The fire started on December 8, 1794, and stretched across 212 buildings, including the royal jail, though it stopped short of the riverfront buildings facing the Mississippi River. Among the buildings spared were the Customs House, the tobacco warehouses, the Governor's Building, the Royal Hospital, and the Ursulines Convent. Despite widespread fire damage, the new
St. Louis Cathedral was not destroyed and was dedicated just two weeks later, on December 23, 1794. In the aftermath, the
schooner Nuestra Señora del Cármen was used as a temporary jail during the period December 10, 1794 to February 26, 1795. The ship's owner, Don Prospero Ferrayolo, received rental payments for use of the ship, replacing the royal jail destroyed during the fire. Because New Orleans was at the time a colony of Spain, rebuilding after both fires continued in Spanish style, and consequently most French architecture was eliminated from the French Quarter. The Spanish occupiers replaced the wooden buildings with structures with courtyards, thick
brick walls, arcades, and wrought iron balconies. Among the new buildings constructed were the signature New Orleans buildings of
St. Louis Cathedral (1794),
the Cabildo (1799), and
the Presbytere (1797), all designed by
Gilberto Guillemard. In 1795, Don
Andrés Almonaster y Rojas agreed to pay for construction of the building now known as the Cabildo. It replaced an earlier structure that had been destroyed by the fire. Almonaster had already commissioned Gilberto Guillemard to design the new cathedral and Presbytere. == See also ==