City Response
SOURCES
On December 19, 1835, Mayor Lawrence and the city’s political leaders met at City Hall to request help from Washington and
the state government. Other cities, such as Philadelphia,
Boston, Baltimore and Albany, approved of New York’s
appeal to the federal government and promised assistance themselves.
Even Montreal sent $2,000 to Mayor Lawrence to help rebuild
the city. It took a while for Washington to decide to pitch
in, a controversial and unprecedented decision. [Not sure
if it was controversial because it took them a long time to
respond or because it required federal intervention in a local
disaster. Needs clarificiation.] New York State quickly authorized
a $6 million loan to the city. Plans began immediately to
rebuild the city. Since, much of New York had arisen haphazardly
from colonial times, the fire was an opportunity to alter
street locations and size. Streets were widened or remapped
before construction began. Plans were quickly made to rebuild
the Merchant’s Exchange.
During
the debate in Congress over whether to lend financial assistance
to the city, Massachusetts Congressmen suggested a rationale
for helping. He stated, “The city of New York is, far
more distinctively than any other city, the commercial emporium
of the United States. The city sustains a relation to the
Government and the country which gives her a right at all
times to claim from both the most-favorable consideration.”
The bill passed, allowing for refunds to merchants on duties
they had paid on imported goods that were destroyed in the
fire. The measure was much less than the city had hoped for
and that which the citizens of many other American cities
had supported. In effect, Washington had done little to assist
the city of New York. It would not be the last time Washington
was less than helpful to the city in times of disaster.
The
fire exacerbated already strained tensions between the firemen
and the city politicians. Harsh criticism of the performance
of the fire department followed in the wake of the Great Fire
of 1835 and resulted in the ouster of Chief Gulick. Alderman
accused the department of being improperly organized and unprofessional.
Indeed, city firemen were such popular figures that many young
boys and men unconnected to the department would appear at
fires and participate in firefighting efforts. City politicians
felt that this was counter-productive. Soon after the 1835
disaster, however, a resolution was passed by the Common Council,
which tried to prevent non-fire department personnel from
appearing and assisting at fires. The resolution placed the
burden of enforcement on the fire fighters themselves. In
an effort to assist them, the aldermen planned to hire additional
men who would make up maintenance crews whose job it would
be to keep track of equipment at the scene. Those firemen
who were assistant engineers would be paid $500 a year salary
to supervise the maintenance crews. The firemen saw this new
policy as an attempt on the part of the politicians to transform
the department from a volunteer organization in which the
firemen had a large amount of control to a paid department
that would be accountable to the politicians. (They were right.)