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From the Iroquois to the Eastland: One Firefighter, Two Catastrophes

From the Iroquois to the Eastland: One Firefighter, Two Catastrophes

Season 4 Episode 154 Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
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A single obituary opened a door to two of Chicago’s most haunting tragedies: the Iroquois Theatre Fire (1903) and the Eastland Disaster (1915). We trace the life of Charles C. Morgan, a Chicago Fire Department truckman who assisted with both tragedies. Along the way, we connect the Iroquois Theater fire and the Eastland disaster, explore what firefighters faced on the line, and surface the reforms that reshaped public safety — outward-opening doors, marked exits, stronger fire curtains, and real drills. These were hard-won lessons paid for in lives, and Morgan was there for both reckonings.

I share the clips that established Morgan’s record: a smoke-filled hotel rescue, a glass-shattered hand, and the commendation that followed Eastland. Then we zoom out to the sources themselves. One early historical organization, the Eastland Memorial Society, built a meticulous online record linking these two events and preserving survivor testimony. That careful, credited work still informs how many understand Chicago disaster history. But after the Society closed, their work appeared elsewhere, often without attribution. When that happens, the source trail frays, and future researchers lose the ability to verify and build.

This episode blends genealogy, local history, and archival ethics. We talk about why a truck company’s technical craft mattered in both fire and water, how an “absolutely fireproof” promise unraveled in minutes, and why footnotes are not fussy add-ons but the backbone of honest storytelling. Morgan’s path reminds us that courage is rarely a single act; it’s a practiced skill applied under pressure, time after time.

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