original all original and intact october 1871 great chicago fire stereograph photographic card with post-chicago fire scene north of randolph street

Special Price $37.50 Regular Price $50.00
In stock
SKU
UR-23263-15
j. a. stoddard, 248 fulton street, chicago, il.

 

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collectible original antique stereoview card featuring a landscape of wreckage from the great chicago fire of 1871. the doubled image shows an area of downtown chicago with rubble and some badly damaged but still partially standing buildings in the distance. the albumen print is on heavy yellow cardstock with rounded edges, and exhibits fountain penned handwriting at the bottom faded to near illegibility -- just decipherable are the words "the view north from randolph st". the stereoview is very faded and exhibits spots of discoloration. the image was taken by famous post-fire chicago photographers copelin & hine, who along with others, documented the fire's aftermath in great detail throughout the "burnt district." the "views of the ruins of chicago" stereoview (and likely several others pertaining to the aftermath of the fire) were printed and distributed by j. a. stoddard, 248 fulton street, chicago, il. the applied albumen photographic prints are in great condition, with little surface wear except for one tear to the right-hand image. the heavy orange cardstock with rounded edges remains in great shape, considering age. the great chicago fire burned from sunday, october 8, to early tuesday, october 10, 1871. the disaster killed up to 300 people, destroyed roughly 3.3 square miles of chicago and left more than 100,000 residents homeless. once the fire had ended, the smoldering remains were still too hot for a survey of the damage to be completed for many days. eventually it was determined that the fire had destroyed more than 73 miles of roads, 120 miles of sidewalk, 2000 lamposts, 17,500 buildings, and $222 million in property--about a third of the city's valuation. of the 300,000 inhabitants, 100,000 were left homeless. though the fire was one of the largest u.s. disasters of the 19th century, and destroyed much of the city's central business district, chicago was rebuilt and continued to grow as one of the most populous and economically important american cities.

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