Sunday A short time after midnight on Sunday, 2 September 1666, a fire broke out at
Thomas Farriner's bakery in
Pudding Lane. The occupants, save the family's maidservant, who was too frightened to try, fled through an upstairs window to the house next door. When the house burned down, she became the fire's first victim. Farriner's neighbours tried to douse the fire; after an hour, the
parish constables arrived and judged that the adjoining houses should be demolished to prevent further spread. The householders protested, and
Lord Mayor Sir
Thomas Bloodworth was summoned to give his permission. When Bloodworth arrived, the flames were consuming the adjoining houses and creeping towards the warehouses and flammable stores on the riverfront. The more experienced firemen were calling for demolition, but Bloodworth refused on the grounds that most premises were rented and the owners could not be found. Bloodworth is generally thought to have been appointed to the office of Lord Mayor as a
yes man, rather than because he possessed the requisite capabilities for the job. He panicked when faced with a sudden emergency, and, when pressed, made the oft-quoted remark, "A woman might piss it out", and left. Jacob Field notes that although Bloodworth "is frequently held culpable by contemporaries (as well as some later historians) for not stopping the Fire in its early stages... there was little [he] could have done" given the state of firefighting expertise and the sociopolitical implications of anti-fire action at that time. , 1666 Later that morning,
Samuel Pepys ascended the Tower of London to view the fire from its battlements. In his diary, he recorded that the eastern gale had turned the fire into a conflagration. It had burned down an estimated 300 houses on its march to the riverfront, and the houses on London Bridge were burning. He took a boat to inspect the destruction around Pudding Lane at close range, describing a "lamentable" fire, "everybody endeavouring to remove their goods, and flinging into the river or bringing them into
lighters that lay off; poor people staying in their houses as long as till the very fire touched them, and then running into boats, or clambering from one pair of stairs by the water-side to another." Pepys continued westward on the river to the court at
Whitehall, "where people come about me, and did give them an account dismayed them all, and the word was carried into the King. So I was called for, and did tell the King and Duke of Yorke what I saw, and that unless His Majesty did command houses to be pulled down nothing could stop the fire. They seemed much troubled, and the King commanded me to go to my Lord Mayor from him and command him to spare no houses, but to pull down before the fire every way." Charles' brother
James, Duke of York, offered the use of the
Royal Life Guards to help fight the fire. As mentioned by Pepys, the fire spread quickly in the high wind. By mid-morning on Sunday, people abandoned attempts at extinguishing it and fled. The moving human mass and their bundles and carts made the lanes impassable for firemen and carriages. Pepys took a coach back into the city from Whitehall, but reached only St Paul's Cathedral before he had to get out and walk. Pedestrians with handcarts and goods were still on the move away from the fire, heavily weighed down. They deposited their valuables in parish churches away from the direct threat of fire. King Charles II sailed down from Whitehall in the Royal barge to inspect the scene. He found that houses were still not being pulled down, in spite of Bloodworth's assurances to Pepys, and overrode the authority of Bloodworth to order wholesale demolitions west of the fire zone. By Sunday afternoon, the fire had become a raging
firestorm that created its own weather. A tremendous uprush of hot air above the flames was driven by the
chimney effect wherever constrictions narrowed the air current, such as the constricted space between
jettied buildings, and this left a
vacuum at ground level. The resulting strong inward winds fuelled the flames. The fire pushed towards the city's centre "in a broad, bow-shaped arc". By Sunday evening, it "was already the most damaging fire to strike London in living memory", having travelled west along the river.
Monday '' for 3–10 September, facsimile front page with an account of the Great Fire Throughout Monday, the fire spread to the west and north. The spread to the south was mostly halted by the river, but it had torched the houses on London Bridge and was threatening to cross the bridge and endanger the borough of
Southwark on the south bank of the river. London Bridge, the only physical connection between the City and the south side of the river Thames, had been noted as a deathtrap in the fire of 1633. However, Southwark was preserved by an open space between buildings on the bridge which acted as a firebreak. The fire's spread to the north reached "the financial heart of the City". Several observers emphasise the despair and helplessness which seemed to seize Londoners on this second day, and the lack of efforts to save the wealthy, fashionable districts which were now menaced by the flames, such as the
Royal Exchange—combined
Exchange (organised market or bourse) and shopping centre—and the opulent consumer goods shops in
Cheapside. The Royal Exchange caught fire in the late afternoon, and was a "smoking shell" within a few hours.
John Evelyn, courtier and diarist, wrote: Evelyn lived in
Deptford, four miles (6 km) outside the City, and so he did not see the early stages of the disaster. He went by coach to Southwark on Monday, joining many other upper-class people, to see the view which Pepys had seen the day before of the burning City across the river. The conflagration was much larger now: "the whole City in dreadful flames near the water-side; all the houses from the Bridge, all Thames-street, and upwards towards Cheapside, down to the Three Cranes, were now consumed". In the evening, Evelyn reported that the river was covered with barges and boats making their escape piled with goods. He observed a great exodus of carts and pedestrians through the bottleneck City gates, making for the open fields to the north and east, "which for many miles were strewed with moveables of all sorts, and tents erecting to shelter both people and what goods they could get away. Oh, the miserable and calamitous spectacle!" The swirling winds carried sparks and burning flakes long distances to lodge on thatched roofs and in wooden
gutters, causing seemingly unrelated house fires to break out far from their source and giving rise to rumours that fresh fires were being set on purpose. Foreigners were immediately suspected because of the ongoing
Second Anglo-Dutch War. Fear and suspicion hardened into certainty on Monday, as reports circulated of imminent invasion and of foreign undercover agents seen casting "fireballs" into houses, or caught with hand grenades or matches. There was a wave of street violence. The fears of terrorism received an extra boost from the disruption of communications and news. The
General Letter Office in
Threadneedle Street, through which post passed for the entire country, burned down early on Monday morning. The
London Gazette just managed to put out its Monday issue before the printer's premises went up in flames. Suspicions rose to panic and collective paranoia on Monday, and both the
London Trained Bands and
Lord General's Regiment of Foot Guards focused less on fire fighting and more on rounding up foreigners and anyone else appearing suspicious, arresting them, rescuing them from mobs, or both. The inhabitants, especially the upper class, were growing desperate to remove their belongings from the City. This provided a source of income for the able-bodied poor, who hired out as porters (sometimes simply making off with the goods), being especially profitable for the owners of carts and boats. Hiring a cart had cost a couple of
shillings the week before the fire; on Monday, it rose to as much as £40, a fortune equivalent to roughly £133,000 in 2021. Seemingly every cart and boat owner in the area of London came to share in these opportunities, the carts jostling at the narrow gates with the panicked inhabitants trying to get out. The chaos at the gates was such that the magistrates briefly ordered the gates shut, in the hope of turning the inhabitants' attention from safeguarding their own possessions to fighting the fire: "that, no hopes of saving any things left, they might have more desperately endeavoured the quenching of the fire." Monday marked the beginning of organised action, even as order broke down in the streets, especially at the gates, and the fire raged unchecked. Bloodworth was responsible as Lord Mayor for coordinating the firefighting, but he had apparently left the City; his name is not mentioned in any contemporaneous accounts of the Monday's events. In this state of emergency, the King put his brother James, Duke of York, in charge of operations. James set up command posts on the perimeter of the fire. Three courtiers were put in charge of each post, with authority from Charles himself to order demolitions. James and his guards rode up and down the streets all Monday, "rescuing foreigners from the mob" and attempting to keep order. "The Duke of York hath won the hearts of the people with his continual and indefatigable pains day and night in helping to quench the Fire," wrote a witness in a letter on 8 September. On Monday evening, hopes were dashed that the massive stone walls of
Baynard's Castle,
Blackfriars, the western counterpart of the
Tower of London, would stay the course of the flames. This historic royal palace was completely consumed, burning all night.
Tuesday in flames, with
St Paul's Cathedral in the distance (square tower without the spire) now catching flames. Oil painting by anonymous artist, . Tuesday, 4 September was the day of greatest destruction. The Duke of York's command post at
Temple Bar, where
Strand meets
Fleet Street, was supposed to stop the fire's westward advance towards the
Palace of Whitehall. He hoped that the
River Fleet would form a natural firebreak, making a stand with his firemen from the Fleet Bridge and down to the Thames. However, early on Tuesday morning, the flames jumped over the Fleet and outflanked them, driven by the unabated easterly gale, forcing them to run for it. By mid-morning the fire had breached the wide affluent luxury shopping street of
Cheapside. James's firefighters created a large firebreak to the north of the conflagration, although it was breached at multiple points. Through the day, the flames began to move eastward from the neighbourhood of Pudding Lane, straight against the prevailing east wind and towards the Tower of London with its gunpowder stores. The garrison at the Tower took matters into their own hands after waiting all day for requested help from James's official firemen, who were busy in the west. They created firebreaks by blowing up houses on a large scale in the vicinity, halting the advance of the fire. With its thick stone walls and a wide, empty plaza which could serve as a firebreak, it was assumed
St. Paul's Cathedral would be a safe refuge from the fire. It had been crammed full of rescued goods, and its
crypt was filled with the tightly packed stocks of the printers and booksellers in adjoining
Paternoster Row. However, as it was undergoing restoration at the direction of
Christopher Wren, the church was covered in wooden scaffolding. This caught fire on Tuesday night, and within half an hour, the
lead roof was melting, and the books and papers in the crypt were burning. The cathedral was quickly a ruin.
Wednesday The wind dropped on Tuesday evening, and the firebreaks created by the garrison finally began to take effect on Wednesday, 5 September. Pepys climbed the
steeple of
Barking Church, from which he viewed the destroyed City, "the saddest sight of desolation that I ever saw". There were many separate fires still burning, but the Great Fire was over. It took some time until the last traces were put out: coal was still burning in cellars two months later. In
Moorfields, a large public park immediately north of the City, there was a great encampment of homeless refugees. Evelyn was horrified at the numbers of distressed people filling it, some under tents, others in makeshift shacks: "Many [were] without a rag or any necessary utensils, bed or board ... reduced to extremest misery and poverty." Most refugees camped in any nearby available unburned area to see if they could salvage anything from their homes. The mood was now so volatile that Charles feared a full-scale London rebellion against the monarchy. Food production and distribution had been disrupted to the point of non-existence; Charles announced that supplies of bread would be brought into the City every day, and markets set up round the perimeter. Fears of foreign terrorists and of a French and Dutch invasion were as high as ever among the traumatised fire victims. There was panic on Wednesday night in the encampments at
Parliament Hill, Moorfields, and Islington: a light in the sky over Fleet Street started a story that 50,000 French and Dutch immigrants had risen, and were marching towards Moorfields to murder and pillage. Surging into the streets, the frightened mob fell on any foreigners whom they happened to encounter, and were pushed back into the fields by the Trained Bands, Life Guards and members of the royal court. The light turned out to be a flareup east of Inner Temple, large sections of which burned despite an effort to halt the fire by blowing up Paper House. == Deaths and destruction ==