Firestorm at Peshtigo: A Town, Its People, and the Deadliest Fire in American History

Front Cover
Macmillan, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 304 pages

"Novelist Denise Gess and historian William Lutz brilliantly restore the event to its rightful place in the forefront of American historical imagination." —Chicago Sun-Times

On October 8, 1871—the same night as the Great Chicago Fire—the lumber town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin, was struck with a five-mile-wide wall of flames, borne on tornado-force winds of one hundred miles per hour that tore across more than 2,400 square miles of land, obliterating the town in less than one hour and killing more than two thousand people.

At the center of the blowout were politically driven newsmen Luther Noyes and Franklin Tilton, money-seeking lumber baron Isaac Stephenson, parish priest Father Peter Pernin, and meteorologist Increase Lapham. In Firestorm at Peshtigo, Denise Gess and William Lutz vividly re-create the personal and political battles leading to this monumental natural disaster, and deliver it from the lost annals of American history.

 

Contents

PROLOGUE
1
FALSE PROPHETS
3
EDEN BURNS
63
REVELATIONS
127
EPILOGUE
221
AFTERWORD
223
NOTES
225
BIBLIOGRAPHY
243
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
253
INDEX
257
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Denise Gess, author of two critically acclaimed novels, is the visiting assistant professor of fiction writing at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington. William Lutz is a professor of English at Rutgers University and the author of fifteen books, including the bestseller Doublespeak. He lives in Philadelphia.

Bibliographic information