A black and white postcard showing the burned out remains of houses on Chihuahua Hill are shown on this 1907 photo postcard. Adobe house upper center was owned by Ella Benson, a Swedish immigrant. She was a widow with 3 daughters. The Caretto House is at the far right. Direction viewed from: Looking Southwest. The postcard is unused, and the publisher is unknown. Charles Pickerell Collection.
On June 28th 1907, a fire broke out when a gas stove exploded at the Colorado Boarding house on OK Street. Mrs. Carter, the house’s manager, alerted all the tenants who escaped unharmed. Several elements impacted the severity of the Chihuahua Hill fire, among them was wood framed buildings, gas-based stoves, bad water availability, and high winds contributed to the size and strength of the fire. The volunteer fire fighting for faced difficulty fighting the blaze. A lack of equipment prevented them from spraying the two- and three-story homes. In the attempt to evacuate caused wagon wheels to run over the fire men's hoses effecting water pressure. All of the miners working underground were brought out to help the firemen and like the great October fire of the following year, they dynamited houses to create a firebreak to help end the spread. Following the Chihuahua Hill fire, seventy-six houses were destroyed and another thirty houses were damaged which left a thousand residents homeless. Though no lives were lost, $200,000 worth of damages were caused and insurance only covered half of the expenses. Before the catastrophe a woman named Emanuel Anderson predicted the exact date and time of the fire three weeks before its occurrence.
1977.25.13