Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912. (watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912. (watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912. (watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912. (watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912. (watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912. (watermarks do not appear on the actual photograph.)
Frozen Ruins of the “Fireproof” Equitable Building — New York City Financial District Fire, January 9, 1912
14 x 8.1 cm
Further images
This striking small collection records one of the most dramatic disasters in early 20th-century New York: the burning of the original Equitable Life Assurance Building at 120 Broadway, once considered one of the city’s pioneering early skyscrapers and widely promoted as “fireproof.” The building occupied the full block bounded by Broadway, Cedar Street, Nassau Street, and Pine Street in the heart of the Financial District. It was destroyed by fire on January 9, 1912, with freezing winter temperatures turning the firefighting water into massive curtains of ice. The disaster killed six people and left the building’s ornate façade and entrances encased in spectacular frozen ruins.
The album page is hand-titled at the top:
“Equitable Fire, January 9th, 1912.”
Each photograph is hand-captioned below, identifying specific views around the block:
Cedar St. and Broadway
A dramatic close view of the frozen Broadway/Cedar Street side, with ladders, shattered openings, heavy ice formations, and small silhouetted figures standing before the immense frozen façade.
Cedar Street
A canyon-like view down Cedar Street, showing fire hoses spraying streams of water into the burned building while ladders lean against ice-covered walls. The street is filled with snow, frozen runoff, and debris.
Pine and Nassau Sts.
A close architectural view of the corner entrance, balcony, windows, and façade detail wrapped in icicles. The sign fragments and arched entrance give a powerful sense of the building’s former grandeur.
Front View, from Liberty St.
A wider street-level view showing the ruined building front, ice-coated columns and walls, pedestrians, fire debris, and a silhouetted figure in the foreground observing the scene.
Main Entrance, on Broadway
A haunting close view of the Broadway entrance, with the arched doorway, ornamental ironwork, columns, and sculptural architectural details almost completely transformed by ice.
The Equitable Life Building was historically important even before the fire. Completed in 1870, it was among New York’s earliest major office buildings and is often discussed in relation to the development of the skyscraper because of its early use of passenger elevators. After annexes were added, it filled the entire block between Broadway, Cedar, Nassau, and Pine Streets. Although advertised as fireproof, the building was consumed by the 1912 fire. The freezing weather made the disaster visually unforgettable: water from the fire hoses froze almost instantly, coating the ruins with heavy icicles and sheets of ice.
The site would soon be cleared for the later Equitable Building, completed in 1915. That massive replacement building became one of the most controversial skyscrapers in New York and helped inspire the city’s 1916 Zoning Resolution, which reshaped the future of Manhattan skyscraper design.
This set is especially desirable because it presents the disaster as a coherent contemporary album grouping, with five related original photographs mounted together and hand-labeled by location. The images combine architectural history, New York fire history, early skyscraper history, and the extraordinary visual drama of a building simultaneously burned and frozen.
Medium: Set of 5 original vintage gelatin silver photographs mounted on album page
Subject: Equitable Building Fire, New York City
Date: January 9, 1912
Location: 120 Broadway, Financial District, Lower Manhattan; Broadway, Cedar Street, Nassau Street, Pine Street
Individual image size: approx. 5.5 × 3.2 in.
Album page size: 9.75 × 12 in.
Condition: Vintage album-mounted photographs with strong historic content; page with period handwriting, age toning, and wear consistent with age.
A rare and visually powerful original photographic record of one of New York’s great early skyscraper disasters — the 1912 Equitable Building fire, remembered as the “fireproof” building that burned and froze.
