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It was a damp foggy morning and this, no doubt, had much to do with the saving of the other building. Fortunately, too, there was scarcely a breeze afloat at the time. But the real saving power lay in the daring heroism of citizens and the Carrollton Fire Co. All lent a helping hand, and the efficiency of the chemical engines was again fully demonstrated. They played constantly on the buildings. Woodwork on the warehouse as badly charred, but wherever the fluid touched the fire, it extinguished it. The fire started at the copper still which was in a small frame structure at the eastern end, and outside, of the brick building. A fire had been started at half past three o’clock. By some means the whiskey in the still caught, whether from an actual leak or some other way, no one knows. It was only a few moments until the building was afire from bottom to top, and in an hour everything combustible had been converted into ashes, and the walls had crumbled to the earth. Many in Carrollton had never heard of the fire until after it was over. Mr. Frank Bates, the Superintendent, who lives in the back part of town, who was on the scene long before the alarm bells rang. Joe Wetherell, the night watchman, discovered the fire in its incipiency, but whiskey is only a little slower to burn than powder. The insurance on the establishment amounts to $12,000, about half of which is in the Commercial Union, Liverpool & London & Globe and Lancashire, represented here by Fisher’s Insurance Agency. The adjusters were here Wednesday. We are glad to state that Messrs. Block and Son will rebuild at once, perhaps on a larger scale and with better equipment than before.
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From the Carrollton Democrat, May 30, 1885. |
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