Fire destroys Danville’s Long Mill

Drew Wilson / Register & Bee

Fire destroys Danville’s Long Mill

Drew Wilson
Danville Register & Bee

Crowds gathered on the Union Street Bridge and by the riverbank Thursday to watch as flames slowly consumed Long Mill.
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By Sarah Arkin and Denice Thibodeau
Register & Bee staff writers

Published: May 8, 2008

UPDATE 10:20 a.m.:

The Danville fire department is still investigating the cause of the fire that demolished the Long Mill Complex yesterday. Fire Chief David Eagle said the department was collaborating with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, but would be handling most of the work.

Firefighters were still putting out smoldering remains of the Long Mill at 10 a.m. this morning, and Eagle said he expected to have crews out all day. Rain last night helped, he said, but wind and lightening didn’t. When there’s lightening, he explained, crew members can’t use ladders.

One building is completely demolished and the second isn’t far behind.
“It’s a collapse waiting to happen,” said Eagle.

A fire that was sparked Thursday afternoon at the historic Dan River Inc. Long Mill complex continued to burn late Thursday night. Firefighters were expected to battle the blaze throughout the night, officials said.

Fire Chief David Eagle said investigators are now sure that the fire that demolished one building of the Long Mill complex and partially demolished another building started in a large pile of debris.

When firefighters responded to a call received at 4:22 p.m. Thursday, the “entire pile of debris was already on fire and lapping up the building,” Eagle said.

The fire in a pile of “dried-out timber from construction, very small kindling type wood” about 100 feet long by 8 feet tall spread to adjacent buildings, he said.

“It overwhelmed us pretty quick.”

Eagle said the building had no fire protection and sprinkler systems had been deactivated.

Emergency crews arrived half an hour later and three streets were evacuated as a precaution-ary measure, he said. Some businesses on Riverside Drive closed due to smoke in the area.

Danville Emergency Services Director Doug Young said that the Salvation Army has been helping to provide relief to evacuated residents.

Eagle said storms rolling through later Thursday night may offer some relief.

“I think Mother Nature can certainly help it. ... We welcome the rain but we hope the winds will stay away,” Eagle said. “I’ve been the fire chief for a year, been in the department for over 30 years and this is a pretty big fire.

“We’re fortunate that no one was in there.”

The fire chief expected crews to be working through the night.

Witnesses said that at about 4:15 p.m., only the huge pile of debris from ongoing demolition was on fire.

“We were coming across the (Union Street) Bridge from Burger King and saw the fire in the pile of trash,” Nancy Beasley of Danville said.

She and her children watched the fire from the bridge, which was shut down to traffic but was lined with residents watching the blaze. Some said they saw the flames from as far away as Wal-Mart on Mount Cross Road.

By 5 p.m., two buildings were engulfed in flames and the Danville Fire Department was battling the blaze from at least five directions while trying to prevent nearby trees and homes from catching on fire.

Build-up from demolition that had been taking place for the past six to eight months contributed to large pile-ups of kindling firewood, Eagle said.

About a hundred Danville residents lined the Union Street Bridge to watch the blaze.

One of them was Florence Slaughter, who worked as a spinner in the now vacant and already partially demolished Long Mill during the 1970s.

“People just worked so hard. I don’t know why, I just hate to see it come down,” she said. “To tear it down is one thing, to see it collapse is another.”

“It’s like history coming down,” said her daughter, Kelly Sims.

Slaughter was holding her 5-year-old grandson, Ryan, on the rail of the bridge as her family watched the building burn.

“That one? That big thing?” he said of the place his grandmother used to work.

“I’ve told him to try to remember this,” she said.

Rose Shields, president of the Danville Historical Society, also was watching the flames.

“It’s a piece of history gone,” she said.

The organization has battling for more than a year to halt the demolition of the mill buildings, and are appealing a recent court ruling to allow the owners to finish demolition.

“We have a lawsuit pending against the owners right now,” Shields said. “We have covenants on those buildings that they were never to come down.”

She said she believes the fire was set deliberately and is bitterly certain there has been collu-sion between the city and the owners to bring the buildings down — lawsuits or not.

“There will be no investigation for the arson factor,” Shields said. “It will be swept under the rug. That’s how it works in this city works. It’s sad.”

City Manager Jerry Gwaltney and Mayor Sherman Saunders were both at the fire until it was time for them to attend the City Council meeting, which Saunders opened Thursday night by saying how proud he was of the firefighters and other city workers battling the Long Mill blaze.

Gwaltney said council has been aware of his feelings about the buildings for some time, and that he has considered them dangerous.

A year ago, Gwaltney spoke at a council meeting about what the city’s liability would be if someone got hurt, and pointed out that graffiti and other signs showed people were getting into the buildings.

Gwaltney said at the June meeting that because of the buildings’ lack of a fire suppression sys-tem, the fire department would not send firemen into the buildings if a significant blaze breaks out there.

He said Thursday that the fire was “pretty well under control” and expressed his appreciation of the firefighters’ efforts.

“We do not believe, at this time, that there’s any arson,” he said, but added that official results would come when an investigation could be started in the morning.

Gwaltney said he felt confident that firefighters had the situation under control, but that high winds were expected later in the evening.

“They’ll be going at it all night long,” he said.

• Contact Sarah Arkin at or (434) 791-7983.
• Contact Denice Thibodeau at or (434) 791-7985.

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( danvillevillander ) on May 09, 2008 at 6:45 pm

Shouldn’t Gwaltney have been fiddlin’ from that roof?

Posted by ( OHMYLOOKWHOITIS ) on May 09, 2008 at 3:42 pm

WELL IM KINDA TORN !!! I CAN SEE WHERE PEOPLE BELEIVE THAT IT WAS ON PURPOSE.. BUT WOULD SOMEONE GO THROUGH THAT TROUBLE TO DO THAT RISKING THE HOMES THAT WERE CLOSE BY AND THE FAMILIES THAT LIVE IN THEM??? ITS A TOSS UP I THINK!! COULD BE 1 OR THE OTHER!!!

Posted by ( mrarmand2u ) on May 09, 2008 at 11:56 am

I wonder what the origional blueprints of those buildings are worth?

Posted by ( jaydeebee ) on May 08, 2008 at 9:40 pm

How convenient.

Posted by ( carabearaunderweara ) on May 08, 2008 at 9:19 pm

Want some more pictures? I arrived at the scene at 4:25pm. I went down a street close to the fire on riverside before the firemen and police were able to get there. I took about 50 photos of the fire. I kept snapping photos until the firemen and policemen arrived and told me to leave the area. Just e-mail me for photos.

Posted by ( Danvillian In Exile ) on May 08, 2008 at 8:50 pm

Surely no one in Danville believes this was an accident?

Posted by ( SpencerO ) on May 08, 2008 at 7:33 pm

This is a really sad story. I’ve not lived in Danville long but I understand that the loss of these mills has been painful for the Danville natives.

Posted by ( TaleGator ) on May 08, 2008 at 5:02 pm

Well, THAT should settle the debate over whether to tear it down or restore it.

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