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Last updated: April 17, 2007. © Copyright 2008 Fire Marshal's Public Fire Safety Council
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LOCATION: > HOME > Fire Prevention Week
Fire Prevention WeekEvery year, a Council task group meets to develop and co-ordinate a province-wide strategy to promote Fire Prevention Week. The task group follows the NFPA theme and plans initiatives to enhance Fire Prevention Week activities in Ontario.OCTOBER 7-13, 2007The theme of this year's Fire Prevention Week will be announced in June 2007.
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Chicago, 1871 On a balmy evening in October, 1871, Daniel "Pegleg" Sullivan was sitting outside his house enjoying the unusually warm weather. His contentment was suddenly shattered by the sight of flames inside the barn of his friends, Patrick and Catherine O'Leary, who lived across the street. Daniel rushed to the barn to help but the fire was already too far advanced and not much could be saved. The fire, aided by a strong, restless wind, spread at lightning speed
through the predominantly wooden structures of greater Chicago. By the
following day--October 9--when the fire was finally brought under control by
the use of explosives, much of Chicago had been devastated. At least 300
people had perished and some 18,000 buildings were destroyed. Almost one
third of Chicago's population of 300,000 was left homeless.
Understandably, the cause of the fire became the focus of much speculation. The popular theory revolved around Mrs. O'Leary's much maligned cow, which was thought to have kicked over a lamp and set the barn on fire. Ironically, the O'Leary house survived the disaster with only minor damage. Thereafter, on each October 9th, the people of Chicago commemorated the fire with parades and ceremonies. In 1911, The Fire Marshals Association of North America officially declared that date as Fire Prevention Day. Ontario became the first jurisdiction to observe Fire Prevention Week during the Sunday through Saturday period in which October 9 falls. This practice continues to this day in communities throughout North America as a constant reminder that prevention is the ultimate cure.
The Great Chicago Fire and the Web of Memory, a virtual exhibition |