<p>In this episode of the Yore Town Podcast, Beard Laws and Megh discuss the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904, which was a catastrophic event that reshaped the city and changed fire safety regulations. The fire started in the basement of the Hearst building and quickly spread, destroying over 1500 buildings and causing around $100 million in damages. The lack of standardized firefighting equipment and outdated infrastructure contributed to the fire's intensity and duration. However, the tragedy led to improvements in urban planning, fire safety regulations, and the standardization of hydrants nationwide. The fire had a lasting impact on Baltimore and became a case study for managing large-scale disasters.</p><br><p>Episode Key Points</p><p>The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 was a catastrophic event that reshaped the city and changed fire safety regulations.</p><p>The fire started in the basement of the Hearst building and quickly spread, destroying over 1500 buildings and causing around $100 million in damages.</p><p>The lack of standardized firefighting equipment and outdated infrastructure contributed to the fire's intensity and duration.</p><p>The tragedy led to improvements in urban planning, fire safety regulations, and the standardization of hydrants nationwide.</p><p>The Great Baltimore Fire became a case study for managing large-scale disasters.</p><br><p>Episode Quotes</p><p>"Once it hits the lips, it's so good."</p><p>"The fire, Meg, was believed to have been started by a discarded cigarette or a cigar in the basement of the Hearst building."</p><p>"They telegraph other cities. Again, this was at 1038. It's now 1 30 p .m. The units from Washington, D .C. started to arrive on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad at Camden Street Station."</p><br><p>Check out all the podcast on the Beard Laws Studio: https://beardlawsstudio.com</p><br><p>Check out the interactive map at https://yoretown.com</p><br><p>Yore Town Podcast is a podcast that features your towns dark, wild, unbelievable past that has you thinking no way that really happened here. Matt and Megh dust off the books,  hit the streets and an occasional  nursing home to unveil Yore Town’s past. From small towns to where we live to big cities before they were what they are today. This is Yore Town, Yore Stories</p><br /><hr><p style='color:grey; font-size:0.75em;'> Hosted on Acast. See <a style='color:grey;' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer' href='https://acast.com/privacy'>acast.com/privacy</a> for more information.</p>

Yore Town

Beard Laws Studio

The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904: A Catastrophic Event | Yore Town Podcast EP. 75

SEP 9, 202417 MIN
Yore Town

The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904: A Catastrophic Event | Yore Town Podcast EP. 75

SEP 9, 202417 MIN

Description

<p>In this episode of the Yore Town Podcast, Beard Laws and Megh discuss the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904, which was a catastrophic event that reshaped the city and changed fire safety regulations. The fire started in the basement of the Hearst building and quickly spread, destroying over 1500 buildings and causing around $100 million in damages. The lack of standardized firefighting equipment and outdated infrastructure contributed to the fire's intensity and duration. However, the tragedy led to improvements in urban planning, fire safety regulations, and the standardization of hydrants nationwide. The fire had a lasting impact on Baltimore and became a case study for managing large-scale disasters.</p><br><p>Episode Key Points</p><p>The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 was a catastrophic event that reshaped the city and changed fire safety regulations.</p><p>The fire started in the basement of the Hearst building and quickly spread, destroying over 1500 buildings and causing around $100 million in damages.</p><p>The lack of standardized firefighting equipment and outdated infrastructure contributed to the fire's intensity and duration.</p><p>The tragedy led to improvements in urban planning, fire safety regulations, and the standardization of hydrants nationwide.</p><p>The Great Baltimore Fire became a case study for managing large-scale disasters.</p><br><p>Episode Quotes</p><p>"Once it hits the lips, it's so good."</p><p>"The fire, Meg, was believed to have been started by a discarded cigarette or a cigar in the basement of the Hearst building."</p><p>"They telegraph other cities. Again, this was at 1038. It's now 1 30 p .m. The units from Washington, D .C. started to arrive on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad at Camden Street Station."</p><br><p>Check out all the podcast on the Beard Laws Studio: https://beardlawsstudio.com</p><br><p>Check out the interactive map at https://yoretown.com</p><br><p>Yore Town Podcast is a podcast that features your towns dark, wild, unbelievable past that has you thinking no way that really happened here. Matt and Megh dust off the books, hit the streets and an occasional nursing home to unveil Yore Town’s past. From small towns to where we live to big cities before they were what they are today. This is Yore Town, Yore Stories</p><br /><hr><p style='color:grey; font-size:0.75em;'> Hosted on Acast. See <a style='color:grey;' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer' href='https://acast.com/privacy'>acast.com/privacy</a> for more information.</p>