Great Stockholm Fire 1759
The Great Stockholm Fire 1759 was the city’s greatest fire after 1686. It raged in the Eastern Södermalm on Thursday July 19 and over the following night, reduced about 20 blocks with about 300 houses to ash, and made about 2000 persons homeless. While no deaths were reported, there were 19 injuries. In Sweden, the fire is named Mariabranden (Swedish brand = fire) after the Maria Magdalena Church, which was severely damaged. Outside Sweden, the fire is most famous because an occult anecdote claims the scientist and mystic Emanuel Swedenborg by a sort of clairvoyance could ”see” the fire from Gothenburg.
Before the fire
In the 18th century, fire was a serious threat to urban centers. In Northern Europe, most houses were made of wood, and often were built very close to adjoining structures. Open fires were used for cooking, heating, and light. When a fire did break out, firefighting mainly depended on bucket or pail teams, in addition to fire axes and equipment to tear downs houses for firebreakes. Like most major cities, Stockholm did not have any professional firefighters at that time. As cities expanded in the 17th and 18th centuries, fires too became more threatening, as with the Great Fire of London, the Great Fire of Copenhagen 1728, and the Great Fire of Bergen 1702.
The same was true in Sweden. During the century before 1759, Sweden had at least 30 fires which destroyed entire towns or cities. In addition, the Russians had burned down more than 20 cities or towns in the period 1714-1721, as a part of the Great Northern War. In 1751, the year before Karlstad burned for the third time since 1616, a violent fire (in Sweden named Klarabranden) had destroyed several hundred houses in Stockholm. It had started on Norrmalm (north of Södermalm) during a whole gale and grew into a firestorm. Some copper plates, glowing with heat from the fire, blew above Riddarfjärden (an arm of the sea Mälaren), at least 400 m, and set fire to buildings on Södermalm, too.[1]
The drought
In 1759, a severe drought struck Stockholm. As both buildings and vegetation dried out, the risk of fire grew. In addition, shrinking water sources (except near Mälaren.[2]) meant that any fire would be harder to fight. This drought may also have contributed to fires in the towns of Skövde and (in south-eastern Norway) Halden the same year.
The fire
At about a quarter to four o’clock in the afternoon on July 19, the fire broke out due to a fishmonger in the Besvärsbackan ("Troublesome Hill") area. High (and increasing) winds very quickly spread the fire in all directions, but especially to the west and southwest. About an hour and a half later, the Maria Magdalena Church caught fire.[3] Panic spreading among the people made the situation worse. Attempts to fight the fire were hampered by a lack of available water, and the lines bringing water from Mälaren (one of the few bodies of water not shrunk by the drought) grew longer as the fire advanced away from the sea.
Given the equipment available at the time and the difficulties in transporting water, it was probably not possible the extinguish the fire itself. As the fire crossed the major street (the Hornsgatan) in the area, firefighting efforts turned towards the construction of firebreaks well in advance of the fire's spread. Using some open areas on either side of the Hornsgatan, the firebreaks were able to halt the fire's advance, and it burned itself out early on the morning of July 20 (Friday).
After the fire
The Maria Magdalena Church was severely damaged. The tower had collapsed, and the interior was burned out. However, the people demanded that the church should be restored. It was reopened four years later, at the Pentecost of 1763. The church tower was rebuilt in 1825.[4] After the fire, the city government required construction in brick and stone. With these regulations in place, the Great Fire of 1759 was the last on such a scale to strike Stockholm.
Emanuel Swedenborg and the fire
Outside Sweden, the fire is most famous because of a story connected to the scientist and mystic Emanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772). According to an anecdote, Swedenborg could ”see” the fire during a dinner in Gothenburg with his friend William Castel. At that time, Swedenborg himself lived at Hornsgatan 43 in Stockholm. Supposedly, Swedenborg declared later in the evening that the fire was stopped three houses from his own – as it indeed was. Swedenborg’s biographer Lars Bergquist, however, writes the dinner in question took place on Sunday July 29, ten days after the fire broke out.[5] Because a courier at that time could travel from Stockholm to Gothenburg at about two days or a little more, Swedenborg could have got information about the fire without the use of any "paranormal" abilities.
References
- ↑ http://www.brandhistoriska.org/olyckor_se.html; in Swedish
- ↑ http://www.brandhistoriska.org/olyckor_se.html; in Swedish
- ↑ Carl Christoffer Gjörwell The Older to Carl Gustaf Warmholtz July 20, 1759, cited from Staffan Högberg: Stockholms historia (Albert Bonniers förlag, 1981. ISBN 91-34-59000-5), p. 412.
- ↑ http://www.stockholmskallan.se/PostFiles/SMF/SD/SSMB_0001451_01.pdf
- ↑ Bergquist 1999, p. 313.
Sources
- Lars Bergquist: Swedenborgs Hemlighet, Stockholm 1999. ISBN 91-27-06981-8 (in Swedish).