AROUND four o'clock in the morning on Sunday, November 10th, 1872, artist James Wells Champney scurried to the rooftop of the Studio Building on Tremont Street in Boston's Beacon Hill. A fire had begun shortly before midnight in the nearby downtown area, and the flames were a sight to behold. With pencil and brush, Champney recorded what he saw. (Fig. 1) In a fluid wash of monotone ink, Champney captured the smoke-filled air and billowing flames while frenzied pencil strokes articulated nearby rooftops and fellow spectators. From Champney's vantage point, the conflagration threatened Old South Meeting House and the Boston Evening Transcript building on Washington Street. Firefighters managed to save Old South later that evening, but the Transcript Building became one of several hundred structures devoured by the Great Boston Fire.
Fig. 1.—
View largeDownload slide

James Wells Champney (1843–1903), Rooftop View of the Great Boston Fire, November...

You do not currently have access to this content.