New York Marks 100th Anniversary of 1911 Capitol Fire with Exhibition and New Film
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, April 4, 2026


New York Marks 100th Anniversary of 1911 Capitol Fire with Exhibition and New Film
A preserved paper document from a fire in the state library at the Capitol in 1911 is seen at the New York State Library in Albany, N.Y. This document was mended shortly after the fire with a silk fabric method. New York is marking this week's 100th anniversary of the Capitol fire with an exhibit, a new documentary film, a newly published book and public lectures by state librarians and historians. AP Photo/Mike Groll.



NEW YORK (AP).- The fire started in the Assembly Library and quickly spread down the hall to the nearby New York State Library, finding plenty of fuel among towering shelves jammed with books and cabinets filled with hundreds of thousands of documents, many of them centuries old.

It would be several days before firefighters finally doused the last embers of the state Capitol fire that started in the early morning hours of March 29, 1911. Meanwhile, one man was dead and an untold wealth of New York's history and heritage — from Dutch colonial records to priceless Iroquois artifacts — had gone up in flames.

The disaster, according to the man who served as the State Library's director before and after the fire, was unequaled in the history of modern libraries. The fire is estimated to have destroyed about 500,000 books and 300,000 manuscripts; only 7,000 books and 80,000 manuscripts were saved. The blaze also destroyed 8,500 artifacts in the New York State Museum, including irreplaceable Seneca Indian craftworks.

The Capitol blaze, coming just four days after the horrific fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. factory in Manhattan, was the second blow in a pair of pyrotechnic disasters that led to legislation in Albany strengthening building codes and factory safety laws statewide, and eventually, nationwide.

New York is marking this week's 100th anniversary of the Capitol fire with an exhibit, a new documentary film, a newly published book and public lectures by state librarians and historians.

"Few realize the extent of the disaster of 1911," James I. Wyer, director of the State Library from 1908-1938, told the New York Post three years after the blaze engulfed the entire western portion of the Capitol, built in the French Renaissance style over a 32-year period and completed just a dozen years before the fire.

Joseph Gavit, the "Superintendent of the Stacks" whose 50-year career at the State Library started in 1896, staunchly believed the fire was started by careless smoking during a boozy party held in a room near the Assembly chamber, according to state librarians Paul Mercer and Vicki Weiss, co-authors of "The New York State Capitol and The Great Fire of 1911."

Officially, the blame was laid on faulty wiring. What isn't disputed is that the blaze ignited around 2 a.m. in what was then the Assembly's third-floor library, just down the hall from the speaker's office.

During a recent tour of the third and fourth floors, Capitol Architect James Jamieson described how the fire spread through the chamber's library, where it intensified and blew out the tall windows overlooking one of the roofless interior courtyards designed to provide natural light and ventilation. That courtyard, along with another nearby and some elevator shafts, wound up acting as conduits for flames that jumped over ceiling spaces and engulfed the State Library, he said.

"Since it's all intertwined, the fire would just find all these places to go," Jamieson explained.

Once the flames reached the library, there was no hope of stopping them. More than half a million books were stacked floor to ceiling on pine shelves. Catalogues, newspapers, old manuscripts, journals, wooden desks and tables — all served as fuel. The heat was so intense it melted some of the building's red sandstone columns that were quarried in Scotland, Jamieson said. Wind currents created by the fires spewed charred pieces of paper through blown-out windows, littering surrounding streets as if a parade had been held.

The first alarm didn't arrive at the Albany Fire Department until 2:40 a.m. About 150 firefighters battled for hours before getting the conflagration under control, although debris would smolder for days. Gavit and others risked their lives running among the still-burning corridors to save books and documents. Among some of the important documents saved: the original manuscript of George Washington's farewell address and an original Emancipation Proclamation, written in Abraham Lincoln's own hand.

Arthur Parker, the first archaeologist hired by New York state, dashed among the State Museum's display cases arrayed on the fourth floor, wielding a tomahawk passed down from a Seneca ancestor and using it as a fire ax as he rescued priceless Iroquois artifacts. He managed to save only about 50 out of about 500 Iroquois relics, said Betty Duggan, a State Museum curator.

"He was just heart-sickened by the fire," Duggan said.

News of the fire soon reached many of the far-flung graduates of the New York State Library School, founded by Melvil Dewey and located in the Capitol's northwest tower. For some, the destruction of so much written knowledge was like a death in the family, and the letters and telegrams they sent to Albany bore condolences from around the globe. The chief librarian at the Imperial University of Tokyo wrote: "I beg to express my deepest sympathy for the loss of the New York State Library by the recent fire."

It took a year to rebuild and repair the damaged sections of the Capitol. Workers removed much of the soot from the scorched, blackened sandstone walls, but it wasn't until a two-year, $2.4 million restoration project completed in 2006 that the Capitol's Great Western Staircase was returned to its pre-fire condition.

"The Capitol fire is still haunting us," said Nancy Kelley, exhibit planner for the State Museum, where a three-month exhibit on the fire runs through June 18. "One-hundred years later, we're still dealing with the fire."

There's also some real haunting, according to Capitol lore. The ghost of Samuel Abbott, the disaster's sole human casualty, is said to haunt the Capitol's fourth floor, where the body of the 78-year-old night watchman was found.

While some say Abbott's spirit still makes his nightly rounds, researchers and librarians often come across more tangible remnants of the fire among the files and volumes at the State Library and State Archives: documents charred around the edges or shriveled from being doused. Experts at the State Archives still work to conserve 20,000 documents rescued from the fire.

They range from such historic items as the Flushing Remonstrance, a 350-year-old Dutch document demanding religious freedom, to a Revolutionary War soldier's appeal to be allowed to remarry, written after he had returned home to find his wife had joined the Shaker religious sect and no longer wanted a husband.

"There are lots of small stories to tell from these documents," said Sue Bove, a conservation expert at the State Archives. "They may not be glamorous, but they're a source of information on what our forefathers had to endure."

Another item saved from the blaze is a page, circa 1675, from a wealthy Dutch woman's account with an Albany baker. The entry shows a purchase of "Sinterklaas" goodies. Mercer and Weiss believe it could be the earliest record of the celebration of the feast of Saint Nicholas — aka Santa Claus — in the New World.




Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.










Today's News

March 28, 2011

Christie's Offers One of the Finest Private Collections of Early 20th Century Decorative Art

Exhibition of Paintings, Drawings, and Prints by James Siena at the Pace Gallery

New York Marks 100th Anniversary of 1911 Capitol Fire with Exhibition and New Film

Film of Werner Herzog's Exclusive Access to the Recently Discovered Chauvet Caves

Author Jeffrey Archer to Auction Works of Art from His Collection at Christie's in June

Sotheby's London Presents Beautiful and Rare Objects from Its April Sale of Arts of the Islamic World

Thomas Dane Gallery in London Presents Artist Anya Gallaccio's Where is Where It's At

Last Keats Love Letter in Private Hands for Sale Tomorrow at Bonhams; Dying Poet Pours Out Heart

Only Publicly Known Matching Pair of Singing Bird Pistols Offered at Christie's

'Stations of a Pause' by Jitish Kallat at Gallery Chemould Prescott Road in Mumbai

Dana Lixenberg Portrays Amsterdam in a Series of Landscapes and Interiors at Foam

SKMU Sorlandets Kunstmuseum Presents Eija-Liisa Ahtila: Where is Where?

Yinka Shonibare Announces Kazuya Tsuji Winner of The Grange Gardens Sculpture Prize

New Permanent Display, from Victorian to Modern British Art, for the Walker Art Gallery

Giant Silk China Scroll Goes for $30 Million Plus to Anonymous Hong Kong Collector

Aerosol Art by Ben Quilty Inhabits the Art Gallery of South Australia in Adelaide

De Hallen Haarlem Presents the First Solo Exhibition by Matt Stokes in a Dutch Museum

Trio of Intriguing & Provocative Exhibitions at Wexner Center in Ohio this Spring

Klemens Gasser and Tanja Grunert Present Artist Grayson Cox's First Solo Show with the Gallery

S.M.A.K. Conceives a Plan to Display the Works of Art and Documents of Marcel Broodthaers

European Drawings from the Collection on View at the Portland Museum of Art

Monika Bartholomé, Arnulf Rainer, and Clemens Weiss Celebrated at Museum Kunst Palast

Homage to Miodrag Djuric Dado Around Three Large Triptychs at Galerie Jeanne-Bucher

Ophelia: An Exhibition of New Paintings by Antonio Murado at Von Lintel Gallery

Zapoteca and Mixteca Art Together for the First Time at the National Museum of Anthropology

Smithsonian American Art Museum Meets the Challenge for New Curator of Craft Position at its Renwick Gallery

Old Clock Gets New Spot at New York's Grand Central

Nicolas Feuillatte Selects Julien Taylor as the "Artist of the Year"




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


sports betting sites not on GamStop

Truck Accident Attorneys



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful