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Wooden Structures in the Downtown Business District | Fire Limits | Market Mile Audio Tour

Galveston Unscripted | Free. Texas History. For All.

English - April 23, 2022 20:00 - 1 minute - 1.17 MB
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Wooden Structures in the Downtown Business District | Fire Limits

Wooden structures such as this are scarce around the downtown area as most buildings in the downtown business district were required to be fortified against fire throughout the 1800s. While most of the Galveston‘s downtown district buildings are made of brick and cast-iron, very few remain that remind us of an old west town. When Galveston was founded in 1839 many of the buildings and homes would’ve been crude one or two room structures. Almost all of them would’ve been made from imported wood as Galveston was barren at the time. Galveston had an economic boom through the mid-1800s. Structures such as this would’ve been a typical sight until fire prevention in the city became a priority. Fires became a real problem in the central business district as they could decimate multiple blocks and severely impact the economy. In 1855 city and business leaders decided that only fireproof buildings were to be built in the central business district between 25th St. and 18th St. and from the Port to Avenue C, AKA mechanic Street. These were the initial fire limits for fireproof buildings. This meant that wood and other flammable materials were not allowed to be used when building commercial structures in the downtown area. Some buildings were grandfathered in and others had to update their buildings in order to meet the code. Brick, steel, and iron became new common materials used to build in the downtown and Port area. Galveston Fire limits expanded every few years until 1932. This may explain in part why Galveston no longer resembles an old wild west town in the downtown area. However keep an eye out there are a few wooden building still remaining.

Interested in information covered in this episode? Reference links below:
Great Fire of 1885
Galveston Burning | James Anderson
Fire insurance maps showing fire limits of downtown Galveston
Drawing of 1885 fire destruction

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