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Morning Lineup – October 8

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Just for the heck of it, ask some firefighters if they know why Fire Prevention Week is always celebrated on or about the 2nd week of October.  If any of them say that it has something to do with the Great Chicago Fire, give them a “B” for their astuteness.  Save the “A” grade for anyone who can tell that October 9 is the anniversary date for the conflagration that has become one of the more famous fires in modern history.

Actually, it was on the evening of Sunday, October 8 that something happened inside of the barn behind the O’Leary home at 137 DeKoven Street.  A fire started up and quickly consumed the little building.  It was a night of unusually strong winds and the air had been very dry all day.  A watchman in a fire tower saw the glow but he mistakenly presumed it was the remnants of another fire that had occurred the previous day and failed to transmit the alarm.

chicfire_a

When the blaze spread to neighboring homes and started moving through the city, the alarm finally went out.  But the super-heated winds were carrying firebrands ahead of the fire front and starting additional fires all through the city.  The mayor immediately telegraphed to neighboring towns for assistance, but it was to no avail.  The intensity and speed of the fire was overwhelming.  Before long, the fire had spread to the water works building and the destruction shut down the city’s water pumping plant.  At that point the fire department had to give up and all the people in the fire’s path had no recourse but to flee for their lives.

chicfire_b

Most of them ran to the Chicago River or over to the shore of Lake Michigan where they sought refuge.  The entire city could do nothing but watch as a true hell-on-earth event roared through a city of closely-packed wooden structures, accelerated by cyclonic winds.  Finally, late Monday night the winds started to subside and a light rain began to fall and the fire ran out of energy.  Come Tuesday morning it was all over, but the burned area was so hot that they could not inspect it for days later.

chicfire_c

When it was all over, the city had lost completely an area 4 miles long and 3/4 mile wide, including 17,500 buildings – a third of the city’s valuation.  While 125 bodies were recovered, the actual fatality count is estimated at 200 – 300.  Nearly 100,000 people of the total 300,000 population were left homeless.  In the fire zone, only 5 buildings survived.  As the flames were dying down, trainloads of lumber began arriving in the city for rebuilding.

chicfire_f

There is no doubt as to where the fire started, as it was easy to trace back the spread pattern.  But exactly how it began will never be known for sure.  Popular folklore says that Mrs. O’Leary’s cow kicked over a lantern which ignited the straw.  But in 1893 Michael Ahern, a newspaper reporter who first wrote the story, admitted that he made up the story because he thought it would sell more papers.  There are other theories involving schemes like an illicit craps game taking place in the barn, but they are only theories.  Ironically, Mrs. O’Leary’s home, seen here in a picture taken shortly afterward, was spared from the fire by a shift in wind direction.

chicfire_e

The O’Leary home

In 1956 the former O’Leary property was cleared and the Chicago Fire Department’s fire training academy was built on the site.  There is a stylized sculpture, Pillar of Fire, erected on the spot where the infamous barn stood.

pillar of fire c

The 34-ft.-high “Pillar of Fire” sits on the site of
Mrs. O’Leary’s barn, the point of origin
of the Great Chicago Fire.

The fire is out and now it’s time for us to get this equipment checked out.  I’ve got to get some coffee going, so we’ll meet later in the day room.

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View Comments

  1. Ralph says

    With all of the folk lore surrounding the barn and cow…..

    Look at the date and year. Look at the fires that ravaged most of the great lakes that year. Michigan, IL, OH, WI, IN……

    Look at what fueled industry and modes of transportation in the era…..Coal…..

    Look at historical accounts of a great drought…

    Or could it have been a simple card game gone wrong in Mrs. O`Leary`s barn…

    on October 8, 2009 @ 7:31 am.
  2. laurence delorme says

    interesting article and pics:it helps to understand the culture of the Fire Service in the USA.

    keep us the good work.thanks Bill.

    on October 8, 2009 @ 12:22 pm.
  3. Capt. Bob says

    Hey Geezer, the Chicago fire was terrible and all, but what about the forgotten fire that happened the same night that took a far greater toll of huuman live, somewhere between 1,200 and 2,400 people. To this day they do not know how many because of the remoteness of this fire. Check out the Peshtigo Fire at http://www.peshtigofire.info/

    Keep up the good work…

    Capt. Bob

    on October 8, 2009 @ 2:37 pm.
  4. firegeezer says

    Thanks, Capt. Bob Yes, I know about Peshtigo and plan to cover it next year. In fact, there were four major fires on that day in cities that are along the coast of Lake Michigan. But Chicago got the glory because their telegraph lines didn’t go out of service.

    on October 8, 2009 @ 4:12 pm.
  5. Ralph says

    Capt`n Bob.

    Thanks for posting that link. I had read about the fires here in Michigan, but not of those across the big pond.

    on October 9, 2009 @ 2:15 pm.
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