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I need not tell you of the greatness of the calamity which has fallen
upon us.
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I little thought when I received your kind & most welcome
letter that so long a time would pass before I acknowledged it, or
that so many sorrows & anxieties would crowd the space which lay
between your letter & my reply.
I need not tell you of the greatness of the calamity which has fallen
upon us. We can all feel that and most of us, I imagine, will feel it
more & more as time advances. Men are full of excitement now &
hope, the smoke of the battle has as yet not fairly cleared away--the
realization, to be followed in many cases by depression & despair,
will come soon enough. Nothing can describe the desolation which
reigns over the whole North Side & nothing can be more depressing,
unless it be the efforts at restoration upon the South. To see the lines
of rough sheds which are taking the places of all the magnificent
buildings destroyed is simply heart-breaking. Chicago is thrown back
now to where it was twenty-five years ago, & I for one do not expect
to see it restored to where it was a few short weeks ago. The men of
Chicago are heroes, their energy, cheerfulness & determination are
something almost sublime; but I fear many a brave heart will sink
under difficulties utterly unsurmountable.
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The wind, blowing a hurricane, howling like myriads of
evil spirits, drove the flames before it with a force & fierceness which
could never be described or imagined....
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You have heard, I have no doubt, account after account of the
progress of the fire, so I will not fill my paper with that; indeed it
would be a waste of time--no words can give an idea of the horrors of
that night. The wind, blowing a hurricane, howling like myriads of
evil spirits drove the flames before it with a force & fierceness which
could never be described or imagined; it was not flame but a solid
wall of fire which was hurled against the buildings & the houses did
not burn, they were simply destroyed. The flames would dash
themselves against the sides of a solid block, in one instant passing
out through the other side & the whole just melted away &
disappeared. The courthouse burned in twenty minutes, while that
long block of forty houses on LaSalle St. opposite Lincoln Park
burned in just seven. The air was full of cinders; pieces of blazing
shingles & boards & great strips of tarred felt fell in every direction,
now on the roofs of houses yet unburned & then on the loads of
furniture & bedding which people were trying to save & which they
were continually obliged to abandon in the street in order to save
themselves.
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& the windows filled with flowers all shining so peacefully in the
moonlight, it seemed impossible to realize that in a few moments the
smoke & flame I saw all around me would seize that too & that I was
looking upon my home for the last time.
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The course of the main body of fire was rather below us, so
that the water works & all beyond burned before our house caught &
many people thought we would be spared; but the fire worked up
gradually along the North Branch & the instant the wind caught it the
fire was hurled the whole length of the city; in that way our house
was burned at last. As I went out of it & saw the vine-covered walls
& the windows filled with flowers all shining so peacefully in the
moonlight, it seemed impossible to realize that in a few moments the
smoke & flame I saw all around me would seize that too & that I was
looking upon my home for the last time. We had time to save most of
our furniture if there had been any way of carrying it off or any
apparent place of safety for it, the only means of conveyance being a
wheelbarrow & our own hands. We saved some clothing, most of our
silver & a few pictures, though part of what we rescued from the
house was afterwards burned. We succeeded finally in procuring a
sand wagon on which we placed ourselves & the few worldly goods
which remained to us & rode to the West Side in company with
thousands of other refugees like ourselves--dusty, smoky, forlorn in
every way, the wind blowing a hurricane, the air full of blinding dust
& smoke & behind us our ruined homes, with all their years of
accumulated treasures & associations of every kind. It is for those I
grieve, not over the loss of money--my Mother's Bible, the clothing &
toys of my dead children, all the keepsakes & mementos of a
lifetime.
People sometimes check me for being too despondent when I
say I shall never have a home again; a house somewhere,
undoubtedly I shall have--I must live out my appointed time--but a
house which simply bears the mark of the builder & upholsterer
could never be home to me if it were ever so elegant.
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...no one had any money to purchase anything or
anything to purchase if they were able.
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We came directly out here to the Bryan's & have been here
ever since, most kindly cared for. Indeed, if it be true "that it is more
blessed to give than to receive," there must be a great many happy
people in the world now, for the outpoured sympathy & kindness of
the world is ours & we need it. Hardly a family on the North Side
saved a change of clothing, & every shop in the city & every office &
bank being burned, no one had any money to purchase anything or
anything to purchase if they were able. You may imagine how I felt
on meeting Mrs. Arnold coming from the Relief Society with a bundle
of clothing for Mr. Arnold, though I think she felt rather uplifted by
the necessity, appearing somewhat in the character of a martyr, &
when Dr. Rylance went to see her & seizing her hands with one of
his characteristic gushes exclaimed: "You noble woman," I am sure
she felt abundantly repaid for all she had undergone. We have
come to the literal fulfillment of the injunction: "Let him that hath
two coats, give to him that hath none," for we all share & share
around in a way that partakes very strongly of the ludicrous. I
found when I examined the sheet which contained my wardrobe that
I had one nightgown & six white skirts. Mrs. LeMoyne had fifty
homeless ones in her house the night after the fire, not one of whom
had a change of clothing. Mrs. Ryerson had on a wrapper & man's
hat tied down with a handkerchief. Tille D'Wolf had a calico wrapper
with a bed blanket by way of shawl, & in that state appeared at
Judge Drummond's. Mrs. Winston saved a pink silk dress trimmed
with lace, but very little else; one lady had a carriage full of party
dresses & another a half dozen bonnets. One man was seen running
from the fire with two immense turnips & another with a piece of
broken furniture of some kind. The Rumseys just succeeded in
getting out with all their children, leaving all else behind. Old Mrs.
McCagg was taken out at the last moment & forced to run, delicate as
she is, to Chicago Ave. where she fell exhausted & would have
burned in the street if her friends had not seized an express wagon
& placed her in it. Ezra McCagg has lost every dollar of income & all
his fine library, though his pictures were saved; his greenhouses look
strangely enough in the midst of all the surrounding desolation.
Washington Park is full of the barracks built by the city for the
houseless poor--they are the only neighbors Mr. Ogden has within a
mile. One of the men whom we employed for a day told Charlie
"that they had not many neighbors, but they were very select!"
meaning the Ogdens. I think Mrs. O. feels worse, living in her elegant,
untouched house, than we do who are altogether homeless, & I do
not wonder at it, as they live in fear of their lives, with their house
watched day & night by policemen.
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The Rumseys just succeeded in
getting out with all their children, leaving all else behind.
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Washington Park is full of the barracks built by the city for the
houseless poor--they are the only neighbors Mr. Ogden has within a mile.
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...indeed, they gave
up all hopes of life & went & stood under one of the trees in their
yard to wait for the end, when they saw a place where the fence had
burned away & rushed through.
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The Arnolds have taken a small furnished house on the South
Side & one servant. The Scudders are with them; poor Mary lost all
her wedding presents; what were not burned in the house were
melted in Mr. Magie's lot where they buried them. The Magies had a
very narrow escape, as they waited in the house loth to give it up till
the fence took fire & were both severely burned; indeed, they gave
up all hopes of life & went & stood under one of the trees in their
yard to wait for the end, when they saw a place where the fence had
burned away & rushed through.
Albert Munger has lost about four hundred thousand dollars,
Mr. Ogden about three millions. The losses of that whole family are
tremendous as they were insured almost entirely in home
companies. Mr. Ryerson, too, seems to be very much injured by the
fire (financially I mean). Mrs. King is out here at their little country
place. Mr. King lost heavily, but his credit is unimpaired, so he feels
in very good spirits, as he stands with Field, Leiter & Co. & a few
others among those who mean to pay dollar for dollar. It must be a
great mortification for J. V. Farwell to be obliged to ask for time. I
understand that Mr. Bross has lost almost everything but his picture,
which he was seen during the fire carrying off on horseback--the
only thing he saved. Jessie has behaved nobly, as of course she
would; it is said she [is] looking for a situation of some kind. Clarence
Dyer had just got nicely settled in his own house & has lost that & his
coal yard which must be very hard for him. They were with Mrs.
Turnley immediately after the fire; I have not heard since.
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Thousands were out on the prairie & in Lincoln Park all night
exposed to the heavy rain which came just twenty-four hours too
late.
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All in that part of the town were driven by the flames toward
the lake & most of them suffered terribly. Mary Howe & her baby
took refuge on the pier with the Arnolds & many others & were
there for hours. Some went into the lake itself; some got off in small
boats & were out all night before they could get back again.
Thousands were out on the prairie & in Lincoln Park all night
exposed to the heavy rain which came just twenty-four hours too
late. Essie Stockton was married the Thursday after the fire in a
white petticoat with a morning dress looped over it & departed on
her wedding trip with her "trousseau" tied up in a pillow case!
Louise Goodwin & her devoted went off on theirs with passes
furnished by the Relief Society! The sick had a terrible time--one
lady with a baby a few days old got up from her bed & walked a
mile; one with a baby a few minutes old was laid on a mattress &
driven off in a wagon; hundreds of children were born on the
prairies the next few days--but all those things you can imagine.
I fear I have written a very incoherent letter, for I seem to
have lost my faculties since the fire. I hardly remember from hour to
hour what I am doing, though the last few nights I have begun to
sleep more & hope soon to feel better. I long to hear of you all.
Yours most affectionately,
Anna E. Higginson
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