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Dormitory destroyed by fire in 1914. |
Note: This is part two in a series on known deaths at the former Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida. The focus is on probable burials at the school's "Boot Hill" cemetery. Please click here to read Part One of this series.
Death at Dozier School
A History of “Boot Hill Cemetery” at the former Dozier School for Boys in
Marianna, Florida
by Dale Cox
Part Two:
The 1914 Fire
The
deadliest single day in the history of the facility later known as Dozier
School for Boys was November 18, 1914. Ninety-nine years ago this
month, a fire erupted in the “white” dormitory of the school, burning it to the
ground and killing seven students and two employees.
The year
1914 was a momentous one in history. An estimated 1,047 people died when the
barely-remembered RMS Empress of Ireland
went down after colliding with another vessel in the St. Lawrence River, just
two years after the legendary RMS Titanic
had carried 1,500 to the bottom. Central America witnessed the passage of the first vessel
passed through the now famous Panama Canal.
In Sarajevo, a Serbian nationalist assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand
of Austria, sparking World War I, while in Siberia an attempt to assassinate
the brutal Rasputin failed. In the United States, Babe Ruth played
in his first major league baseball game, Charlie Chaplin appeared in the first
feature-length silent film comedy, Ford Motor Company introduced the 8-hour
workday and the Federal Reserve Bank opened for business.
In Jackson
County, an unexplained series of fires continued on the campus of the Florida
Industrial School for Boys (future Dozier School) in Marianna.
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Building identical to burned dormitory (at right, notice the tower) Florida State Archives, Florida Memory Collection |
These fires
took place with alarming frequency over the first 14 years of the school’s
operation. One in February 1906 had killed six mules and three horses and destroyed corn, hay and 32 barrels of syrup. The cause was arson and the
suggestion was raised that former guards had been responsible. “It is supposed
that the barn was set on fire to spite the superintendent,” reported the
Pensacola Journal, “as several guards have been discharged for various reasons.” Tracking dogs brought to the scene,
however, failed to detect the trail of the perpetrator.
[i]
The fires
continued over the next five years with growing frequency and on January 25,
1911, a new brick barn burned to the ground with almost disastrous
consequences:
That the school’s loss is not greater is
miraculous, as the dormitory for colored inmates is within fifty to
seventy-five feet of the barn. None of the livestock or farming implements were
lost. This will badly cripple the school as all of the supplies of this kind
[i.e. hay and cattle feed] were in this one barn.[ii]
The outbreak
of a fire described as “spectacular and fierce” so close to one of the school’s
two dormitories alarmed employees, authorities and reporters alike. Damage was
estimated at $10,000, a massive figure in that day and age, with 1,000 bales of
hay and several tons of cattle feet being destroyed, along with a supposedly
“fireproof” barn.
[iii]
Newspaper
clippings indicate additional fires took place over the next three years,
although none resulted in destruction on the scale of the 1911 blaze. All were
blamed on an “incendiary” or arsonist.
[iv]
The
escalating series of fires came to a dramatic end in the predawn darkness of
November 18, 1914:
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Closeup of building identical to burned dormitory. The superintendent and older boys escaped through the tower. Florida State Archives, Florida Memory Collection |
W.H. Bell, acting superintendent, has just
wired from Marianna that main building white school was destroyed by fire last
night, and eight boys and two officers dead. Please call meeting of Board of
Managers with least possible delay. Have matter exhaustively investigated and
let me have report.[v]
Immediate
reports from the scene indicated that the fire had been discovered by a night
watchman at around 3:30 a.m. The watchman passed the main dormitory and saw no
problems at 3:15 a.m., but when he returned from his rounds fifteen minutes
later, a large fire was burning on the ground floor near the base of the main
stairway. He began to call out to the boys and employees sleeping on the second
and third floors of the building, trying to alert them to the danger.
[vi]
The calls of
the watchman alerted Severino Gustinez, a student considered so trustworthy by administrators
that he had been given employment at the school and assigned to watch over the
younger boys who were housed on the second floor of the east wing of the
dormitory. Although some media reports of the time claimed that fire drills had
never been held at the school, the opposite appears to have been true.
[vii]
Realizing
the danger, Gustinez called out “fire drill” to awaken the young students
under his charge. Sleepily rising from their beds, they immediately formed
into the proper lines for evacuating the building. Realizing that he could not
take them down the main stairway due to the fire, he led them down the western stairway to safety. Thanks to “Toto,” all of the
younger students made it out of the building without incident.
[viii]
Leaving the
small boys in charge of a guard named Register, Gustinez then went back into
the building where he found an older boy nicknamed “Monkey Wrench” lost in the
smoke. Carrying “Monkey Wrench” in his
arms, he made his way back to the stairway but found the door now in flames.
Risking his own body to bring “Monkey Wrench” to safety, Gustinez leaped
through the burning doorway. Both survived, although the heroic rescuer
suffered slight injuries.
[ix]
Another
older student named Walter Tucker made it out, but was unable to find his bunk
mate Button Shaw. Desperate to save his friend, he went back into the burning
building, found Shaw still in bed, pulled him out and carried him up to the
third floor of the building. The tower that rose above the center of the
structure had windows that also functioned as skylights. Dragging Shaw up into the
tower and through one of these windows, Tucker carried him across the roof and
down the fire escape to safety.
[x]
The acting
superintendent of the school – later claims to the contrary aside – was in the
building and asleep when the fire broke out. Making his way
up to the tower, W.H. Bell helped most of the older boys escape through a
window and then down the fire escape to the ground.
[xi]
Having already
saved many lives, Bell now joined a desperate effort to save two employees and
a student who could be seen trapped inside a locked grate that blocked access
to the fire escape from the second floor:
…The office being in flames, he procured an
axe and with the assistance of Mr. Allen, one of the guards, he climbed to the
landing of the fire escape at the second floor, where three men were trying to
make their escape. He succeeded in breaking the locks of the barred grating to
the window, but was unable to get the metal frame out of the window. In the
meantime, the floors gave way and the inmates were hurried to their doom.[xii]
Two of the
men who died as Bell and Allen tried to save them were Bennett Evans, the
school carpenter, and Charles M. Evans, his son who was employed as a guard.
Charles had made it out of the building, but was unable to find his father and
went back inside to save him. He found Bennett looking for him in the smoke and
tried to bring him and a student they found lost in the smoke to safety, but
found their escape barred by the locked grate. All were killed when the floor
collapsed beneath them.
[xiii]
Despite
folklore repeated second hand by researchers from
the University of South Florida, there was no mention of any kind in the
eyewitness accounts of the fire, let alone any actual evidence, that any of the
students were chained to their bunks or that they had to break locks to get out of the building. In fact, original reports indicate that all who died were moving freely inside the
building, that the western stairway was open and that the fire escape could be and was accessed via the roof of the building. Reporters noted that had some students not panicked, all could have escaped.
The
Tampa Tribune, for example, reported
that most of the dead were in the west wing of the building farther from the
fire than the smaller boys who were led to safety by Severino Gustinez. They
became “panic-stricken” the newspaper reported, and lost their lives as a
result.
[xiv]
According to
the Tribune, the guard named Register
went back into the building after getting the smaller boys to a safe
place. He found a group of older boys still inside and led them to a stairway
by which escape was still possible. Frightened by the smoke that filled the
stairwell, however, they panicked and went back deeper into the building to a locked window that opened onto the fire escape. They lost their lives as a result.
The windows had been locked to prevent boys from using the fire escape to run away during the night. The school grounds were not fenced at the time and escapes had been a problem for the staff, which had been overwhelmed by judges around the state with many more students than the facility was designed to handle. The stairways and doors were not locked, nor was the entrance to the fire escape from the top of the building, but the windows opening onto it had been secured.
Within
thirty minutes of the time the fire was discovered, the “white dormitory” of
the Florida Industrial School for Boys burned to the ground. By the time the
sun rose over the horrible scene, only the ruined sections of walls could still
be seen.
Although
researchers from the University of South Florida have made questionable claims
that as many as twelve people died in the fire, initial reports from the scene
placed the number at ten (two employees and eight students). Subsequent
investigation revealed that the actual number was somewhat lower.
I will provide more information on the true
number of deaths from the fire and some of the controversy surrounding it in my next post in this series. Be sure to check back regularly at
http://twoegg.blogspot.com.
[i]
“Fire at State Reform School,” report from Marianna dated February 28, 1906,
Pensacola Journal, March 1, 1906, p. 1.
[ii]
Pensacola News, January 1911,
clipping in Singletary Collection.
[iv]
Clippings from the Marianna
Times-Courier,
1911-1914, Singletary Collection.
[v]
Gov. Park Trammell to Hon. W.H. Milton, President of the Board of Governors,
November 18, 1914, Singletary Collection.
[vi]
“Heroic Tampa Boy saves many lives at Marianna Fire,” datelined Marianna,
November 20, 1914,
Tampa Tribune,
November 21, 1914, p. 1.
[xi]
Anonymous, “Ten Lives Lost When Florida Reform School Burns at Marianna,”
November 18, 1914, report reprinted in numerous newspapers across the United
States.
[xiv]
“Heroic Tampa Boy saves many lives at Marianna Fire,” datelines Marianna,
November 20, 1914,
Tampa Tribune,
November 21, 1914, p. 1.