Aerial view of Chicago in 1874
Burnt district shown left of center
Burnt district shown left of center
Today marks the 140th anniversary of the forgotten second
Chicago Fire of 1874. That fire began
about 3:30pm on Tuesday, July 14th with the first alarm raised near
the northeast corner of Clark and 12th Street (now Roosevelt Road). The point of origin was a small wooden shanty
and barn occupied by a Jewish immigrant, Nathan Isaacson, located
next to an oil factory. By the time the
fire stopped around 10:00pm, approximately 60 acres in the “South Division” of
downtown, which had escaped the Fire of 1871, had been totally destroyed,
causing nearly $5 million in damage.
The “Great Fire” was still fresh in people’s minds, and this second fire
was a reminder that the threat of fire was very real. At the same time, there was a general feeling
that, although the fire brought hardship for many, it also rid the city of a
section that would continue to be susceptible to fire. The account of the 1874 fire in the Chicago
Tribune stated in part:
“It has come to
complete in part the work left undone in 1871, and to scoop out of existence
another broad belt of wooden buildings which menaced the new structures which
have sprung up in the business quarter of the South Division. It has shaken hands with the fire of 1871,
and reaching the ground its predecessor conquered, has stopped, not satiate,
and yet satisfied. Well it may be for
the palaces that line Madison street that yet another strip of brick and stone
is to be piled up between them and the menacing frame structures that lie
beyond, and yet we cannot help reflecting that this security of the future has
brought by too great a sacrifice in the present.
“Nature said to us, ‘Beware
of the repetition of 1871;’ but man, so cautioned just after a fire, is
brutally heedless when its memory has faded away. Even the insurance men, of all others most
sensitive to the approach of such a calamity, seemed to have no forebodings
that there was no special vigilance, no particular care, against possible
disaster.”
The circumstances surrounding the 1874 fire were similar to the first – dry
conditions, a “fatal southwest wind,” and an abundance of wooden buildings to
fuel the conflagration. The 1871 fire
resulted in new regulations being implemented which prohibited the construction
of any wooden buildings in the area bounded by 22nd Street on the
south, the Chicago River on the north, Halsted Street on the west, and Lake
Michigan on the east. However, wooden
buildings standing within those boundaries at the time were, of course, allowed
to remain, and temporary wooden structures could be built until more permanent
structures were completed. The “temporary”
buildings were to be razed within a year of construction, but they often
remained standing much longer.
The section of the city burned in the 1874 fire was immediately south of
the downtown core rebuilt after the earlier fire but could not have been more
different in character. A Tribune
described a portion of the area as follows:
“The fire commenced
in that portion of the city known as Cheyenne, between Taylor and Twelfth and
Clark street, and Fourth avenue (now Federal).
This part of the city consists of the worst rookeries imaginable, most
of which are occupied as houses of ill-fame.”
It was estimated that nearly 500 prostitutes were left homeless as a result
of the fire. In addition to the “houses
of ill-fame” which quickly reestablished themselves south of 18th
Street (in the area that would soon evolve into the infamous Levee), the neighborhood
was home to many poor immigrants, including Eastern Europeans and Jews, and was
also the center of a small but growing community of African-Americans. Wabash Avenue had been a fine upper-class
residential street, and many larger homes and churches remained, but the
character of the street was changing rapidly as the original residents and congregations
moved to the district farther to the south in and around Prairie Avenue.
The First Baptist Church on Wabash Avenue was the most prominent building
destroyed in the 1874 fire; although the building was only ten years old,
the congregation was already considering a move farther south
destroyed in the 1874 fire; although the building was only ten years old,
the congregation was already considering a move farther south
Wabash Avenue north from Peck Court (now 8th Street)
This section of the avenue was destroyed in the fire
This section of the avenue was destroyed in the fire
Wabash Avenue south from Eldredge Court (now 9th Street)
This section was spared in the fire
This section was spared in the fire
The Church of the Messiah on Wabash Avenue had been converted to a
carriage shop by the time it was destroyed in the fire of 1874
carriage shop by the time it was destroyed in the fire of 1874
Map showing the 1874 burnt district in yellow
Area burnt in the 1871 fire shown in gray
Area burnt in the 1871 fire shown in gray
The fire proceeded in a generally northeast direction from its point of
origin to State Street where it continued north to three doors north of Van
Buren. (The fire stopped at this point,
not because of the efforts of the Fire Department, but rather because it had
reached the rebuilt section of the city, and the new stone and brick structures
did not burn). It extended as far east
as Michigan Avenue for the half block north of Congress, but otherwise did not
extend east beyond the alley between Michigan and Wabash Avenues as far south
as Peck Court (now 8th Street).
From there the southern border of the burnt district followed a line
heading southwest back to the point of origin, just missing St. Mary’s Catholic
Church at Wabash and Eldredge Court (now 9th Street).
The former Wabash Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church
at Harrison and State was used as the main post office after the fire in 1871;
it was destroyed in the 1874 fire
In the aftermath of the fire, there was a demand for additional reform
to prevent another calamity of this scale from occurring again. The Citizens’ Association of Chicago was
formally chartered later that month with a Constitution that stated their
purpose in part “to insure a most perfect administration in our
municipal affairs; to promote the general welfare and prosperity of the city.” The Association was largely responsible for
revisions to the Fire Limits Ordinance which was expanded to encompass the
entire city, and also worked closely with insurance companies to expedite
settlements with property owners.
Chicago Fire Department officials, 1874
The Fire Department was highly criticized during the 1874 fire and there
had been unresolved issues ever since the Great Fire three years earlier. The Citizens’ Association brought General
Alexander Shaler to Chicago to aid in remedying this situation. Shaler, a decorated Civil War veteran, had
served as the head of the New York City Fire Department from 1867 to 1873, and
his visit to Chicago brought about important reforms in the management of the
Department as well as restoring public confidence.
NOTE: Nathan Isaacson, the “Mrs.
O’Leary” of the 1874 fire was arrested and charged with arson, but was never
found guilty. The account of his trial
would seem to indicate that he was the innocent victim of racial prejudice
against the Jewish residents of the neighborhood.
Congratulations on an excellent article for a story largely forgotten.
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