[On September 20th, 1873, the New York Stock Exchange closed for ten days, a key moment in the developing economic crisis that came to be known as the Panic of 1873. So for the 150th anniversary of that moment this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of Panic contexts, leading up to a weekend post on 2023 echoes of those histories!]
On how two
disasters helped set the stage for the Panic, and why they’re even more
significant than that.
I wrote at
length about the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 for my Saturday
Evening Post Considering History column
a few years back, so in lieu of a first paragraph here, I’d ask you to check
out that column and then come on back here. Thanks!
Welcome
back! For whatever reason (maybe it’s that damned cow), the Chicago Fire is far
better remembered than the following year’s Great
Boston Fire of 1872, but that latter one seems to have been just about as
destructive, meaning that one of America’s oldest cities and one of its newest
ones both experienced parallel, equally terrible tragedies in the early 1870s. While
there are lots of contributing causes
of the Panic of 1873 (including the most proximate one, a Congressional law
I’ll discuss in tomorrow’s post), these two fires are definitely high on the
list, as the stunning level of
property damage they produced led to significant bank and financial
shortages as the communities sought to respond and rebuild. Much like the Great
Depression, this Panic and the subsequent depression (on which more in
Wednesday’s post) really began with runs on
the banks, and it’s fair to say that those runs were due both to actual financial
shortages and to the widespread uncertainty and fear that can follow these
kinds of disasters.
So the
Chicago and Boston fires were important factors in the lead-up to the Panic of
1873, and well worth more of a place in our collective memories as a result
(Boston at all, and Chicago more accurately, as I discussed in that column). But
I would argue that these two fires also reflect and exemplify something else
about America in the early 1870s, a related but more overarching point: its
hugely rapid (and only increasing) urbanization. Obviously
fires can and do occur in any community, and are hugely destructive and tragic
wherever and whenever they happen. But there’s a certain kind of fire that
consumes a developing urban center, as embodied most famously perhaps by the 1666
Great Fire of London and as would define another rapidly
developing American city a few decades after Chicago and Boston. I’m not
necessarily suggesting that fires are a given in those settings and periods—but
it does seem a common (if still tragic) part of the urbanization process, a
reflection perhaps of growth that outpaces infrastructure. That’s a big part of
where America was in the early 1870s, a moment ripe for fires and, it seems,
Panics as well.
Next 1873
contexts tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
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