Sibley fire

The Sibley fire was a 1904 fire in Rochester, New York.

The worst conflagration in the city's history at the time, the fire broke out shortly before 5 o'clock on February 26, 1904 in the basement of the Rochester Dry Goods company's store at 1516 Main street. Hampered by bitter cold, the fire burned for 40 hours, engulfing the north side of East Main Street, spanning from St. Paul Street to just short of Clinton Avenue.[1] When finally put out, the fire had leveled between 1.5 and 1.75 acres (0.61 and 0.71 ha) and caused significant damage to the Sibley's department store (hence becoming popularly known as the "Sibley fire"). The estimated loss was about $3,000,000[2] (equivalent to over $73,000,000 in 2016 when adjusted for inflation).

Notes

  1. Ludwig 2015
  2. Governale 2011

References

Coordinates: 43°09′38″N 77°34′16″W / 43.160429°N 77.571096°W / 43.160429; -77.571096


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