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 Souvenirs
  My children grieve over their little treasures and their books, and I cry with them. I saved my baby's portrait and my Mother's and husband's--my silver, my India and lace shawls, and a few silk dresses, my photograph album, and a little jewelry. The above is my stock in trade, and I feel as if my life were beginning again.  
¥ Letter of Mrs. Aurelia King, October 21, 1871  


Galleries
Souvenirs Gallery
Pieces of the Past
Touched by Fire
Selling History
Living Memory


Library
Souvenirs Library
The Rescue of Bessie
Saving the Family Bible
 

Once it became terrifyingly apparent to Chicagoans that their homes were in the fire's path and that they had no option but to flee, there was still an important decision left to make: what, if anything, could they save? Many loaded their worldly goods in wagons they owned or hired, in several instances never to see them again. Some buried what precious possessions they could and hoped for the best. Thirteen-year-old Bessie Bradwell carried away her best clothes by putting them on, while her mother Myra donned Bessie's father's Masonic hat, declaring, "Masonry will certainly be an aid at a time like this."

Most just gathered up their loved ones, made a hurried selection in these worst of circumstances, and sadly abandoned the rest to the flames. Aurelia King rescued family portraits and photographs, along with a few articles of clothing, jewelry, and silver. On her way out, Myra Bradwell lifted from its place the cage holding her pet bird. Philena Lloyd's father preserved only the Bible he had brought with him when he and his wife moved from Maine to Chicago as newlyweds in the mid-1850s. Harriet Peabody, six years old, ran back into the house to retrieve her doll Bessie. In the heat of the moment, some irrationally clutched something of no particular personal or financial value. A few lucky ones recovered precious items that they thought were gone. Julian Rumsey's servant Christian Larson by chance ran into the stranger whom Rumsey had hired on the spot to cart away his favorite painting. Mary Emily Blatchford was able to ransom her wedding dress from someone who had "found" it, so that her daughter could wear it at her own wedding, as Mrs. Blatchford could again on her fiftieth anniversary in 1908.



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The Great Chicago Fire and the Web of Memory
Copyright © 1996 by the Chicago Historical Society and the Trustees of Northwestern University
Last revised 10-8-96