Commemorating a conflagration
Fire Prevention Week was established to commemorate the Great
Chicago Fire, the tragic 1871 conflagration that killed more than 250
people, left 100,000 homeless, destroyed more than 17,400 structures and
burned more than 2,000 acres. The fire began on October 8, but continued
into and did most of its damage on October 9, 1871. According to popular
legend, the fire broke out after a cow - belonging to Mrs. Catherine
O'Leary - kicked over a lamp, setting first the barn, then the whole city
on fire. Chances are you've heard some version of this story yourself;
people have been blaming the Great Chicago Fire on the cow and Mrs.
O'Leary, for more than 130 years. But recent research by Chicago historian
Robert Cromie has helped to debunk this version of events.
The
'Moo' myth
Like any good story, the 'case of the cow' has some truth to it.
The great fire almost certainly started near the barn where Mrs. O'Leary
kept her five milking cows. But there is no proof that O'Leary was in the
barn when the fire broke out - or that a jumpy cow sparked the blaze. Mrs.
O'Leary herself swore that she'd been in bed early that night, and that
the cows were also tucked in for the evening. But if a cow wasn't to blame
for the huge fire, what was? Over the years, journalists and historians
have offered plenty of theories. Some blamed the blaze on a couple of
neighborhood boys who were near the barn sneaking cigarettes. Others
believed that a neighbor of the O'Leary's may have started the fire. Some
people have speculated that a fiery meteorite may have fallen to earth on
October 8, starting several fires that day - in Michigan and Wisconsin, as
well as in Chicago.
The biggest blaze that week
While the Great Chicago Fire was the best-known blaze to start during
this fiery two-day stretch, it wasn't the biggest. That distinction goes
to the Peshtigo Fire, the most devastating forest fire in American
history. The fire, which also occurred on October 8th, 1871, and roared
through Northeast Wisconsin, burning down 16 towns, killing 1,152 people,
and scorching 1.2 million acres before it ended.Historical accounts of the
fire say that the blaze began when several railroad workers clearing land
for tracks unintentionally started a brush fire. Before long, the
fast-moving flames were whipping through the area 'like a tornado,' some
survivors said. It was the small town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin that suffered
the worst damage. Within an hour, the entire town had been destroyed.Eight
decades of fire prevention
Those who survived the Chicago and Peshtigo fires never forgot what
they'd been through; both blazes produced countless tales of bravery and
heroism. But the fires also changed the way that firefighters and public
officials thought about fire safety. On the 40th anniversary of the Great
Chicago Fire, the Fire Marshals Association of North America (today known
as the
International
Fire Marshals Association), decided that the anniversary of the Great
Chicago Fire should henceforth be observed not with festivities, but in a
way that would keep the public informed about the importance of fire
prevention. The commemoration grew incrementally official over the
years.
In 1920, President Woodrow Wilson issued the first National Fire
Prevention Day proclamation, and since 1922, Fire Prevention Week has been
observed on the Sunday through Saturday period in which October 9 falls.
According to the National Archives and Records Administration's Library
Information Center, Fire Prevention Week is the longest running public
health and safety observance on record. The President of the United States
has signed a proclamation proclaiming a national observance during that
week every year since 1925.