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THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
Report of the Chicago Relief and Aid Society of Disbursement of Contributions for the Sufferers by the Chicago Fire. Printed for the Chicago Relief and Aid Society, at the Riverside Press, 1874.
This volume is one of unique and remarkable interest, founded on one of the most terrible tragedies in all history. Within a period of twenty-four hours an immense portion of a great city was laid in ashes. The total area burned over was 2,124 acres, or nearly 31⁄3 square miles, containing about 73 miles of streets and 18,000 buildings, while, of a population of 334,000, the houses of 100,000 were destroyed. Of the experience of that terrible Sunday night, when the conflagration spread through the city before a driving gale of wind, the "Report" remarks as follows:
But, appalling as was this phase of the great disaster, the consequences it immediately entailed were hardly less dreadful:
Instant measures were required to meet the emergency. The news of the calamity spread by telegraph through the world, roused universal sympathy, and back, along the wires, as if by reflex action, came prompt offers of abundant assistance. The telegraph poured in reports of world-wide contributions in money, and the railway-trains came freighted with provisions, clothing, merchandise, and all the necessary supplies which a suddenly unhoused and bankrupted community might require. To meet these universal proffers of help, and carry out the work of distribution, the "Relief and Aid Society" was called suddenly into existence, and the present "Report" is the history of its experience. Its officers consisted of the ablest men in Chicago, and the record of their prompt and vigorous doings is in the highest degree interesting and instructive. The report they have issued is a model of systematic, detailed, and comprehensive statement of operations, and will be permanently valuable, both as an impressive chapter in the history of Chicago, and as a register of experiences that will be valuable for consultation in similar emergencies that are liable to happen in other cities. The volume before us is gotten up in superior style, but we hope there is a cheaper edition for general circulation.