
Cocoanut Grove Fire - Boston, MA
Posted by:
silverquill
N 42° 20.998 W 071° 04.090
19T E 329657 N 4690705
Quick Description: 492 people lost their lives in the deadliest nightclub fire in U.S. history on the evening of Nov. 28, 1942, when a match ignited flammable decorations in Boston's lavish Cocoanut Grove Nightclub, over-crowded with 1,000 people.
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Date Posted: 9/3/2009 8:15:57 AM
Waymark Code: WM754J
Views: 1
Long Description:
This horrific fire rocked the nation, even displacing World War II
from the front pages, as the massive loss of life in such a tragic
fire struck with the force of a blitzkrieg on the consciousness of
a city and a country. Today, few could locate the site on a small
side street near the intersection of Piedmont and Church Streets in
Boston's Bay Village Neighborhood. The only memorial is a small
brass plaque embedded in the sidewalk, installed in 1993 by the Bay
Village Neighborhood Association. It is easily missed even by
someone looking for it.
The Cocoanut Grove was an elegant nightclub, but it had formerly
been a speakeasy, so many of the windows and doors had been bricked
over, welded shut, or boarded over. Though lavish in appearance,
cheap, flammable decorations were used such as paper palm trees and
streamers. Though the rated capacity was only 460 people, more than
twice that number were crammed into the nightclub when about 10:00
p.m. a 16 year-old busboy light a match in order to see to replace
an electric light bulb in the lower level Melody Lounge igniting
the overhead paper ceiling.
The fire became a fast moving inferno and within fifteen minutes
had left nearly 500 people dead and scores injured. About the only
working exit was the main revolving door, which quickly jammed, and
dozens of people were jammed against it, as they were at other
exits that had been disabled. Some 187 firefighters responded to
the blaze, but there was little they could do for those trapped
inside.
In the aftermath of the fire, and the extensive investigations,
new laws were enacted in Boston and the rest of the nation vastly
overhauling unsafe construction and operation of public places. New
treatments were developed for burn victims, and research into the
psychological treatment of victims of tragedies were realized.
THE COCOANUT GROVE
Erected By
Bay Village
Neighborhood Association
1993
In memory of the more than 490 people who died as a result of the
Cocoanut Grove fire on November 18, 1942. As a result of this
terrible tragedy major changes were made in the fire codes and
improvements in the treatment of burn victims not only in Boston
but across the nation.
PHOENIX OUT OF THE ASHES
It is ironic that a little over fifty years later, another similar
fire involving flammable insulation, overcrowding, and blocked
exits ocurred at the Station Nightclub in Warwick, Rhode Island, a
few hours south of Boston, on Feb. 20, 2003, resulting in the loss
of 100 lives.
And before that, on May 28, 1977, the Beverly Hills Supper Club
in Southgate, Kentucky, went up in a blaze in which 165 persons
died and over 200 were injured.
Dozens of books and hundreds of articles and reports have been
written about the Cocoanut Grove Fire, and many are maintained in
personal collections of survivors, or those involved in the
aftermath in some way. I have personally seen shelf after shelf of
notebooks, and other material gathered by the son of the lead
investigator on the case.
Here are just a few of the online resources, each giving a piece
of the picture from which a whole perspective can be gained.
Wikipedia
- Cocoanut Grove Fire
Boston Globe 1992 - The Cocoanut Grove Inferno 50th
Anniv.
Celbrate Boston - Cocoanut Grove Fire
Fire News -
64th Anniversay of the Cocoanut Grove Fire