
''The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons'' (1835) by
J. M. W. Turner. Turner witnessed the fire, and painted the subject several times.
Over the course of history there have been a number of parliament buildings engulfed by flames.
The United Kingdom Parliament
The 1834 Fire
The
Palace of Westminster which houses the
Parliament of the United Kingdom burned in
1834. The fire was caused by
tally sticks. The account of this event is due to the English novelist
Charles Dickens, as described in a book by Tobias Dantzig. Speaking at a conference on governmental reform, Dickens told how counting devices destroyed "the halls of government". Long before Dickens' time, literate clerks of the
Exchequer ceased to use tally sticks. In
1724, treasury officials commanded that tallies no longer be used, but they long remained valid.
Said Dickens:
:''"... it took until
1826 to get these sticks abolished. In 1834 ... there was a considerable accumulation of them. ... [W]hat was to be done with such worn-out worm-eaten, rotten old bits of wood? The sticks were housed in
Westminster, and it would naturally occur to any intelligent person that nothing could be easier than to allow them to be carried away for firewood by the miserable people who lived in that neighborhood. However [the sticks were no longer] useful and official routine required that they never should be, and so the order went out that they should be privately and confidentially burned. It came to pass that they were burned in a stove in the
House of Lords. The stove, overgorged with these preposterous sticks, set fire to the panelling; the panelling set fire to the House of Commons; the two houses [of government] were reduced to ashes; architects were called in to build others; and we are now in the second million of the cost thereof."''
The Palace of Westminster was rebuilt according to a design by
Sir Charles Barry with
neo-Gothic detailing by
A.W.N. Pugin. It was opened in
1844. Though Dickens deplored the cost, the buiding is among the most familiar landmarks of London.
The English landscape painter,
J. M. W. Turner (1775-1851), painted the burning of the Palace of Westminster from memory, having witnessed it firsthand.
The 1941 Fire
The
Palace of Westminster was again badly damaged by fire during the
London Blitz on the night of
May 10 1941. During the air raid that night, German bombers attacked London with
incendiary bombs, several of which set the Commons Chamber alight. The ensuing fire destroyed the interior and collapsed the roof, causing massive internal damage to the building, as well as killing three staff. Other areas were also badly hit, but the Lords Chamber and Westminster Hall survived with only slight damage. The building would also be damaged to a lesser degree on fourteen other occasions in the
Second World War, the last coming in July
1944. The rebuilt Commons Chamber was based on the design of the old chamber, and was completed in
1950 by Sir
Giles Gilbert Scott.
References
★ 'Number, the language of science', Tobias Dantzig, Free Press, New York, 1967.
★
Parliamentary Publications Archives
Canada
Canada has lost two
Parliament buildings. In the
1849 Montreal Riots, an angry mob torched the
parliament buildings located in
Montreal. In
1916 an accidental fire consumed the parliament buildings in
Ottawa.
Germany
The
1933 Reichstag fire was a pivotal event in the establishment of
Nazi Germany.
Denmark
Christiansborg Castle, home of the Danish parliament (
Folketinget), has burned several times, the last being in
1884.
In Fiction
In the
film and
original graphic novel V for Vendetta, the main character,
V blows up and burns down Parliament to accomplish what
Guy Fawkes had attempted.
See also
★
Guy Fawkes - who failed to blow up the British Houses of Parliament in
1605, but is still commemorated each year with bonfires.
★
List of historic fires
★
Manchester Guardian Report on the 1834 fire at Westminster.