By ANNE SUTTON
The Associated Press

(Published: March 13, 2006)
JUNEAU -- A Sunday morning fire engulfed Juneau's second-oldest church and burned the 110-year-old National Historic Landmark to its foundation.
The pre-dawn fire destroyed Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, a center of community life in downtown Juneau, along with a neighboring house.
No injuries were reported.
The fire started after 4:30 a.m., sending smoke billowing through downtown Juneau and cutting electricity to many homes and businesses. Firefighters sprayed nearby buildings to keep the fire from spreading.
The blaze was under control by 8 a.m.
Holy Trinity was built in 1896, making it the second-oldest church in Juneau. Plays, community meetings and receptions were held in the adjoining McPhetres Hall and concerts were regularly held at the church.
The cause of the fire was under investigation. Fire Chief Eric Mohrmann said it appeared to have started between the two buildings.
A motorboat parked in the driveway was fully engulfed when firefighters arrived.
Firefighters pointed their hoses at the burning boat, while the church rector's wife and Shelby Edwards, owner of the burning house, frantically called firefighters' attention to the flames licking from the rooftops of both buildings.
Mohrmann said the fire had spread from the boat to the attics of the church and house, and from there traveled quickly through the walls of the wood-frame structures.
A series of explosions caused by built-up smoke and gases prompted firefighters to leave the buildings and concentrate instead on containing the blaze to the two structures, Mohrmann said.
Neighbors and many of the church's more than 100 parishioners gathered to watch.
Jim Wakefield, senior warden at the church, said the community had lost a wonderful building but the church would rebuild.
"The church is still there," he said. "It's just the building that's gone."
At least seven wood-frame houses and an old hotel are tightly packed into the same downtown block. Mohrmann said a thick concrete wall built alongside the church addition protected a neighboring house.
As the heat rose from the blaze, residents of the nearby Bergman Hotel were evacuated.
Dave Thomas, who rents an apartment at a bed and breakfast next door, hauled boxes, electronics and bags of possessions from his home.
"Our windows in the kitchen were cracking," he said. "We got the bills, the homework and the computers."
The church rector, Rev. George Silides, declined to speak to reporters, saying he was too close to tears.
Mohrmann said although the blaze was under control, he expected crews to spend the next two days working to extinguish the fire completely.