Friday, December 17, 2021

Michigan fires of late 19th and early 20th centuries: 1871 fires

 


Michigan’s first recorded catastrophic fire occurred in the fall of 1871, at the time of the great Chicago Fire and the Peshtigo Fire in Wisconsin which took over 1,500 lives. These two famous fire overshadowed those that swept our state of Michigan, literally from shore to shore, rendering some 15,000 citizens homeless. To date, the death toll remains incomplete, with most research sources declaring a ball park figure in the range of some 200—plus or minus—deaths. Similar to other great conflagrations, these fires of 1871 were actually a series rather than just one large inferno. But often these smaller fires going together and created walls of flame and their own breed of ‘hell’ on earth (Sodders 1997:5-6).

The 1871 fires burned over a wide area of Michigan in early October of 1871. There had been little if any rain for at least two months preceding these fires. 

Sodders writes: “ … it appears that many—if not most—of these fires started out as a single runaway blaze, totally out of control dye to the high wind gusts, finally joining towpath other such fires until the fire became an enormous beast that simply could not be stopped for miles—forays—until it ran out of fuel and the winds to fan it (Sodders 1997:9). ”

In reading about the 1871 Michigan fires and preparing for writing this piece, I was struck by the geographical extent of the fires. The map that I am sharing, prepared from Google Earth shows only some of the towns and counties affected by these fires.In reading about the 1871 fires and the 1881 fires which I will write about in a later article, you will see references to the thumb region, yet this region looks like the thumb of a mitten. If you look at the map, you will see three counties that look like they form a part of the thumb of a mitten (Huron, Tuscola, and Senilac Counties). I decided to limit the counties (yellow markers) and towns (green markers) in the map to those mentioned in the video below. Thumbwind has a much better map, which is also interactive and includes most of the 1871 fires as well as historic photos and articles, please go here.




The video focuses on the 1871 fires across the Lake States including but not limited to Michigan. I am sharing it here because of there account of the fires that burned in Michigan. Note that it is likely that Mrs O’Leary’s cow did not knock over a lantern that started the Chicago Fire (see this Smithsonian article for more information), note you may see an ad when you click on the link. Whether or not the comet led to the 1871 fires is still open for debate.


Direct link to video on YouTube (podcast) from ThumbWind Publications


Note: Sodders, Betty (edited and designed by Don Weeks). Michigan on Fire. 1997: Thunder Bay Press.

Articles in this series:


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