Item #23300 Sequential Photographs of the Fire Destruction of Trinity United Methodist Church, Clearfield, Pennsylvania: Large Scale Urban Fire and Volunteer Firefighting Operations, December 1968. Trinity United Methodist Church Fire.
Sequential Photographs of the Fire Destruction of Trinity United Methodist Church, Clearfield, Pennsylvania: Large Scale Urban Fire and Volunteer Firefighting Operations, December 1968
Sequential Photographs of the Fire Destruction of Trinity United Methodist Church, Clearfield, Pennsylvania: Large Scale Urban Fire and Volunteer Firefighting Operations, December 1968

Sequential Photographs of the Fire Destruction of Trinity United Methodist Church, Clearfield, Pennsylvania: Large Scale Urban Fire and Volunteer Firefighting Operations, December 1968

Photograph

Fire destruction of Trinity United Methodist Church on South 2nd Street in Clearfield, Pennsylvania, photographed during the active overnight blaze of December 21, 1968, in a dramatic sequential record of one of the borough’s largest twentieth century urban fires. The archive captures the church while fully engulfed, preserving flames erupting through the roofline, smoke pouring from the arcaded façade, hose streams striking the structure from darkened streets, and the silhouette of the church tower rising above the fire. The photographs record not only the destruction of a major downtown religious landmark led at the time by Rev. Oliver H. R. Krapf, but also the operational reality of late 1960s volunteer firefighting systems in small town Pennsylvania, where borough police, volunteer companies, ladder apparatus, hydrant pressure, and regional mutual aid networks were rapidly assembled in an effort to contain a spreading structural fire. The blaze was first spotted around 2:10 a.m. by taxi driver Billy Knepp, after which Fire Chief William Swisher summoned neighboring companies to prevent the fire from spreading beyond the church into the surrounding civic center.

Photo archive of 16 silver gelatin photographs mounted to a large cardstock sheet measuring approximately 20" x 14", each image roughly 3.5" x 5", Clearfield, Pennsylvania, December 1968. Each photograph is numbered by hand from 1 to 16 and together they function almost cinematically, moving through different stages and vantage points of the firefight. The images center the church’s cut stone arcades and bell tower as bright interior firelight blows outward through the large arched openings and flames tear across the roof structure above. Several photographs show powerful hose streams cutting diagonally across the frame toward the burning façade, while others pull back into wider nighttime street scenes where bare winter trees, utility poles, parked cars, wet pavement, and gathered onlookers remain visible beneath smoke and reflected firelight. One frame includes a firefighter seen from behind at street level facing the inferno, while another captures a bicyclist or passerby entering the foreground as the church burns behind him. Multiple views emphasize the repetition of the long arcade row, transforming the church exterior into a glowing sequence of arches illuminated by active fire inside the structure. The resulting series preserves not only the destruction itself but the visual atmosphere of the emergency response: steam, smoke, glare, darkness, reflective pavement, and shifting vantage points from the surrounding streets as firefighters attempted to control the blaze.

The archive is especially significant as documentation of pre modernized municipal fire response during a period when Pennsylvania boroughs depended heavily on intercompany volunteer assistance for major structural fires. The identified responding companies from Lawrence Township, Hyde, Curwensville, Philipsburg, and Chester Hill gives the group great specificity within the history of regional mutual aid firefighting networks. At the same time, the photographs preserve the loss of an architecturally prominent early twentieth century Methodist church before widespread sprinkler retrofitting and later fire protection standards transformed many American religious and civic structures in the decades that followed. Mount toning, with expected contrast loss and glare in several high intensity night exposures. Overall good condition.

Item #23300

Price: $780.00