WHEN
THE SHOW DIDN’T GO ON..
THE
IROQUOIS THEATER FIRE
On
this date in 1903, one of the most devastating fires in American history
occurred at Chicago’s new Iroquois Theater during a standing-room-only matinee
performance starring the popular comedian Eddie Foy. The fire claimed the lives
of more than 600 people, including scores of children, who were packed into the
place for the afternoon show.
The
front façade of the Iroquois Theater can be seen to the left of the photo.
The
Iroquois Theater was much acclaimed, even before it opened. In addition to
being “absolutely fireproof”, it was a beautiful place with an ornate lobby,
grand staircases and a front façade that resembled a Greek temple with massive
columns. The theater was designed to be safe. It had 25 exits that, it was claimed,
could empty the building in less than five minutes. The stage had also been
fitted with an asbestos curtain that could be quickly lowered to protect the
audience. All of this would have been impressive it had actually been installed
– and if the staff actually had any idea how to use the safety devices that
existed.
And
those were not even the worst problems. Seats in the theater were wooden and
stuffed with hemp. “Unattractive” safety doors were hidden from site and gates
were locked across the entrance to the balcony during the show so that those in
the “cheap seats” wouldn’t sneak into the main theater. The building had no
fire alarms and a myriad of other safety equipment had been forgotten or simply
ignored – leading to the ever-popular “Chicago pay-offs” to officials who
allowed the new theater to open on schedule anyway.
As
crowds filled the theater on that cold December day in 1903, they had no idea
that how close their way to meeting their deaths.
The
horrific events began soon after the holiday crowd had packed into the theater
on that Wednesday afternoon to see a matinee performance of the hit comedy Mr. Bluebeard. The main floor and
balcony were packed and dozens more were given “standing-room-only” tickets and
they lined the rear and walls of the theater.
Around
the beginning of the second act, stagehands noticed a spark descend from an
overhead light, and then watched some scraps of burning paper fall down onto
the stage. In moments, flames began licking at the red-velvet curtain and while
a collective gasp went up from the audience, no one rushed for the exits. It’s
believed the audience merely thought the fire was part of the show.
A few
moments later, a flaming set crashed down onto the stage, leaving little doubt
that something had gone wrong. A stagehand attempted to lower the asbestos
curtain that would protect the audience. It snagged halfway down, sending a
wall of flame out into the audience.
A view
of the stage from the balcony, showing the devastation of the fire.
Actors
on stage panicked and ran for the doors. Chaos filled the auditorium as the
audience began rushing for the theater’s Randolph Street entrance. With
children in tow, the audience members immediately clogged the gallery and the
upper balconies. The aisles had become impassable and as the lights went out,
the crowd milled about in blind terror. The auditorium began to fill with heat
and smoke and screams echoed off the walls and ceilings. Through it all, the
mass continued to move forward but when the crowd reached the doors, they could
not open them. The doors had been designed to swing inward rather than outward.
The crush of people prevented those in the front from opening the doors. Many
of those who died not only burned, but suffocated from the smoke and the crush
of bodies. Later, as the police removed the charred remains from the theater,
they discovered that a number of victims had been trampled in the panic. One
dead woman’s face even bore the mark of a shoe heel.
Backstage,
theater employees and cast members opened a rear set of double doors, which
sucked the wind inside and caused flames to fan out under the asbestos curtain
and into the auditorium. A second gust of wind created a fireball that shot out
into the galleries and balconies that were filled with people. All of the stage
drops were now on fire and as they burned, they engulfed the supposedly
noncombustible asbestos curtain and when it collapsed, it plunged into the
seats of the theater.
The
fire burned for almost 15 minutes before an alarm was raised at a box down the
street. From outside, there appeared to be nothing wrong. It was so quiet that
the first firefighters to arrive thought it was a false alarm.
This
changed when they tried to open the auditorium doors and found they could not
--- there were too many bodies stacked up against them. They were only able to
gain access by actually pulling the bodies out of the way with pike poles,
peeling them off one another and then climbing over the stacks of corpses. It took
only 10 minutes to put out the blaze, as the intense heat inside had already
eaten up anything that would still burn. The firefighters made their way into
the blackened auditorium and were met with only silence and smell of death.
They called out for survivors but no one answered their cry.
A
photograph taken from the stage of the fire-blackened theater.
The
gallery and upper balconies sustained the greatest loss of life as the patrons
had been trapped by locked doors at the top of the stairways. The firefighters
found 200 bodies stacked there, as many as 10 deep. Those who escaped had
literally ripped the metal bars from the front of the balcony and had jumped
onto the crowds below. Even then, most of these met their deaths at a lower
level.
The
balcony of the theater had the greatest loss of life. Theater patrons were
trapped there by gates that were locked across the stairways and then abandoned
by theater staff after the fire began. Others raced for the fire escapes – only
to find that they had never been installed. Many of those in the balcony burned
to death or plunged to their doom in the alleyway outside.
A few
who made it to the fire escape door behind the top balcony found that the iron
staircase was missing. In its place was a platform that plunged about 100 feet
to the cobblestone alley below. Across the alley, behind the theater, painters
were working on a building occupied by Northwestern University’s dental school.
When they realized what was happening at the theater, they quickly erected a
makeshift bridge using ladders and wooden planks, which they extended across
the alley to the fire escape platform. Reports vary as to how many they saved,
but several people managed to climb across the “bridge”.
Several
plunged to their deaths as they tried to escape across the ladder but many
times that number jumped from the ledge or were pushed by the milling crowd
that pressed through the doors behind them. The passageway behind the theater
is still referred to as "Death Alley" today, after nearly 150 victims
were found here.
When
it was all over, 572 people died in the fire and more died later, bringing the
eventual death toll up to 602, including 212 children. For nearly five hours, police
officers, firemen and even newspaper reporters, carried out the dead. Anxious
relatives sifted through the remains, searching for loved ones. Other bodies
were taken away by police wagons and ambulances and transported to a temporary
morgue at Marshall Field’s on State Street. Medical examiners and investigators
worked all through the night.
The
city went into mourning. Newspapers carried lists and photographs of the dead
and the mayor banned all New Year’s celebrations. An investigation into the fire
brought to light a number of troubling facts. The investigation discovered that
the supposedly "fireproof" asbestos curtain was really made from
cotton and other combustible materials. It would have never saved anyone at
all. In addition to not having any fire alarms in the building, the owners had
decided that sprinklers were too unsightly and too costly and had never had
them installed.
To
make matters worse, the management also established a policy to keep non-paying
customers from slipping into the theater during a performance --- they quietly
bolted nine pair of iron panels over the rear doors and installed padlocked,
accordion-style gates at the top of the interior second and third floor
stairway landings. And just as tragic was the idea they came up with to keep
the audience from being distracted during a show. They ordered all of the exit
lights to be turned off.
The
investigation led to a cover-up by officials from the city and the fire
department, who denied all knowledge of fire code violations. They blamed the
inspectors, who had overlooked the problems in exchange for free theater
passes. A grand jury indicted a number of individuals, including the theater
owners, fire officials and even the mayor. No one was ever charged with a
criminal act. Families of the dead filed nearly 275 civil lawsuits against the
theater but no money was ever collected.
The
Iroquois Fire still ranks today as one of deadliest in history. Nevertheless,
the building was repaired and re-opened briefly in 1904 as Hyde and Behmann’s
Music Hall and then in 1905 as the Colonial Theater. In 1924, the building was
razed to make room for a new theater, the Oriental, but the façade of the
Iroquois was used in its construction. The Oriental operated at what is now 24
West Randolph Street until the middle part of 1981, when it fell into disrepair
and was closed down. It opened again as the home to a wholesale electronics
dealer for a time and then went dark again. The restored theater is now part of
the Civic Tower Building and is next door to the restored Delaware Building. It
reopened as the Ford Center for the Performing Arts in 1998.
Bodies
of the dead lined up in the alley behind the theater. Newspaper reporters
dubbed this alleyway, officially known as Couch Place, “Death Alley” after the
fire. It remains one of the most haunted spots in downtown Chicago today.
But
this has not stopped the tales of the old Iroquois Theater from being told, especially
in light of more recent -- and more ghostly events. According to recent
accounts from people who live and work in this area, "Death Alley" is
not as empty as it appears to be. The narrow passageway, which runs behind the
Oriental Theater, is rarely used today, except for the occasional delivery
truck or a lone pedestrian who is in a hurry to get somewhere else. It is
largely deserted, but why? The stories say that those a few who do pass through
the alley often find themselves very uncomfortable and unsettled here. They say
that faint cries are sometimes heard in the shadows and that some have reported
being touched by unseen hands and by eerie cold spots that seem to come from
nowhere and vanish just as quickly.
Could
the alleyway, and the surrounding area, actually be haunted? And do the spirits
of those who met their tragic end inside of the burning theater still linger
here? Perhaps, or perhaps the strange sensations experienced here are
"ghosts of the past" of another kind --- a chilling remembrance of a
terrifying event that will never be completely forgotten.
The
complete story of the Iroquois Theater Fire is available in several of Troy’s
book, including AND HELL FOLLOW WITH IT. Death Alley is a regular stop on our
WEIRD CHICAGO ghost tours of the city.
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