Mr. Horan's death certificate is available at FamilySearch and we can learn a lot about him from that record. He was born in Chicago in 1859, the son of Irish immigrants, and he had served the city as a fireman just short of thirty years at the time of his death. Notice how the names of the cemetery and undertaker are written. Is it possible that the family had a difficult time deciding where Mr. Horan would be buried? Or perhaps someone mistakenly wrote the wrong information and then corrected it? The informant, Daniel Horan, was Mr. Horan's brother and I can imagine him stepping in to help the grieving widow.
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Today's article says that the fire "left behind 19 widows and 35 orphaned children" and I wondered who those unnamed people were. I searched the Chicago Tribune at Footnote.com and found several articles mentioning funerals for the men who were killed. Twenty-four people died as a result of the fire, twenty-three on December 22 and one on December 23. Twenty-one of them, members of the Chicago Fire Department, are memorialized on a monument at the Chicago Union Stockyards. Of the remaining three, two were "firemen" employed by Morris & Co.--Andrew Dymuran and Patrick Realph--and one was a messenger boy, Stephen Leen.
The Illinois Statewide Death Index entries for those who died in the fire are listed below. Click on the small images next to the death index entries to view the death certificates. (I located the records on FamilySearch using a database called Illinois, Cook County Deaths, 1878-1922).
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I haven't looked at these records carefully yet but it seems to me that each death certificate linked above will tell a story worth remembering--just like Mr. Horan's does.
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If you're interested in learning more about the fire and its aftermath, the Chicago Tribune is a good place to start. Here are a few things that I learned as I searched through articles:
*Mourning clothes were provided to survivors free of charge by Charles A. Stevens' company. Employees went to the homes to take orders and measurements. (24 Dec 1910, p. 2, col. 6)
*Dennis and Nicholas Doyle were father and son. (24 Dec 1910, p. 2, col. 7)
*"Phone girls" handled a record number of calls during the incident. A number of them had relatives who died in the fire. (23 Dec 1910, p. 5, col. 6)
4 comments:
What a sad Christmas that must have been for so many families. Thanks (once again) for revealing the lives and stories behind the facts.
I like that you notice not just the bare facts but such things as likely "help" on the certificate for the widow and so on. To be a good historian or genealogist needs that good talent. Thank you.
I will have to look at Powers family tree - some of ours from Tipp were in Chicago at that time.
Thanks for your great information, really enjoy the blog.
Catherine
Interesting and heartbreaking. I did not know abut the fire, and was looking for other info on Armour & Co, as my father and his father both worked there. My grandfather would have been working at Armour during this time period.
Thank you for sharing, as Peter Powers was my daughters and husbands great grandfather on my husbands mothers side.
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