The Iroquois Theatre Was ‘Absolutely Fireproof.’ Hundreds Died When it Burned to the Ground. 66%
By Elizabeth Rayne34%
7/17/2026, 12:00:04 PM
Keywords: Fire, Theater, Flame, Iroquois Theatre, Building, Closed Door, Muslin Curtain, Stage Manager, Victim, Child, Safety Measure, Mother, Scene, Light, Startled Stagehand
BS Summary: This article contains 32 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Emotion, Post Hoc (False Cause), and Anecdotal, with Negativity Bias as the most egregious example at 31.2% saturation with 319 hits. Analysis detected 2,626 faulty-reasoning hits from 1,022 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 60.2% and a BS Rank of 66% (5,933 of 17,126 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 65.40% of the article peer group.
Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:Despite its grandeur, the “fireproof” Iroquois Theatre was a conflagration waiting to happen, as safety measures were overlooked in the rush to build it.
When an overheated stage light came into contact with a muslin curtain in the wings, the resulting fire quickly spread.602 theatergoers lost their lives in the fire, and new safety measures were implemented in buildings across the country as a result.There was something about the early 20th century that ushered in a short-lived era of superlative claims that seemed almost too extraordinary to be true.
Advertisements proclaimed the wonders of the era’s new marvels of engineering, perhaps the most infamous of which was the “unsinkable” Titanic, which immediately sank.
But almost a decade before that, there was the Iroquois Theatre, which was touted as fireproof.
As the curtains rose on December 30, 1903, audiences weren’t aware of was just how misleading that claim was.Patrons eager to escape the chill of downtown Chicago filed into the theater on 26 West Randolph St. for a matinee performance.
The theater wouldn’t have been open so soon but for the pressure of the holiday rush promising more profits.
Founders William J.
Davis and Harry Powers decided to open on November 23, right before Thanksgiving, and the urgency meant bypassing safety inspections (usually accomplished with a bribe in the form of a bottle of whiskey).
Competition loomed, and the theater’s owners meant to cash in on the opportunity.“
It has taken rush work night and day to get the new structure to completion for the opening,” stated the November 15, 1903 issue of The Inter Ocean.
“Under the direction of Messrs.
Powers and Davis, the Chicago partners in the new enterprise, and Architect Benjamin Marshall, the work has been rapidly completed.”
This new theater was a luxurious waking dream.
Its facade was inspired by classical Roman architecture, and inside, it was covered in plush carpeting and ornate brass moldings.
Together, the orchestra circle, dress circle, and gallery sat 1,744 people beneath glittering chandeliers.
Every seat in the house had a view of the splendid proscenium arch from which painted curtains hung.
These curtains—made of asbestos fabric and painted with scenes of a sunrise in the Mohawk Valley—were advertised in playbills and newspapers as fireproof.
That December afternoon, wide-eyed faces (most of them children whose mothers were treating them to the 2:00 p.m. matinee while their husbands returned to work after Christmas) marveled at their surroundings.At 3:15 p.m., the musical number “Let Us Swear it by the Pale Moonlight” opened to a blue-tinged wash of light meant to glow like the moon itself.
There was a single spotlight focused on sixteen actors perspiring under layers of greasepaint.
Something sparked.
The spotlight short-circuited and set fire to a muslin drape in the wings, and soon, the backdrops that illustrated scenes from a castle also caught fire.
When the stage manager caught sight of the flames licking at the oil paint, he tried in vain to spray them with a firefighting liquid, but it was far too watered-down.
Tongues of flame ignited the allegedly fireproof asbestos curtains.Startled stagehands began throwing the contents of the theater’s Kilfyre extinguishers, which were filled with a compound that was mostly sodium bicarbonate, at the blaze.
But the dry chemical powder was almost useless, as when it was thrown at the fire, which had started high above the stage, it drifted down to the floor instead of smothering the flames.
There were no sprinklers in the building.
As the captain of the Chicago Fire Department had disturbingly noticed days before the Iroquois opened, it was also lacking alarms, water connections, and telephones.
Emergency exits were everywhere, but nearly impossible to find or use—they were not lit, because that was thought to distract from the show, and they were held closed with bascule locks, which were popular in Europe but otherwise unfamiliar.
Closed doors kept the flames from escaping.Panic erupted throughout the house.
When stagehands opened the back exit, a gust of freezing wind rushed in from the alley and aggravated the fire even more.
Most of the performers and crew still managed to outrun the fire.
Actor Eddie Foy, a comedian and vaudeville star, stayed back and urged everyone to stay calm even as the stage burned at his feet.
Some were engulfed in flames before they could ever reach a door.
Others were trampled.
One performer (Nellie Reed, an aerialist playing a fairy) became trapped and fell to her death.By the time firefighters arrived, they found piles upon piles of charred bodies in the wake of a fire that was putting itself out.
Some people who climbed frantically to escape only survived because they fell on the corpses of those who had fallen before them.
Most of the 602 victims whose lives the fire claimed had been burned beyond recognition.
It was the worst theater fire Chicago—or any other city in America—would ever see, and would hold the record for the highest single-event death toll until the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Twelve employees were arrested, but ultimately released.Following the tragedy, mandatory safety measures were implemented in buildings and other large indoor spaces across the country, including panic bars that allowed doors to open from the inside with a push, and lights above emergency exits.
Memorials to the victims still stand in Chicago—several years after the fire, victims were remembered with a memorial structure in Montrose Cemetery, and the Iroquois Memorial Hospital was also built in their honor.Today, the Nederlander Theater—which was once the Iroquois—is thought to be haunted by earthbound spirits in Edwardian period costumes, and they apparently want the living to feel their tremendous loss.
When actress Ana Gasteyer was performing at the Nederlander in a touring production of Wicked, she described the eerie vision of a mother with two children who appeared before her backstage.“
There was a feeling of incredible sadness, an incredible calm” she told AE’s Celebrity Ghost Stories, according to CBS Chicago.
“Not in the [ghosts of the] children so much, but the mother.”
Analysis
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