Harbaugh Palace Livery Stable Fire

Name/Title

Harbaugh Palace Livery Stable Fire

Entry/Object ID

1954.311.055

Description

Print, photographic. B/W panoramic photograph of the Harbaugh Palace Livery Stable fire, 6 April 1906. Mounted on black board. Written on back: "Smouldering ruins - fire of Palace Livery April 6th, 1906."

Acquisition

Accession

1954.311

Source or Donor

Jordan, Joshua Leland

Acquisition Method

Gift

General Notes

Note

Henry H. Harbaugh’s business—the Palace Livery Stable—and home were next door to the Westminster firehouse on East Main Street. A fire of unknown origin erupted there on April 6, 1906. The blaze was reported just before 3:00 a.m. by a pedestrian on Green Street. The fire began at the back of the building and swept through the frame structure so rapidly that Harbaugh, his wife, and their three sons barely escaped, fleeing the building barefoot and in their nightclothes. Harbaugh’s losses amounted to over $18,000 and included 45 vehicles, harness, household goods and furniture, clothing, and 22 horses. The intense heat of the fire ignited the window frames of the firehouse and eventually spread to the interior of that building. The firehouse was saved but suffered extensive damage to the department’s meeting room, banquet room, and library. Also damaged were the city council chamber and clerk’s office that were located in the building. Burning embers carried on the wind to the roofs of nearby houses and residents used hoses and buckets to extinguish them and keep the fire from spreading. The firehouse was repaired and Harbaugh rebuilt, this time a fireproof building.