Tinder Box, Anthony P. Hatch
Tinder Box, Anthony P. Hatch
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Tinder Box
The Iroquois Theatre Disaster 1903

Author: Anthony P. Hatch

Narrator: Matthew Josdal

Unabridged: 8 hr 4 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/14/2020


Synopsis

When the Iroquois Theater opened in Chicago on November 23, 1903, it was considered one of the grandest structures of its day, a monument to modern design and technology, as well as "absolutely fireproof." This was a theater that would rival any in New York or Paris. Instead it became the funeral pyre for hundreds of victims.

In Tinder Box, Tony Hatch, former CBS reporter and Emmy Award winner, tells the Iroquois story as it has never been told before. In a rush to open the theater on time, corners were cut, and the Iroquois lacked the most basic fire-fighting equipment: sprinklers, fire alarm boxes, backstage telephone, exit signs, and functioning asbestos curtain. Some exits, for aesthetic reasons, were hidden behind heavy draperies, doors opened inward, and exterior fire escapes were unfinished. But Chicago officials, the theater owners and managers, the contractor, stagehands—all looked the other way.

Then, on December 30, 1903, disaster struck. The theater was packed, overcrowded with a standing-room-only audience, mostly women and children who had come to see the popular comedian Eddie Foy perform in the musical fantasy Mr. Bluebeard. A short circuit in a single backstage spotlight touched off a small fire that, in minutes, erupted into an uncontrollable blaze. More than 600 people died.


About Anthony P. Hatch

Anthony P. Hatch is a New York City native whose career has spanned twenty years in wire service, print, and broadcast media and twenty years in public affairs.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Michael

Overall a good read. Kind of a matter of fact writing style. Doesn't really jump off the pages but keeps you interested. Not super detailed but enough to give you a pretty good understanding. One things for sure, this book pissed me off!! The scumbags responsible(politicians and wealthy business men......more

Goodreads review by Jason

Six hundred people died when Chicago's Iroquois Theater caught fire. The theater was advertised to be fireproof and state of the art, and its owners were working feverishly to make money. During a holiday matinee, a faulty spotlight set a curtain ablaze, and the terrible truths about the Iroquois we......more

The Iroquois Theatre opened on November 23, 1903 in Chicago, Illinois. The capacity of the theatre was 1,602 people, sitting at three different viewing levels. There were 700 seats on the floor, over 400 seats on the first balcony, and 500 seats on the second balcony. The theatre was widely applaude......more

Goodreads review by Randy

Not a bad book at all, but I found myself skimming a bit. There were things I just wasn't interested in about Chicago's mayor, theater syndicates, and the like. I've found myself reading books about catastrophic fires ever since I first read about the fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory when I w......more