Friday, January 10, 2020

Friday, 1/10


I'm not trying to use this as an excuse, but I have (in no particular order) a sick morning person, a TV show to shoot, and a History Center TV thing to do, so I'm gonna take the cheap, easy way out and repurpose an article I wrote for the Mining Journal this week.

However, it has bonus pictures—a shot or two that didn't appear in the print edition. So maybe it's really NOT the cheap, easy way out.

You're welcome.

8-)

Have a great weekend,


*****

An historic Marquette sandstone building met its end by fire fifty five years ago this past Sunday, a few days after the new year of 1965. A crowd estimated by one observer at almost 1,000 people gathered to watch the structure burn.

Some even brought a picnic lunch.

The First Baptist Church, which called the southwest corner of Front & Ridge home for over 100 years, was at its beginning a small wooden building. John Burt donated the land for that first church, which was dedicated on July 13th, 1863.

Because of its (at the time) remote location on the very northern edge of Marquette, the building survived the fire of 1868, although the church offices, which were located on Washington Street, did not.

First Baptist Church is the one on the right.  Photo State of Michigan Historical Archives
As the city grew so did membership in the church and construction was started on a much bigger sandstone building in 1884. When it was finished, it held 700 people, and had as its centerpiece a Hook & Hastings steam powered organ, one of the first in the state of Michigan. The organ was donated by Burt and W.S. Westlake.

The organ was the heart of the church, even if wasn't always the most reliable piece of equipment. In a Mining Journal article on the history of the congregation members fondly recalled that they would be in the midst of singing a hymn and the organ would suddenly quit working, either because the steam that powered the organ ran out or the water pressure on top of Front Street hill fell to too low of a level.

Despite all that, the organ was still the pride & joy of church members.

Photo courtesy Marquette Regional History Center


The church served its congregation for 80 years, although by the 1950s the building was starting to show its age. The organ no longer functioned properly, while heating the structure during the winter was problematic, as well. In fact, as officials later discovered, the fire that destroyed the building started due to an overheated smoke pipe leading from the church's coal-burning furnace.

At 2:53 on the afternoon of January 5th, 1965 the Marquette Fire Department received a call from the Northland Hotel next door that the church was on fire. Several trucks showed up just minutes later, but by then the fire quickly spread. The Marquette city fire department didn't have enough manpower to battle the blaze, so additional units were called in from the Marquette Branch Prison and KI Sawyer Air Force Base. In the end, over 40 firefighters were on scene.

Photo Marquette Regional History Center
As word spread of the fire, a large crowd of area residents gathered to watch the blaze and the firefighting efforts. One Marquette fire department official estimated that “hundreds” of residents watched from the steps of the Peter White Public Library or from the safety of West Ridge Street Another estimate, from the Marquette City Police, has the crowd of onlookers at 1,000. The Alpha Phi Omega fraternity from NMU was even brought in to keep the crowd of onlookers under control.

And despite the fact that it was early January, that didn't stop the onlookers from making a day out of it. Several people who were there that day in person recall stopping by downtown restaurants before making their way to the blaze, so they would have sandwiches and coffee for sustenance while watching the action.

Close to 6 pm that evening the fire was eventually brought under control, mostly because what could burn had, although firefighters were on the scene until 830 that evening. Thankfully, the wind was blowing from the south that day. If it had been blowing from the north, there was a real danger that the flames would have jumped over to the Northland Hotel.

Loss of the structure and its contents, including the organ, was estimated at $400,000 (over 3.2 million dollars in today's money). The church's insurance only covered 20% of the loss.

The structure sat on the corner, in its half-razed state, for over a year. What was left of the building, mostly the sandstone walls, was razed on June 7th, 1966. Don Britton Construction, which performed the demolition, then sold some of the sandstone from the old church. The rest was tossed in the landfill.

Members of the church had by then embarked on a campaign to raise funds for a new facility, which was eventually opened in 1967 on the corner of Fair and Eighth Streets in Marquette, right across from NMU. That building is still in use today.

The land on which the church once sat is now one of the parking lots for the Landmark Inn.




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