ornamental rule for section top
 Queen of the West Once More
  The capitalists, the mercantile and business interests of this country and of Europe cannot afford to withhold the means to rebuild Chicago.... What she has been in the past she must become in the future, and a hundred fold more.  
¥ William Bross, Speech to the New York Chamber of Commerce  


Galleries
Queen Gallery
Back in Business
Bricks and Mortar
Body and Soul
The New City


Library
Queen Library
Our Trade and Commerce
Political Economy of the Fire
  Burnt out of his home on Terrace Row, William Bross expended little energy on self-pity. Chicago's future was at risk, and there was no time to lose. The fire ended Tuesday at dawn, and by Thursday evening he was on a train to New York. On his arrival he spoke to reporters eager for eyewitness reports, and soon after he addressed local businessmen. His point was simple and direct: the fire opened rather than foreclosed opportunities to invest in his city. New York, "the senior partner" in American enterprise to "junior partner" Chicago, couldn't "sit by and see the business of the firm crushed out when he has the means to establish it on a scale more gigantic and more profitable than ever before." John Stephen Wright, the king of Chicago boosters, who had ceaselessly promoted the city's prospects over the previous four decades, even more boldly declared, "Five years will give Chicago more men, more money, more business, than she would have had without this fire." He followed this with the colorful observation, "Chicago is not burnt up, only well blistered for bad ailments, to strengthen her for manhood."

This talk of Chicago as a junior partner approaching manhood emphasized that the fire had done nothing to damage the city's most important quality, its remarkable potential for continued growth. And, whether they were speaking more from concern or from confidence, both Bross and Wright prophesied true. Industrializing America had too much invested in Chicago's development, and the features that made that development possible-- the city's location and resources--were still in place. After a brief downturn in the financial markets and an even briefer moment of doubt about the future on the part of some Chicagoans, the city's rebuilding began in earnest. Within days a few pioneer businesses sprang up in sheds and stands among the ruins, and traffic started moving again. The rubble was swept away, a good portion of it pushed into the lake south of the river to make new real estate. Basic services were quickly reestablished in temporary quarters--the post office, for example, was set up in the Methodist Church on the corner of Wabash and Harrison. Inside of six weeks, work had begun on 212 stone and brick buildings in the South Division alone.



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The Great Chicago Fire and the Web of Memory
Copyright © 1996 by the Chicago Historical Society and the Trustees of Northwestern University
Last revised 9-30-97