (Lot 8) with the mansion built by his son, George 'Read, Jr., on Lot 9.
Both were then owned by George Read, Jr., and hence both could have been known
properly as his dwellings. Since the fire was going north, and is not described
as leaping over a building before it was stopped by a wet roof, and since the
account states that one Read house was reached by the flames before the other
halted the fire, we can conclude that the house of George Read, Sr., the Old
Read House, now owned by his son, was burned and that the fire was stopped by
George Read, Jr.'s house, the present Read House. This explanation seems to be
confirmed by a letter of thanks to the Wilmington fire companies published in a
Wilmington newspaper by Read.
By this
fire over one‑half the buildings along Front Street between Delaware and
Harmony Streets were burned or had to be rebuilt. On the east side, all the
buildings from Bank Lot 1 to Bank Lot 7 were destroyed or badly damaged. On the
west side portions of an older