On December 8, 1794, a group of boys playing in a New Orleans courtyard lose control of a fire to gusty winds. The ensuing blaze engulfs more than 200 buildings in what is now known as the city’s French Quarter.
It was a devastating blow. A colony of Spain at the time, New Orleans was in the process of rebuilding after an even more devastating fire had hit the area just six years earlier. On the morning of Good Friday in March 1788, that fire had swept through New Orleans destroying 856 of its 1,100 buildings.