On the evening of October 8, 1871, a fire broke out in a barn in Illinois, sparking the legendary Great Chicago Fire. That same night, just a few hundred miles north, a vastly more terrifying and deadly inferno was born. Yet, because of the media's obsession with the destruction of a major metropolis, the deadliest wildfire in American history was completely erased from the national memory.
Ashes of Peshtigo resurrects the horrific true story of the firestorm that annihilated the booming logging town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin. Fueled by months of severe drought and reckless industrial logging practices, a massive wall of flames generated its own weather system, creating a literal fire tornado that reached temperatures high enough to turn sand into glass.
The book pieces together the harrowing survival accounts of the townsfolk who threw themselves into the freezing Peshtigo River to escape the two-thousand-degree winds. It analyzes the specific meteorological and human errors that converged to create an unstoppable ecological weapon.
Honor the forgotten victims of the gilded age. This historical deep dive exposes how the mechanics of media attention can bury a monumental tragedy, and offers crucial lessons on environmental mismanagement that still resonate today.