|
< Browse to Previous Essay | Browse to Next Essay >
Fire destroys Seattle's Lincoln Hotel, killing four, on April 7, 1920.
HistoryLink.org Essay 10162
: Printer-Friendly Format
On April 7, 1920, fire breaks out in Seattle's elegant Lincoln Hotel, one of the city's finest establishments. Hundreds of people flee the building as it quickly goes up in flames. Four people, including a Seattle firefighter, die in the catastrophe.
At the time it was built in 1899, the Lincoln Hotel was
Seattle's most luxurious hotel. Located
at the northwest corner of 4th Avenue and Madison Street, the hotel was seven
stories tall on the east side and nine stories tall on the west. From its
vantage point along the steep incline of Madison Street, its elegant rooftop
garden offered views unmatched by most Seattle buildings at the time.
In 1900, the Lincoln opened as the city's first
apartment-hotel, and was owned by local developer James A. Moore (1861-1929) and Dr. Rufus
P. Lincoln, a New York investor. Although the Lincoln was considered one of the
finest hotels in the city and the site of many social functions, room rentals
suffered due to the hotel's distant location from the city's commercial
district. Because of this, the Lincoln passed through a number of different
owners over the years, until it was purchased by the Madison Realty Company on
November 1, 1919, which invested $75,000 on remodeling the then 20-year-old
building.
Fire Down Below
Shortly after 12:30 a.m., on the morning of April 7, 1920, A.
A. Wright, a night clerk at the hotel, noticed something odd. The lights from
all of the basement telephones – in the laundry room, engine room, and kitchen –blinked
and then went out. Since no one was in those departments at the time, he waited
for the night watchman to return, to ask him to investigate.
Just then, the watchman, who had been escorting a guest to
his room, rushed out of the elevator yelling
that there was a fire in the basement and that he had heard a muffled explosion
and had seen the smoke. Wright called the fire marshal's office, set off the
fire alarms, and began calling as many guests as he could on the telephone. The
night watchmen began bringing people down in the elevator until it stopped
working, and then proceeded to help the lower floor guests down the stairs. In
all, there were over 300 people staying at the hotel.
Smoke filled the lobby as people streamed out of the hotel
into the streets. Wright grabbed the hotel's cash and guests' valuables from
the hotel safe, and brought them to the Elks Club a block away for safe keeping.
Some of those who escaped from the lower floors caught their breath on the deck
of the Carnegie Library across the street, and watched as the hotel went up in
flames.
The Rush to Escape
The fire spread fast. Inside the hotel, the interior court
acted as a giant chimney, sending the flames high above the hotel and showering
nearby buildings with sparks and embers. By the time fire crews arrived, all of
the stairwells were thick with smoke, trapping hundreds of people on the upper
floors. As guests crowded the windows to gasp for air, people on the street shouted
words of encouragement, urging them not to jump.
Some people were able to make it down the three exterior
fire escapes, but others could not. Fire ladders went up and rescuers began
carrying down the injured and the infirm. Some guests had to be lowered down by
rope. The badly injured were whisked to hospitals, while others were brought to
the Elks Club and private homes.
On the west side of the building, Fred Hamilton (1869-1920) -- owner of
the Puss 'n' Boots Confectionery Company -- and his daughter, Gray Hamilton (1901-1920), whose name was often reported in newspapers as "Grace," were trapped in their
room awaiting rescue. As they waited for fire ladders to reach their sixth
floor window, the flames and smoke grew near. In a panic, the father jumped
from the window and fell to his death. His daughter stepped out and hung to the
ledge by her hands, before falling to her death as well.
After the Fall
Less than an hour after the fire started, firefighters had pulled
most people from the building. They continued to douse the building with water,
and at 2:30, the west wall of the hotel collapsed, burying some of the firemen
in the rubble. Many were badly injured, and one -- Charles La Casse (1870-1920), Ladder Co. No. 4 -- died.
In the morning, another body was found in the rubble. It was
believed to be Blanche Crowe (1896-1920), who had not shown up for work at Chauncey Wright's
Restaurant Company offices in the Smith Tower. An autopsy later determined that
Crowe had woken and dressed after the fire began, but could not escape. She had
suffered from smoke inhalation and burned to death before being crushed by the
collapse.
Because the hotel register was burned in the fire, it took a
few days to canvass nearby hotels and apartment houses to determine if everyone
else at the Lincoln made it out alive. At first it was though that five others
had died in the fire, but they were found alive and well, having escaped the
blaze and then finding new accommodations without telling anyone.
Aftermath
The Fire Department had considered the Lincoln Hotel a fire trap
for years. Right after the disaster, Fire Marshal Harry Bringhurst (1861-1923) noted that
when the hotel was first built it had no fire escapes at all, and that, "it
was little else than a lumber yard with four brick walls around it" (The Seattle Times, April 7, 1920). When
the hotel's new owners took charge in 1919, fire officials urged them to
include fire safety features into their remodel, which they did, possibly
saving countless numbers of lives.
During the coroner's inquest into the death of Blanche
Crowe, witnesses told the jury that the doors to the fire exits were bolted
from the inside and that they had to break through the door's windows to
release the latch. R. B. Ward, assistant manager of the hotel, noted that the
bolts were placed there to prevent burglars and thieves from gaining entrance,
and that the words "Fire Escape -- Break Glass" were clearly printed on
the glass. This was found to be acceptable under city law.
The coroner's jury determined that the deaths resulting from
the Lincoln Hotel fire were likely caused by "conflicting building
regulations and a laxity of city departments in enforcing the city building
code" (The Seattle Times, April
16, 1920). Fire Marshal Bringhurst and Superintendent of Buildings James
Blackwell took umbrage at this statement, claiming that the low number of
deaths was evidence enough to prove that safety features were working and in in
place. Nevertheless, the city's hotels and other buildings came under
heightened scrutiny to make sure they were up to code.
Meanwhile, the destruction of the Lincoln Hotel got Seattle's
business community to start thinking about the need for a new hotel that the city
could be proud of. A funding campaign began, and within a few years, the
Olympic Hotel opened to great success as the premiere hotel for Seattle
visitors.
Sources:
"Is Glad the Name Changed," The Seattle Times, July 1, 1903, p. 7; "Seattle -- A City of
Hotels," The Seattle Times, February
12, 1905, p. 10; "Three Dead, 15 Injured, 18 Missing, When Hotel Lincoln
is Destroyed" The Seattle Times,
April 7, 1920, p. 1; "Father and
Daughter Plunge to Death," The
Seattle Times, April 7, 1920, p. 2; "Firemen Risk Lives to Rescue
Guests," The Seattle Times, April
7, 1920, p. 2; "Dead Girl Her
Father's Pet; Hamilton Here on Business," The Seattle Times, April 7, 1920, p. 4; "Fire Traps Lincoln Hotel Guests. Two Are
Dead; Six Others in Hospital," Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, April 7, 1920, p. 1; "Inquest Will Fix Blame for
Four Deaths in Fire Tragedy at Lincoln Hotel," Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 7, 1920, p. 1; "Five Persons
Said to be Missing From Wrecked Building," The Seattle Times, April 8, 1920, p. 1; "New Hotel Great Need
of Seattle," The Seattle Times, April
8, 1920, p. 14; "Blaze Inquest Soon Becomes General Probe," The Seattle Times, April 10, 1920, p. 1;
"Bolts on Doors Leading to Hotel Fire Escapes Become Storm Center," The Seattle Times, April 10, 1920, p. 1;
"Door to Exits in Hotel Bolted Inside," Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 11, 1920, p. 1; "Blame Civic
Bureaus for Hotel Deaths," The
Seattle Times, April 16, 1920, p. 1; "Antiques Recall Seattle's
Elegant Lincoln Hotel," The Seattle
Times, October 24, 1965, p. S-2.
By Alan Stein, August 12, 2012
Travel through time (chronological order):
< Browse to Previous Essay
|
Browse to Next Essay >
Related Topics:
Calamities |
Landmarks |
|
Licensing: This essay is licensed under a Creative Commons license that
encourages reproduction with attribution. Credit should be given to both
HistoryLink.org and to the author, and sources must be included with any
reproduction. Click the icon for more info. Please note that this
Creative Commons license applies to text only, and not to images. For
more information regarding individual photos or images, please contact
the source noted in the image credit. |
 |
Major Support for HistoryLink.org Provided
By: The State of Washington | Patsy Bullitt Collins
| Paul G. Allen Family Foundation | Museum Of History & Industry
| 4Culture (King County Lodging Tax Revenue) | City of Seattle
| City of Bellevue | City of Tacoma | King County | The Peach
Foundation | Microsoft Corporation, Other Public and Private
Sponsors and Visitors Like You
|
This essay made possible by:
Seattle Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs
Lincoln Hotel fire, Seattle, April 7, 1920
Courtesy MOHAI (Neg. No. 2002.3.144)
Lincoln Hotel, Seattle, 1900s
Postcard
Roof gardens, Lincoln Hotel, Seattle, 1900s
Postcard
Room at the Lincoln Hotel, Seattle, 1910s
Courtesy MOHAI (Neg. No. 1983.10.7477)
Lincoln Hotel fire, April 7, 1920
Courtesy UW Special Collections (Image No. Asahel Curtis 39502)
Lincoln Hotel after fire, April 7, 1920
Courtesy UW Special Collections (Neg. No. Lee 4415)
|