REBUILT FACTORY ON SAME SITE. |
Cortland
Evening Standard, Wednesday,
April 8, 1896.
DISASTROUS FIRE.
THE CORTLAND FORGING CO.'S PLANT
DESTROYED.
Loss $80,000—Insurance $42,000—Many
Men Out of Employment—
Bad Night’s Work.
Cortland
last night received another bad blow in the almost total destruction by fire of
the large plant of the Cortland Forging Co. situated in the eastern part of the
village on the Lehigh Valley railroad. This concern formed one of the chief
industries of the town. It was started six years ago as a partnership by David
F. Wallace, J. Hub Wallace and Curtis L. Kinney. Its business was the manufacture
of carriage rails, bow sockets and joints. It has grown steadily each year from
the beginning. New buildings have been constructed, additional machinery put in
and more men employed until now it was the largest factory of its kind in the United
States. It had a capacity of one thousand complete sets of rails, sockets and
joints per day. During the fall and winter it has regularly been necessary to
run day and night, and it was only a few weeks ago that the night force was
dispensed with for this year. About 120 men were employed yesterday though in
the best season of the year the number was nearly 160.
Last summer
the concern was changed into a stock company with a capital of $100,000. More
new machinery was put in and the prospects were never brighter for business
than yesterday. The officers of the company were [sic]:
President—D.
F. Wallace.
Secretary—C.
L. Kinney.
Treasurer—J.
H. Wallace.
The company
has never missed a pay day since it began operations six years ago and was
recognized on all sides as one of the most substantial concerns in business.
At 6
o'clock last night the employees left the works as usual. Night watchman J. D.
Brown was on duty. Following his usual custom he went through the entire plant
closing up and locking doors. He had been to the office and locked the front
door and at 6:20 o'clock came into the forgingroom, which was the third room
back from the front and was 75 by 45 feet in size. Near the extreme back or
west end he was startled at seeing flames in the roof just over the oil pump.
He dashed through this room at full speed to the engineroom and pulled the big
whistle. The whistle of the Forging Works has long been recognized as one of
the heaviest in Cortland and has a peculiar gruff quality entirely different
from any other of the score or more whistles that are daily heard from every
quarter of the town.
The
terrible unearthly shriek of distress which this whistle gave last night was
heard for miles. Coming as it did too at an unusual time and one always very quiet
when people are at supper and all the factories still, it roused almost the
entire population of the town. It sent the engineer of the works, Melvin
Wright, who lives across the street, flying over to see what was the trouble.
As he ran into forging room and saw the incipient blaze [and] he called out to
the watchman, "I can soon stop that." He rushed to a standpipe close at
hand which had hose all attached and coiled up, and turned on the city water
and directed his hose toward the flame. There was one rush of water through the
hose which lasted for fifteen seconds or so and then it stopped, and no effort
on his part could get another drop. Throwing this down he ran into the
engineroom and started the pumps and attached a hose to them. In from three to
five minutes he had a stream here, but that delay was fatal. The roof was as
dry as tinder and the flames spread with astonishing rapidity and in a very few
minutes he and the small army of helpers who had arrived was driven from the
room.
The whistle
was heard at the engine house and at the same moment a telephone message came
in there from some place locating the fire and F. A. Bickford rung a general
alarm upon the fire bell. The department responded promptly and in a very few
minutes all the companies were on their way to the fire. It was a long run,
nearly a mile. The engine drawn by a big team struggled through the mud, but
did not arrive until long after the hose companies were all at work attached to
nearby hydrants.
Hitchcock
hose was the first on the scene and attached to a hydrant near the southwest
corner of the works. The other companies all arrived at about the same time.
Water Witch first attached to a hydrant on Elm St., but the hose wouldn't reach
and it came over and coupled to the same hydrant with Hitchcock. Orris and
Emerald each ran a line of hose from the hydrant near the southeast corner of
the japan [lacquer] room. The water works were only extended two years ago from Elm-st. over
to the Forging company's plant and these two hydrants which are the last on the
line in that direction were put in then.
By the time
the water was on the entire south end of the plant was in flames. The office was
at the north end and before the fire reached that, willing hands had cleared out
all the desks and other furniture. The small safe was tumbled out and rolled
away. Nearly all the valuable books and papers
in the big vault had been taken out when there was a cry that the roof was all
on fire over the office and was about to fall and the rescuing party was urged
to come out at once. Then the big doors of the vault were shut together, the
lock was turned and the rest of the valuables were left to their fate. It is
believed that they will come out all right.
Two cars,
one loaded and one unloaded, were standing on the two private switches of the
Lehigh Valley in the yard, and a switch engine was sent hustling over from the
station to remove them which was accomplished safely.
An attempt
was made at first to save the huge storehouse which stood at the northeast
corner of the works, and a stream of water was turned on it, but the wind was
blowing directly toward this, and in a very few minutes the entire building was
wrapped in flames.
The
department then determined to try to save the japan building which stood
at the extreme south end of the plant and which was separated by a narrow alley
way from the burning forging room and welding rooms. Hitchcock hose sent their
pipemen upon the roof of the japan building on the west side and the Emeralds
took a similar position on the east side, while Water Witch played from the
ground on the west side, and Orris from the ground on the east side. A crowd of
men was engaged in rolling out barrels of japan, naphtha and other inflammables
from the japan building and saving other property stored there. The north side of
that building was several times on fire, but the pipemen on the ground kept it
wet down, while those on the roof [kept] the flames fought back in the adjacent
burning building.
The flames
rolled high in the air lighting up the whole sky. It was broad daylight when the
fire began, but as the twilight and finally darkness came on the scene was a
grand, but awful one. The smoke was terrific and the volume of sparks immense.
Several times shingle roofs of dwelling houses on East Garfield-st. were on
fire, but bucket brigades passed water to men on the roofs and the flames were
extinguished.
The crowd
of people that surrounded the fire on all sides was something wonderful. It was
estimated to be in the thousands. They came from all over Cortland, from Homer
and McGrawville, but the people had to keep far back, for it was a terribly hot
fire. The pipemen of the two companies on the roof nearly blistered their
faces, but every few minutes their associates on the ground would turn their hose
for a momentary dash of water over them to cool them off. A tall pole of the long
distance telephone company across the railroad track from the fire stood up in
its lofty height blazing from ground to cap. The railroad trestle for the
unloading of coal at the works was several times on fire, but the Water Witch
boys who were working near it put out the blaze as often as it started.
At last it
became evident that the firemen were bound to succeed in their efforts to hold
the fire back from the japanroom. The hook and ladder boys began pulling down
the timbers of the building nearest the japan building with their pike poles
and hooks as soon as the fire was sufficiently subdued so that they could get
near enough. And as each timber fell the heat diminished. Within two hours from
the time the fire broke out the entire plant except the japan building and a
little stable west of it was entirely burned down, though the fire continued to
burn for many hours afterward and the firemen continued to play water upon the
embers till long into the night.
The loss is
estimated by Mr. D. F. Wallace, the president of the company, at about $80,000.
Of this nearly half is on the stock on hand, the balance being on buildings,
machinery and patterns. Many of the machines are very intricate and were built
especially for this plant.
The entire
insurance carried by the company was $42,000. It was all placed with local
agents and in the following companies: North British and Mercantile $3,000;
Northern $2,000; Philadelphia Underwriters $2,000; North America $1,000; New
Hampshire $1,000; Aetna $2,000;
Hartford $2,500; Phoenix $2,500; National $2,500; German American $2,500;
London, Liverpool and Globe $2,500; Royal $2,500; Phoenix of London $3,000;
Westchester $1,500; Girard $1,500; Germania $2,000; Commercial Union $3,000;
Pennsylvania $1,500; American New York $1,500; Commercial Union $1,000; Long
Island $1,000.
Of this
$42,000 there was an insurance of $1,000 on the japanroom and its contents
which was not destroyed, consequently $41,000 is available.
There was
in addition an insurance of $500 held by James Higgins on some property which he
had there and which the Forging company was manufacturing for him. The Thompson
Electric Welding Co. also had a policy of $400 on an armature owned by them
which was stored there in the building ready for use by the company if they
should ever have an accident to the armature in use.
Many of the
men lost valuable tools which were not insured. The loss will fall heavily on
the men chiefly from being thrown out of work. The company have not yet decided
whether or not they will rebuild, but they will probably do so, as all have
their homes here. Still it is too early to tell positively. The Forging company
is one of the most highly valued manufacturing concerns in Cortland and the
owners have the sympathy of all in their loss.
One
question which created a great deal of wonder last night and which has caused
much discussion to-day was why the water stopped in the hose in the hands of
Engineer Wright last night. It also appeared that two of the hose companies found
small gravel stones in their nozzles. At the outset last night Orris hose tried
to use its ball nozzle so as to walk right up on the fire, but this clogged up
so that they had to change it for the regular one. Twice after that they had to
unscrew their nozzle and in each case they removed small gravel stones which
had choked the flow of water. Emerald hose, which was attached to the same
hydrant, had the same experience three times. Water Witch and Hitchcock had no
trouble whatever.
A STANDARD man to-day called upon Superintendent
B. F. Taylor of the
Water works company and inquired if he had any
explanation to offer to the matter. Mr. Taylor said that he had not. He was
completely puzzled. The hydrants are never permitted to be opened except by
firemen at a fire or by the water works people to test them. Last fall the
hydrants were used by the sewer people when the sewers were put down and he
suspected that some boys might have thrown stones in them at the time, and
still he could not see how the effect should have been felt at this time, as the
hydrants had all been flushed since that time. It is the custom of the Water
Works company to test and flush each hydrant every spring and fall. There is no
chance for stones to get in the pipes at the springs as all water has to pass
through two fine wire screens.
In respect
to the stoppage of the water in the building in the engineers' hose Mr. Taylor
could not see how there could be any other explanation for this than that the
water was shut off somewhere in the works, either at the stand pipe or at the meter.
A stone could never get through the meter any way to get into the hose. Mr.
Taylor thought that the water might have been shut out of the pipes to keep
them from freezing and not have been turned on since. Pressure of air would
cause such a squirt of water as was noted. If this was not true—and he did not
charge that it was, because he didn't know—he was sure he could afford no other
explanation for it.
The STANDARD
man then sought Mr. D. F. Wallace again. This gentleman was emphatic that the
water was not shut off at the works [plant]. It had not been shut off for cold
nights in several weeks. All the stand pipes had been tested within a week and all
worked perfectly. He knew there was no difficulty of that kind. He
apprehended that the cause of the stoppage of the water was a stone in the
pipe. He agreed with Mr. Taylor that no stone could get through the meter, but he thought it must be behind the meter. He said boys had been seen throwing
stones into the tank on Prospect hill and he believed this was the explanation
of it. He thought the stones had been sucked in the pipes and had followed them
along until they clogged last night in the [hydrant].
The buildings
occupied a very considerable amount of space on the ground. Additions had been made
to them from time to time. The machine room was 35 by 40 feet in size. The
welding room was 35 by 40 feet; the
forging room was 45 by 75 feet; the office was 25 by 30 feet; the shipping room
was 30 by 35 feet; finishing and shipping room was 35 by 80 feet; the foundry
was 50 by feet; the welding room was 50 by [?] feet; the polishing room was 25
by [?] feet; the emery room was 15 by 30 feet; the storehouse was 20 by 60
feet, these were on the first floor and all this was burned. Part of the building
were [sic] only one story high, but the [most] of them were two stories.
There were
four large ovens in japan room which was saved and [which] is not mentioned
among the rooms burned. The large boiler which [was] put in new last summer and
which [was] one of the finest in town it is believed will prove to be all
right. The engineer with wise foresight when he saw that the building was to be
burned filled his boiler with cold water so [that] it would not be harmed.
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