???????????FIRE ON THE
?????????????????????????????????? ??by Rick Russack????
On the night of Thursday ?June 18, 1908 all the buildings at the Summit of Mt. Washington, with the exception of the original Tip Top house, were destroyed by fire. The damage was extensive:? the Summit House Hotel, the printing office and press of “Among The Clouds”, the cottage, the stage office, the Signal Station, the train shed and a portion of Cog Railway track, were destroyed.? It would be seven years before a new Summit House would be built.
??????Ruins of the Among The Clouds Office and Printing Press
??????????????????????? ?? Douglas Philbrook Collection
The exact cause of the fire was never determined.? Railroad crews had been working that day, getting the buildings ready for the first day of the season, June 29.? It was a bright, sunny day, and the work crew descended the mountain by train at about
Apparently, the fire was first noticed by the hikers, one of whom later said that they had seen flames coming from a window of the hotel.? They entered the hotel but were unable to put out the fire.? They were unable to call down to the Base Station, as the telephone had been disconnected and four of the hikers started down the carriage road to alert men at the Glen House.
Because of the placement of the Base Station, the railroad employees were not able to see the summit, and did not know of the danger.? The first word of the fire was relayed from the nearby Fabyan House.? A number of people at the hotel, staff and guests, saw the glow on the mountain but assumed it to be sunlight.? The hotel clerk saw the flickering of the light and understood the situation.? He called Colonel Baron, manager of the hotel and he called the Base Station.? Superintendent Horne, in charge of the work crew, had a train made ready and a crew went up the mountain.? As they approached the Gulf tank, the men saw the hotel almost consumed by flames and realized they could not take the train to the summit.? They left the train near that point and when they arrived at the summit, they saw the roof of the hotel was already gone and the fire was spreading.? The train shed had been destroyed, the stage office had fallen in, and the “Among The Clouds” building was burning.? Shortly after they arrived, the Signal Station caught ??fire from embers from the train shed.? The crew from the Base Station could do nothing but watch as the fire progressed.? When the flames were seen from the Glen House, a crew started up the carriage road and met the four young hikers who were coming down to try to get help.? But nothing could be done.? By
Although the Baron family, operators of the Summit House, initially thought they could re-build in time for that season’s visitors, it was finally decided that it simply could not be done. Logic, and logistics, were such that immediate re-building was not possible. They decided to use the old Tip Top House, the only building that had survived ?the fire, for that season’s visitors. Tip Top House had not been used as hotel in many years. Work began immediately to get the building ready and by the end of July it was able to feed day visitors and accommodate overnight guests. The new Summit House was not completed until 1915
???????????????? ??New Summit House Under Construction
????????????????????? ???Douglas Philbrook Collection??????????????
?
The original Summit House was opened in 1852 Joseph Seavey Hall and Lucius Rosebrook. Building it required physical effort almost impossible to believe today. The lumber was cut at a sawmill in Jefferson and taken up to the
In 1861, the
In 1877, Henry M. Burt, began publishing Among The Clouds, the first paper to be printed on a mountain summit, using a portion of the Tip Top House. In 1884, a new building was erected for the paper. (The paper was not published at all in 1908, all it’s equipment having been destroyed in the fire. In 1909, a Special Edition was published and in 1910 regular publication resumed, but not from the
In 1878 the Stage Office was built by the owners of the
It’s likely the photographs on this page, and the photo-album linked below, were taken by Guy Shorey, a well known photographer from Gorham. Shorey was on the
The information used on this page is taken from that 1909 Special Issue of Among The Clouds and from Frederick Kilbourne’s “Chronicle of the
?? click here for additional photos of the Summit?Fire