About this Item
Good. Minor foxing. Size 22 x 16 Inches. This is the October 14, 1871 (vol 41) issue of the Prairie Farmer containing the first published map of the Great Chicago Fire. This elusive issue was published just days after the fire, wherein the Prairie Farmer building was burnt to the ground. The Prairie Farmer The Prairie Farmer was a weekly newspaper published in Chicago but marketed to rural farmers. Located at 112 Monroe Street, the Prairie Farmer 's grandiose marble offices were immolated by the fire. Nonetheless, while fleeing the conflagration, editors saved subscription books, account books, a set of back issues, and some engravings. Despite the major catastrophe, the Prairie Farmer immediately re-established itself at more humble offices at 96 Randolph Street, and just days following the fire, this issue was mailed on time. The important map occupies roughly half of the broadside's verso. It is boldly titled 'First Map Issued Showing the District Burnt'. Although crudely engraved in woodcut, the map broadly embraces Chicago, roughly centered on the conjunction of the Chicago River with its North Branch. The burnt area is blacked out, with hachuring illustrating the limits of the fire. As might be expected, the post-fire issue was much smaller than their usual multi-page issues, consisting of just a single broadside, printed back to back. It does, nonetheless, feature the first map illustrating the area devastated by the Great Chicago Fire. The front page begins with the dramatic headline, 'Chicago in Ruins!' and proceeds to elaborate on the devastation, underscoring the city-wide despair God's vengeance never so utterly blotted Sodom and Gomorrah from existence as has been the fairest portion of the Garden City. The world was never before so lighted up as by the billows of fire that enwrapt doomed Chicago on the dread night of October 9. Acres on acres, miles on miles, of hottest flames consumed the treasures of ten and tens of the fairest years, and men's feet were laved ankle-deep in the flying ashes of destroyed fortunes. Three thousand acres of earth's riches, the layers on layers of the accumulated results of unparalleled industry and thrift, and of the mightiest intellects and hands that God's system of planets has ever given birth to, swept away by the hot, huge breath of an hour, fired by the million fold tongues of flame! The article breaks the fire into two separate related conflagrations. The first fire, it reports, started at a beer saloon located at No. 195 South Canal Street. From there it spread, burning four entire blocks and four parts of blocks, embracing the territory from Van Buren Street to Madison, and from the River to Clinton Street. A second more violent fire began At half past nine o'clock on Sunday evening, October 15 [this can only be a misprint], just as people were returning from church, a small cow barn, belonging to a cottage on the corner of DeKovan and Jefferson streets, in the West Division, was discovered to be on fire. Almost [sic] in a moment, the flames spread over a large number of sheds, barns, and small houses, and before engines could be called together by the alarm bells, very many buildings, on either side, were entrapped in flames. The above is no doubt the origin of the O'Leary Cow legend. In addition to the map, the verso features a lengthy appeal to subscribers to renew in advance in exchange for four issues free. It also begs those with outstanding dues and advertising invoices to pay promptly. This section further features some advertising and a list of retained assets, including most of the paper's staff of editors and specialist reporters. The Great Chicago Fire The Great Chicago Fire burned roughly 3.3 square miles of Chicago, Illinois, from October 8 - 10, 1871. Although only about 300 people died, the fire consumed 17,000 buildings and left more than 100,000 residents homeless. Early Chicago's wooden construction and dry, windy conditions led to the fire's rapid sprea.
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