The Great fire viewed from the Thames with St Pauls and Tower of London visible
Listed places

5 Buildings that Survived the Great Fire of London

On 2 September 1666, a catastrophic fire began to consume the City of London within its defensive walls.

Shortly after midnight on 2 September 1666, a catastrophic fire consumed the City of London within its defensive walls.

These walls ran from Blackfriars in the west up to Moorgate in the north and round to the Tower of London in the east.

The fire raged for 5 days.

Painting of a building on fire with people carrying belongings out of it
This anonymous painting from around 1672 shows people rescuing possessions from a burning building in Ludgate, London.

…the fire rage(s) every way, and nobody in my sight endeavouring to quench it, but to remove their goods and leave all to the fire…and the wind mighty high and driving it into the city, and everything after so long a drougth, proving combustible, even the very stones of churches…

Samuel Pepys (1633 to 1703), Secretary to the Admiralty, MP, celebrated author of ‘The Diary of Samuel Pepys’ and witness to the Great Fire.

There were 10 recorded deaths, but many hundreds may have died in the extreme heat and never been found. Some 100,000 citizens were made homeless.

Illustrated map of the River Thames and City of London by Wenceslaus Hollar
A map by Wenceslaus Hollar, cartographer and engraver to King Charles II, created immediately post-fire in 1666. The white area indicates the extent of the fire.

13,200 homes were completely destroyed, along with the 500-year-old St Paul’s Cathedral, 84 out of the 109 parish churches, and many commercial and administrative buildings, including the Royal Exchange, luxury shops and 44 livery company halls. Only 20 per cent of the city remained; the rest was in ruins.

However, a handful of buildings and structures survived the inferno and are still around today.

The origins of the Great Fire of London

A narrow cobbled street with buildings either side almost touching at the top
A medieval street in Shambles, York. Many streets in the City of London at the time of the Great Fire would have looked similar to this, but paved with cobbles. © Historic England Archive. WSA01/01/04954.

Medieval London was a crowded warren of narrow streets with many timber-framed houses having upper storeys (jetties) leaning out and almost touching each other across the street.

The City was full of fire hazards. Thatch had been banned since the Great Fire of Southwark in 1212 but was still used. Citizens had candles and open fireplaces and lived in their wooden houses among trades using fire, such as foundries, glaziers and smithies, as well as alongside warehouses and cellars used for storage of highly flammable materials, such as pitch, oil, tar, alcohol, coal, sugar, tallow and gunpowder.

Drawing and map of London Bridge with houses along it and boats going under it.
A drawing from a 1682 map of Old London Bridge with its houses built on top of the structure. Pudding Lane was top left on the north bank of the River Thames, to the right of the end of the bridge. A major fire in 1632 damaged the bridge, and rebuilding left a gap between houses. This acted as a firebreak and prevented the Great Fire from leaping across to Southwark on the south bank.

The summer of 1666 was extremely hot and dry. The Great Fire started just after midnight in the early morning of Sunday, 2 September, in a bakery run by King Charles II’s baker, Thomas Farynor, in Pudding Lane just north of the old London Bridge.

The quick early spread of the fire was exacerbated by the dithering of the Lord Mayor, Thomas Bludworth. He fatally misjudged the danger of the fire and refused to follow orders from the King and allow adjoining properties to be blown up with gunpowder to create firebreaks. Demolition was then the firefighting technique for major fires. Samuel Pepys himself had urged the King to pursue this path.

The fire, fanned by strong winds from the east, rapidly spread and intensified, eventually creating a firestorm with temperatures reaching around 1,250 degrees centigrade.

Drawing of a house on fire with people using fire hooks to pull down the roof with people watching
Fire hooks were traditionally used to try and drag down timber buildings to stop a fire spreading, as pictured above in this image from 1612.

Parishes were legally required to store fire hooks, wooden ladders, axes and leather buckets in churches for emergencies, but as the fire raged out of control, such firefighting measures were futile.

The fire jumped across and along streets where the jetties of homes nearly touched. Firefighting was hampered by the narrowness of the streets, crammed with frightened citizens fleeing with their wagons and horses, hand carts and possessions.

Here are 5 buildings that survived the Great Fire of London.

1. St Alphage London Wall

A tall roman wall
A section of wall that originally formed part of a Roman fort built in the second century. It subsequently was incorporated into the City Wall. The wall, which survived the Great Fire along with other sections, shows evidence of much repair over the centuries.. Source: Jane Sidell.

Defensive walls enclosed the City up to 6 metres high, which risked trapping people within the fire zone. There was chaos and panic as homeless Londoners tried to get out through the seven main gateways – Aldgate, Bishopsgate, Moorgate, Cripplegate, Aldersgate, Newgate, Ludgate – to reach the open fields to the north of the city.

Here they set up makeshift shelters. Escape by boat on the River Thames to the south was quickly made impossible by the fire-consuming warehouses along the wharves of the river.

Rumours spread that foreigners were to blame for the fire, especially French and Dutch – Britain’s enemies. Immigrant groups were targeted. There was mob violence and lynchings. Foreigners and Catholics were rounded up.

2. St Dunstan’s-in-the-East Church

Benches line the ruins of a church, with overgrown trees.
Pictured today, the ruins of St-Dunstan’s-in-the-East on St Dunstan’s Hill. Listed Grade I. Source: Creative Commons.

On the second day, Monday, 3 September, the Great Fire reached St Dunstan’s-in-the-East – just to the east of Pudding Lane. Determined to help, John Dolben, Dean of Westminster Abbey (1662 to 1683), summoned a group of scholars from the Abbey’s Westminster School, marching at their head to the church and tasking them with saving the building and nearby houses.

They worked together for hours using hand-over-hand buckets of water, eventually bringing the fire under control.

The church was severely damaged but not destroyed. It was repaired rather than rebuilt. Then, between 1695 and 1701, architect Sir Christopher Wren (see later) added a tower and spire in the original Gothic style.

The church was badly damaged again during the Blitz of the Second World War (7 September 1940 to 11 May 1941), with only the tower and steeple surviving. In 1971, the City of London turned the ruins into a public garden.

3. The Guidhall

The facade of the Guildhall, an extravagant buidling with spires
The Guildhall, Basinghall Street. Listed Grade I. © Jerry Young.

The Great Fire was essentially halted to the south of the City by the River Thames, but flames started to spread northwards early on 3 September into the commercial and financial heart of the City, damaging or destroying properties including the vast open-air trading piazza, the Royal Exchange, as well as affluent houses and fashionable shops in Lombard Street and Cheapside.

Also in the path of the fire was the Guildhall, just north of Cheapside, built in the early 15th century as the administrative and ceremonial centre of the City of London, still its function today. The flames took hold, causing devastation, including the destruction of the medieval roof’s open timberwork. The building was restored four years later, in 1670.

An underground room with columns and a white ceiling.
The undercoft, Guildhall, today. Following restoration in 1851, Queen Victoria was served a banquet here in the July. Source: Creative Commons.

The Guildhall undercroft, dating from 1411– one of the most spectacular and extensive in London – withstood the inferno. Its clustered columns and stone-ribbed vaulting extend half the length of the Guildhall.

4. Merchants Taylors’ Hall

Undercroft with stone arches and a doorway leading to a flight of stairs.
The undercroft beneath the Merchant Taylors’ Hall, Threadneedle Street. The Hall is listed Grade II*. The Merchant Taylors are one of the City of London’s 12 most ancient livery companies. © Historic England Archive. DD002872.
A commercial kitchen with metal counters and surfaces. Food is being prepared.
The Merchant Taylors’ Hall’s double-height kitchen photographed in 1986. © Historic England Archive. DD002848.

On nearby Threadneedle Street, the Hall of the Merchant Taylors’ Company – established as a social and religious fraternity of tailors and linen-armourers (padded clothes worn beneath armour) – had occupied the same site since 1347.

The Hall, built in 1400, was burnt out by the Great Fire, with only its ancient walls and foundations remaining. It was restored, only to become another victim of the Blitz. Splendidly restored again post-war, it still has a 14th-century undercroft under the Beadle’s office and original medieval walls, both in the double-height kitchens (built in the 1420s) and concealed behind mahogany panelling in the dining hall.

Drawing of Old St Paul's cathedral on fire.
17th century drawing of Old St Paul’s cathedral on fire by Wenceslaus Hollar. Source: Public Domain.

Also, on 3 September, as the fire raged out of control, the King overrode the City authorities and took emergency action. He had put his brother, James Duke of York, in charge (the future King James II: 1685 to 1688), who set up eight firefighting command posts around the City, each manned by soldiers and volunteers.

They pulled down and blew up buildings in the fire’s path. But the fire outflanked them at every turn. It was at its most intense and widely destructive on Tuesday, 4 September, spreading from west to east. The King rode through the City, urging Londoners to fight the inferno.

In the evening, the fire reached Old St Paul’s, thought to be a safe place because of its massive stone walls. It was full of rescued goods and stock from nearby booksellers and printers in Paternoster Row, the heart of the City’s publishing trade. But the cathedral was undergoing renovation by Sir Christopher Wren and was covered with wooden scaffolding, which soon caught fire.

The stonework cracked and exploded in the heat. The huge lead roof melted in hot streams, flowing down onto the streets. The building was destroyed.

5. All Hallows-by-the-Tower

A church with a green spire
All Hallows-by-the-Tower, Byward Street, pictured today (also known as All Hallows Barking). The original church was founded by the Abbey of Barking in 7th century. It was remodelled in the 19th century and bombed during the Blitz, leading to extensive rebuilding. Source: Public Domain.

The Great Fire, moving eastwards, also reached All Hallows on Tuesday 4. The church survived because Admiral William Penn, Pepys’ neighbour in Seething Lane near the church, ordered his men from the nearby naval shipyard to blow up surrounding properties.

Pepys wrote: ‘…(the fire) having only burnt the Dyall (sundial) of Barkeing Church, and part of the porch, and was there quenched.’

A drawing of the Tower of London from the south bank, with boats in the river infront.
View of the Tower of London from the south bank. Engraving by Nathanial Buck 1737. Source: Public Domain.

Just east of All Hallows was the Tower of London which held vast stocks of gunpowder. The fire, advancing fast, was only 300 yards away. The garrison there – who had been waiting all day in vain for help from the Duke of York’s firemen – blew up houses in Tower Street to create firebreaks, managing to halt the fire’s progress.

Oil painting of Samuel Pepys, a man with long brown hair wearing a brown coat and holding a sheet of music.
Oil painting of Samuel Pepys by John Hayls, 1666. Source: Public Domain.

Samuel Pepys wrote in his diary:

I after supper walked in the dark down to Tower-street and saw it all on fire…with extraordinary vehemence.  Now begins the practice of blowing up the houses of Tower-street, those next to the Tower, which at first did frighten people but it stopped the fire where it was done…

An extract from ‘The Diary of Samuel Pepys’.

By Wednesday, 5 September, most fires had been put out. The wind had finally dropped. The firebreaks were working. There were just sporadic outbreaks, including on the western edge of the fire area at Temple and Shoe Lane.

Drawing of the Royal Exchange, a square with collanades.
The Royal Exchange, illustrated pre-Great Fire by Wenceslaus Hollar, showing its colonnades and the statues of all the monarchs since William the Conqueror. Source: Public Domain.

Pepys went to view the devastation. He wrote in his diary:

I walked into the town and find Fanchurch-street, Gracious-street and Lumbard-street all in dust. The (Royal) Exchange a sad sight, nothing standing there of all the statues or pillars…Walked into Moor-fields (our feet ready to burn walking…among the hot coles)….and find that full of poor wretches…carrying their goods…Thence homeward, having passed through Cheapside and Newgate-market, all burned…

An extract from ‘The Diary of Samuel Pepys’.

On Thursday, 6 September, the last fire broke out at dawn at Bishopsgate but was suppressed. The Great Fire, which had ravaged the City of London for five days, was finally over.

Aftermath

Drawing of the ruins of St Paul's Cathedral
The ruins of Old St Paul’s cathedral by Thomas Wyck, circa 1673. Source: Public Domain.

At the end of September 1666, a Parliamentary committee determined that the fire had been an act of god and not resulting from a foreign conspiracy. The Rebuilding of London Act of 1667 brought in new regulations, such as banning jetties, imposing a maximum number of storeys and decreeing that buildings should be constructed of brick or stone.

A Fire Court was established to settle disputes between landlords and tenants of burnt buildings. The authorities also introduced fire prevention rules, including dividing the City into four, each section having 800 leather buckets, 50 ladders, 24 pickaxes and 40 shovels for future firefighting.

Sir Christopher Wren’s map of the new London.
Sir Christopher Wren’s vision for radically reconstructing the City, drawn up a week after the Great Fire and presented to the King. It included wide avenues and piazzas. Top left is an image of a phoenix suggesting renewal and rebirth. Source: Public Domain.

The King ordered the submission of rebuilding schemes. Many were put forward, including by Sir Christopher Wren (1632 to 1723). Most dispensed with the medieval street plan, replacing it with a grid pattern. These schemes were all deemed prohibitively expensive and impractical in negotiating land.

In addition, there was a labour shortage, and the priority was to rebuild homes quickly. Despite this, many homeless Londoners either lived and worked miserably for years in shanty towns in poor outlying areas, such as Smithfield and Moorfields, waiting to rebuild their homes, or left the City for the countryside.

The fire area was rebuilt within ten years, including most of the Livery Halls. The rebuilding generally followed the same medieval street pattern as before, which broadly survives today.

Wren’s architectural masterpiece, the new St Paul’s cathedral (Listed Grade I), was completed in 1710 after nine years of planning. He was also responsible, along with Robert Hooke, Surveyor to the City of London, for designing and rebuilding 51 of the 84 parish churches lost to the fire.

Commemorating the Great Fire of London

The Monument is a tall white doric column topped with a gilded urn of fire, surrounded by buildings.
The Monument, Fish Street Hill, London. This Doric column of Portland stone – with an internal spiral staircase of 311 steps up to a viewing platform and surmounted by a symbolically flaming urn of gilt bronze – was built between 1671 to 1677 by Wren and Hooke. It is on the site of the first church to be destroyed by the Great Fire – St Margaret. Listed Grade I. © Jerry Young.

By the King’s decree, a monument to the Great Fire was erected near Pudding Lane. It stands 202 foot high. Laid on end from its site, it would reach where the fire started in Thomas Farynor’s bakery.

The original plaque, blaming Catholics and the Pope for the Great Fire, was removed in 1830 following legislation outlawing discrimination against Catholics.

Small gold statue of a young boy on a plinth on a white building. The inscription: This boy is in memory put up for the late Fire of London occasioned by the Sin of Gluttony, 1666.’ is below him.
The carved and painted Golden Boy of Pye Corner can be found at the junction of Giltspur Street and Cock Lane, Smithfield. The boy formerly had an inscription on his breast and arms: ‘This boy is in memory put up for the late Fire of London occasioned by the Sin of Gluttony, 1666.’ Listed Grade II. © Jerry Young.

This figure marks the spot where the inferno of the Great Fire of London ended to the west. It was believed by some then that the fire was a Catholic conspiracy and by others that it was God’s punishment for the sin of gluttony.

The latter is inferred by further historic words inscribed on a panel of modern stonework on the site explaining that the boy was made ‘…prodigiously fat to enforce the moral….’

Written by Nicky Hughes


Further reading

6 comments on “5 Buildings that Survived the Great Fire of London

  1. Jennifer Ledfors

    St Dunstan’s-in-the-East Church does not have any medieval fabric surviving. Please see 2015 LAMAS article, p. 55, http://www.lamas.org.uk/images/documents/Transactions66/047-078%20St%20Dunstan%20Church.pdf

  2. David Dodd

    That was a prodigious feat to have rebuilt most of the destroyed buildings after just ten years; it would be interesting to see any drawings/depictions of that scene ten years after the fire.

  3. Alan Crosby

    ‘The undercoft, Guildhall, today. Following restoration in 1851, Queen Victoria was served a banquet here in the July. Image via Creative Commons’ …. it would be interesting to know exactly how Queen Victoria was restored in 1851!

  4. VirginiaLB

    Very interesting account and great photos but why is the name of God not capitalized? Very curious.

  5. Is there any way I can get a printed copy of this excellent article? I’d like to take it with me when I next go to London. I am more than willing to pay.

  6. Fascinating. And being able to enlarge the illustrations on my large 70mm desktop screen made it quite exceptionally interesting, particularly the maps.
    Elswhere in the letter, being able to zoom into the famous engraving of the execution of Charles 1 was amazing – onlookers even on the roof! While in the for-ground a woman fainting and a man weeping at the horrific sight.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from The Historic England Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading