The engines arrived on time. The water was plentiful. But the entire city burned because no one could screw a hose onto a hydrant.
In February 1904, the city of Baltimore caught fire. It was a massive blaze, but surrounding cities like Washington D.C., Philadelphia, and New York immediately dispatched their best fire engines by train to help. When the reinforcements arrived, they realized they were completely useless.
The threads on their fire hoses did not match the hydrants in Baltimore. As firefighters stood helplessly holding incompatible brass couplings, the city burned to the ground. This disaster exposed the absolute chaos of the pre-standardized industrial era, where every municipality custom-machined its own unique hardware.
This book uncovers how a completely mundane mechanical oversight led to the destruction of 140 acres of urban real estate. It details the frantic, nationwide political push to establish universal manufacturing standards that followed the ashes.
Understand the invisible rules that govern our world. Learn how the modern era of seamless technological compatibility was forged in the fires of municipal incompetence.
James M. Drapeau
Author
baltimore fire 1904 industrial standardization firefighting history urban disasters mechanical engineering standards municipal infrastructure american history