Morbid - Episode 587: The Hartford Circus Fire
Episode Date: August 1, 2024On July 6, 1944, an estimated 7,000 people, mostly women and children, gathered at the Barbour Street fairgrounds in Hartford, Connecticut to see the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Baily ...Circus. Inside the big top tent, the lion show had just ended, and the Flying Wallendas were getting ready to begin their performance when the tent caught fire, sending the large audience into a panic as the spectators and performers rushed to get to safety. The tent, which had been coated in paraffin wax, was quickly engulfed in flames and by the time the fire was put out, 139 people were dead and hundreds were badly injured. In the weeks that followed, another twenty-eight would die from their injuries. At the time, the Hartford circus fire was one of the worst fires in American history, and it remains one of the biggest tragedies in the state’s history. Thank you to the incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research!ReferencesCavanaugh, Jack. 1994. "The Hartford fire, 50 years later." New York Times, July 3: CN1.Daily Boston Globe. 1945. "7 Ringling officials held responsible by coroner for Hartford circus fire." Daily Boston Globe, January 12: 12.—. 1950. "Circus holocaust, 4 N.E. murders laid to N.H. man." Daily Boston Globe, Juky 1: 1.—. 1950. "Psychiatrist to examine youth who thinks he set Hartford circus fire." Daily Boston Globe, May 21: C29.Davis, John. 1944. "Circus Fire is described by witness." Hartford Courant, July 7: 3.Ensworth, Bob. 1944. "Quick-witted show folks saved many, soldier declares." Daily Boston Globe, July 7: 1.Glaberson, William. 1991. "Our towns." New York Times, August 2: B2.Hartford Courant. 1944. "113 children, mothers not yet located." Hartford Courant, July 7: 1.—. 1944. "'Flying Wallendas' on high wire when flames swept through tent." Hartford Courant, July 7: 1.—. 1944. "Negligence facts found says Alcorn." Hartford Courant, July 8: 1.—. 1944. "Panic and blaze trap hundreds." Hartford Courant, July 7: 1.—. 1944. "Thousands attracted by circus here." Hartford Courant, July 6: 1.—. 1944. "Tossed cigarette blamed for fire by ushers, police." Hartford Courant, July 7: 1.Kelley, Robert. 1945. "The strange case of Little Miss No. 1565 still baffles police." Daily Boston Globe, July 16: 1.Linscott, Seymour. 1944. "136 die in circus fire." Daily Boston Globe, July 7: 1.Los Angeles Evening Citizen News. 1950. "Quiz firebug suspect in '44 circus tragedy." Los Angeles Evening Citizen News, May 19: 1.Morning Edition. 2007. Remembering the Horror and Heroes of a Circus Fire. July 6. Accessed July 2, 2024. https://www.npr.org/2007/07/06/11768511/remembering-the-horror-and-heroes-of-a-circus-fire.New York Times. 1950. "Arson killer sane, psychiatrists find." New York Times, November 2: 47.—. 1950. "Arsonist imprisoned; admitted 172 deaths." New York Times, November 4: 34.—. 1944. "Children caught in frenzied mass." New York Times, July 7: 11.—. 1950. "Some doubts raised in arson confession." New York Times, July 2: 27.Ross, Leonora. 1944. "Hartford tragedy leaves cricus artisits staggered." Daily Boston Globe, July 8: 2.Skidgell, Michael. 2019. The Hartford Circus Fire. Mount Pleasant, SC: Arcadia Publishing.Smith, John Henry. 2024. 80 years ago, a gas-soaked roof and WWII created a perfect storm for the Hartford circus tragedy . July 1. Accessed July 1, 2024. https://www.ctpublic.org/news/2024-07-01/80-years-ago-a-gas-soaked-roof-and-wwii-created-a-perfect-storm-for-the-hartford-circus-tragedy.Tuohy, Lynne. 2004. "Back to the circus." Hartford Courant, May 16: 69.United Press. 1942. "Scores of animals killed in $125,000 circus fire." Brooklyn Citizen, August 4: 1.Wallenfeldt, Jeff. 2024. Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. May 31. Accessed July 1, 2024. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ringling-Bros-and-Barnum-and-Bailey-Combined-Shows/Ringling-Bros-and-Barnum-Bailey-Combined-Shows.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, weirdos. I'm Alaina. I'm Ash. And this is Morbid. And I just waved at you.
You did.
You waved at me and it was, uh, it wasn't off-putting.
I didn't wave at you.
I waved at the weirdos.
Well, that's the end of this episode because I quit.
I'm done.
She didn't wave at me.
Fuck that. If it makes me feel better, I just knocked my stanule over and all the ice
shattered.
Good.
Didn't spill in the room.
Instinct karma.
It was actually.
It would have been more carm-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m-m- me but it didn't but anyway I'm gonna move it. That's a great idea because it'll clang clang clang live updates with Ash. And bang bang bang. Bang bang bang. So yeah. What updates do we have? Do we have updates? We don't even know when this is
going out so. Nah we don't. You should buy Alina's book obviously. Pre-order that book
The Butcher Game it's coming out September 17th you can pre-order it
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interact with the Tickety-Tockety. With the Tickety-Tockety.
The TikTok.
I did a shimmy, but I did arm day yesterday.
And like the-
So it was a light shimmy.
Like, no, but like it hurt right here.
Ooh.
Like under my armpits.
You're like right here, everybody.
But I'm getting swole.
Swole.
Swole, swole, swole.
You know what else is getting swole
because we've been in a humid heat wave?
All the doors.
Every door that existed on the East Coast.
Every time you open a door in Massachusetts right now,
it's like a crossfit event to open the door.
We have that problem at our apartment.
It would get super, deeper swollen in the and like you'd have to like slam it and then in the wintertime it like wouldn't like latch properly when you closed it because I think it like fucked up the alignment of it.
Oh yeah, that makes sense.
It's annoying.
So that's swollen doors with Ash and Alaina.
It's a new segment that we're introducing today.
Where we just talk about all the swollen doors.
Look out for the next one.
The evidence.
So today's episode is so sad.
I believe that.
It's so sad.
And it's a little local here.
It's the Hartford Circus Fire.
And yes, we're talking about Hartford, Connecticut.
I've been there.
You have been there.
We've all been there.
It's this is really it's from 1944. Okay. So sort of old timey.
Yeah, a little. I mean, it's where I live and it's just a really sad story.
It's very tragic.
A lot of people lost their lives.
A lot of people got hurt.
It's a very unsettling scene.
Just warning you. This is like the intro to all of your cases. Unfortunately It's a very unsettling scene, just warning you.
This is like the intro to all of your cases.
Yeah, unfortunately.
It's so unsettling.
It's tragic.
It's horrifically sad. It's all of the above.
Yeah, all of the above.
So without further ado, I suppose we just get into it.
Let's go.
So first things first, you're the realest. I'm the further ado. I suppose we just get into it. Let's go. So, first things first, you're the realest.
I'm the realest.
I never really liked the circus
because I don't like animal shows.
Like, I don't like animals having to do tricks.
Yeah. I think...
I'm trying to think of, like,
because I know one of my mom's boyfriends was like,
let me impress this bitch,
and took me to the circus, like with my mom.
And I'm trying to think if animal,
it's only recent that animals
were taken out of the circus, right?
Let's look it up.
Cause I mean like childhood trauma makes it
so that I don't recall a lot of events in my life.
But I can't remember if there was animals there or not.
I think it was, I feel like it was like recently.
Fairly recent.
Same. I'm recent. Same.
Do you remember animals being there when you went to the circus?
I have, I do not remember specifically what was there.
I do remember my dad took me when I was much younger.
Which is adorable.
When your dad takes you at school.
Yeah.
When your mom's boyfriend takes you, you're like, who's this fucker?
Like, thanks for trying to take me somewhere, but I don't even know you.
Yeah. See, my dad did like the, he loved to do just like the me and him hangout. I love
that. So he would take me to like the, all the Disney movies that came out. Well, that
was like his thing. I'm just kidding. Sorry. It was great. I will say. Puppet did fun shit
with us. He did. He did a great job. And this was one of the things he did because he's an electrician.
And at one point he did like the lights for the show.
He also did the lights for a Celine Dion concert.
And then he met her in the elevator and he said she was one of the nicest people
he's ever met in his life. He did.
And he said one of the most.
He was a very she was a very beautiful woman.
She is beautiful. So that was very nice.
And he also did the the lights for the Olympic trials,
the gymnastics trials once.
I don't think I fucking knew that.
Yeah, he took tons of pictures
and he gave me all the pictures
because I used to love watching the gymnastics.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Damn, I don't know that I knew that.
Yeah, Puppa's the coolest.
He's pretty cool.
Shout out to Don Bob.
He was in a submarine.
He was at like thinking of him being in a submarine at the bottom of the ocean for like
months at a time.
I'm like, you're a bad ass.
Months at a time.
Actually, wait, can you tell the story?
Because I don't, I don't tell it perfectly, but how he heard his back, how he heard his
back.
So the story is that my dad was like almost paralyzed in the military.
Yeah.
He was like in horrible shape when he got out of it. And some guy was about to fall down the ladder in like the hatch.
I don't know how this works.
All I know.
Don't at me.
Don't at me about it.
Because he doesn't even really talk about it.
He told us the story like once.
Yeah, Ma tells it sometimes.
But he grabbed the guy and as he grabbed the guy to try to help him,
he slipped and hit his back on every,
like the rungs of the ladder,
and then fell down into the hatch.
And he ended up like having to have like crazy surgeries
on his back.
He's got like a massive scar on his back.
It's crazy.
But he's like, he walks around like it's nothing now.
I think he literally had to learn how to walk again.
And now it's like, you'd never know what happened.
Unless you see his back
and you see that giant massive scar on his back.
I think it might've been like a rogue wave or something.
Yeah, I was gonna say, there was a reason
that like something happened that like jostled everything
where this person fell.
But he was trying to help that guy out and he grabbed him.
That's our guy.
That's our guy.
That's what he does. That's our guy. That's our guy. That's what he does.
That's our guy right there.
He helps.
But yeah, so he's a pretty big badass and he did the lights for the fucking circus.
Have you figured out when they got rid of the animals?
It's kind of hard to figure out.
I feel like it was always kind of an, it was always a thing that people were up in arms about.
Like it always became a thing where people were questioning how these animals were treated
and whether this is humane or not.
The answer to me is no, it is not humane.
Did you ever watch that movie?
Water for Elephants?
No, of course I didn't watch that movie.
It would make me cry and I don't want that.
Oh, I can't watch it anymore, but I watched it one time and it made me absolutely sob.
Yeah. See that. And that's the thing I've heard that that's the reaction. And anytime
somebody tells me a movie made me sob, it's off my... I don't like being manipulated by movies to cry.
I get that. Sometimes I watch a movie like if I have to cry, but there's like certain movies that
I'm like, I can't cry.
I can't have that kind of cry.
Because it's a different kind of cry when it's like gut wrenching and you're like, now
I just feel sad.
Yeah.
And if I'm feeling sad for an animal, I'm not going to recover for days.
And also elephants are my favorite animals.
So that's just, that's all bad. But getting into this, on July 6th, 1944, an estimated 7,000 people, mostly women and
children gathered at the Barber Street Fairgrounds in Hartford, Connecticut to see the Ringling
Brothers in Barnum and Bailey Circus.
After the Lion show had just ended, tragedy struck.
Within 10 minutes, the entire tent had burned to the ground.
139 people were dead and hundreds were badly injured.
And in the weeks that followed, another 28 would die from their injuries.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
It was like a massive loss of life.
At the time, the Hartford Circus Fire was one of the worst fires in American history.
And it remains one of the biggest tragedies in the state's history, especially.
I believe it.
So in the summer of 1944, just to give you an idea of what was going on then and why
there were just so many women and children and elderly people in attendance to this one
particular show.
Yeah.
In the summer of 1944, as the allied forces were beginning to overtake the Nazis across Europe,
Americans at home were just trying to find ways to distract themselves from the horrific losses of
life. You know, the Normandy invasion, the battlefields, like you were hearing all kinds
of awful stuff. And among the more popular summer pastimes in both 1944 and years before that,
you know, were the things we think of the
fairs, the carnivals, like you think of those old timey carnivals and stuff.
And they were newer too, you know, like at that point in time and circuses that traveled
to small towns and big cities across the country.
And each year companies of, you know, varying quality would bring their animal shows, their games, their various big
tops, you know, all those attractions to town.
And locals could just pay a small fee and spend the day being entertained, eat some
carnival food, ride some rides, you know.
One thing about me, I fucking love carnival food.
Oh, carnival food is top notch.
I thought you were going to say toxic.
No, absolutely it is, but it's top notch. I thought you were going to say toxic. No, absolutely. It is, but it's toxic. Yes. Fried dough me the fuck up. You will never. John loves a fried dough.
Yes. That man, I feel like I should just like for one of his birthdays, just have like several
food trucks of different fried doughs show up at the house.
Obviously you're going to invite me to that, but if you don't invite me to that, I'm going
to kick you.
I'm going to kick your shins.
I'm going to kick you in the shins.
And honestly, that's a scary threat.
But yeah, so, but when it came to the circus, there was none better and at the time thought
none better quality and more well-known than Ringling Brothers
and Barnum Bailey Circus, which everybody knows those names.
So the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus officially began operating when the
two businesses merged in 1919.
Oh wow.
I was going to say it all was much earlier.
Yeah, I didn't actually realize that.
But their individual histories date back to the early 19th century in one form or another.
Oh, fuck me then.
I was like, yeah, this was a new thing everybody.
I know when you said that, I was like,
you're like, I have a sentence coming up
that's gonna rock your world, bitch.
But within a decade,
the organization had purchased other traveling companies
and kind of consolidated them into one large exhibition
that they dubbed, what did they
dub it everybody? The greatest show on earth. Oh, wow. The circus generally traveled from
one location to another by train. Cause I mean, train was the way to travel. Yeah. And
it carried the entire operation, the train, performers, tents, animals, attractions,
it all came on the same thing.
I saw water for elephants.
There you go.
Following the merger, the company employed
over more than like a thousand people at that point.
Yeah.
And they all traveled with dozens of camels,
large cats, bears, more than two dozen elephants,
and over 700 horses and countless other animals.
Those poor animals.
Think about it, two dozen elephants when elephants are in like short supply right now.
And two dozen of them were just working for the circus.
And just like stuffed into train cars.
Like they're fucking elephants and bears and big cats.
It's like lions. All elephants and bears and like cats. It's like, like lions,
all these animals are like endangered now. Yeah. And you wonder why. Yeah. Now throughout the
economic turmoil of the first half of the 20th century, you know, traveling circuses and Ringling
brothers in particular became really important opportunities for short and long-term employment.
Like they offered a lot of opportunities for
work. And especially those who were desperate just to do any kind of work, they could take
it. In fact, by the early 1940s, their power and influence was so crazy that President
Roosevelt, recognizing the relief from wartime tensions that the circus could provide for
the American public, granted them special rail privileges. Wow. So. The president. That's crazy. I didn't know that. Yeah. Well, others
were restricted due to military activities. So like they got this special privilege to
go on the rail, like just to get to these places. Cause he recognized, listen, everybody
needs a distraction. Like we all need to be entertained by something. Yeah, I mean, yeah.
Now, despite their power and influence
or maybe because of it,
Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey
were often targets of criticism for a number of issues.
That included, you know,
their frequently inhumane treatment of animals,
which is just proven.
Fuck.
There was exploitation of workers.
There was a lot of lack safety protocols.
I'm sure.
And while there are always going to be some amount of risk, especially around such a large
scale operation like this, particularly one with unpredictable wild animals, other issues
like fire safety was something that management should have had better control over.
Absolutely.
You know you're going to have risk.
You have performers that are doing very, you know, very dangerous things that you can't
necessarily control.
You have performers tossing fire into the sky.
Yeah.
And it's like, and wild animals, you can't control wild animals.
You can try to, and you can do it for a little bit of time, but you're never really in control.
No.
But when it comes to the safety issues, you know,, they should have been able to control some of these.
They should have put better stuff in place.
And circus fires were actually a common occurrence at Ringling Brothers and others.
Circus fires happened a lot.
And there's a very common and well-known joke that when you say, have you heard of a circus
fire? And somebody says, it was intense. What? And you say, it was intense. And it's supposed
to be that double little, it was intense, but also it was in the tent. I love that joke,
but after reading this, now I feel icky about that joke. Yeah, that's fair. You know, that's
one of my favorite little like, Oh, I have a funny little joke for you. Have you heard about
the circus fire? And I'm like, I have heard about the circus fire and it's very
sad. That's the thing. I think a lot of people telling that joke hadn't heard about the circus
fire. It's true. And now there's a lot of circus fires when you look into it. It happened
a lot, but in 1940, for example, a fire at the Clyde Beatty circus stop in Rochester,
Indiana, resulted in the death of a majority of the circus's animals, including in this just,
this will destroy you.
Six lions, six lions died in a circus fire.
Oh, that's horrible.
And like, I'm not saying like that, you know,
one loss of life is worth more than the other.
I'm not saying like obviously.
No, I know humans died, but like. This one in particular, the animals were the ones who died.
There was no human deaths, but six lions, two leopards, 15 antelope and 100 monkeys.
All died in that fire when the fire broke out in the animal pens.
Oh my God.
Like that's a lot.
That's hard.
That's horrific.
That's oh my God.
That makes me want to cry.
And again, so many of these animals are fucking endangered.
They're going extinct.
And it's like, what the fuck?
Six lions?
And you said more than 100 monkeys?
At least 100 monkeys.
Oh, and a similar tragedy occurred during a 1942 Ringling Brothers show in Cleveland, Ohio,
and that resulted in the death of dozens of animals and an estimated $125,000 in damage.
Damn, and that was back then.
And that was in 1942.
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Now, because of the frequency and cost of circus fires,
accidental and otherwise,
one would assume circus managers would be a little more vigilant when it came to fire
safety.
Maybe.
But the problem just kept on going through the decades with honestly very little attention
paid to it.
Because they just figured they could just get more animals, just keep going.
We're just letting animals burn it out.
It's not a big deal.
No big deal.
And then tragedy struck in 1944.
That's wild.
And this demonstrated how truly fucking hellacious the cost of lax fire safety could be in these
environments.
So from the moment the Ringling Brothers in Barnum and Bailey arrived in Hartford, Connecticut
on July 5th, 1944, things were off.
There was a vibe.
There's something at like a lot of these things,
theaters, circuses, kind of like these kind of productions,
there's a lot of superstition involved in it
that is very fascinating when you look into it.
There's superstitions and there are like traditions
and stuff, very fascinating.
I love that kind of stuff.
And if you've ever been involved in like a theater company
or anything like that, you know that there's a lot
and they're very, very serious about it.
We should cover some more of those.
We should.
That'd be fun to look into.
Yeah, that would be an interesting one.
But, and this is one of those situations
that you sit there and you go, well, fuck,
like, because things were going wrong.
And that morning, a late start out of Providence
caused them to miss their first performance of the day.
They call that a sign where I'm from.
Well, that's something that superstitious members
of the crew said, that's bad luck.
The fact that we didn't get that first performance,
that's bad luck.
Wow.
I can't even believe it.
Yeah, and once they arrived,
the crew worked very quickly to get everything set up,
including the circus's big top,
which was a 200 by 450 foot tent
with 15 foot high canvas walls.
You see me, me and mine,
we want you to work as slow as you need to,
as methodically as you need to,
to get that massive of a fucking thing up in the air
that is gonna be responsible for holding.
Many women and children, elderly people. Yeah animals, performers, all that kind of thing.
Take as much time as you need.
But they worked quickly because they had a late start.
And when it was fully assembled, the big top stood 48 feet tall and included the three rings for the performers, two stages, a large hippodrome
and multiple big seating areas like big balcony bleacher kind of things.
And that July, it was super, super hot like now.
Retweeting.
Yeah.
And so the freshly cut grass, hay and wood shavings where the tent was going to be raised upon,
super dry.
Yeah.
Very dry.
And so what they were doing though, they were thinking of this, but they ended up being lax
about it.
It was requiring like many soakings with a hose.
Like they would just keep soaking this to make sure.
And it was mainly one because you don't want that tall to dry up.
But two, it was making a lot of dust and debris kind of go in the air when it dried up.
Oh, and that's terrible.
So that's not good for anyone to be breathing.
So they would soak it to try to keep it dry or keep it wet.
So with everything in place, the management was able to get the gates open for the evening
show and the next day and that one went okay.
And actually the next day the papers announced
that audiences found that show to be bigger, better,
and smarter than ever.
Wow.
And in addition to the usual, you know, menagerie of animals,
the show also had something called the Cloud Ballet,
which sounds beautiful.
Yeah.
It's a high wire spectacle,
and it included dozens of girls on swings and trapezes,
engaged in aerial acrobatics. Think of that like in the 1940s. That's in that kind of thing
fascinating. Totally. I'll watch people do that kind of stuff. I don't want to see the animals.
Like Cirque du Soleil kind of. Yeah like those kind of things. Mm-hmm. We were talking about
this earlier. Yes. There's something called Cirque Berserk. I think it's called, I've
never seen it. Mm-hmm. I've seen little like clips of it. I donerk. I think it's called, I've never seen it. I've seen little like
clips of it. I don't even know if it's still happening, but fuck I want to go to Cirque
Berserk.
Wait, am I fucking nuts or was Bridget in Cirque Berserk?
Was she? Was it not an episode of Curls Next Door?
I know she was in one of the Cirque du Soleil things, but maybe she was, like, maybe I'm googling one.
But I need to know if Cirque du Soleil is still around.
Okay, so Bridget trained with Cirque du Soleil.
Cause I think she was in the particular one
that was like, oh, and it had like water in it.
It's like Cirque du Soleil, oh.
Yeah, cause they have like different versions
of Cirque du Soleil.
I think you're right.
Like they love and stuff.
So we looked up some shit.
It's surprisingly harder to confirm all this
than we thought.
Yeah, truly.
But somebody called Dave, I don't know.
Dave help.
But there is something called Cirque Berzerk.
And it's the one with the Z that we're thinking of.
It's got like burlesque kind of things going on.
It's like spooky carnival vibes.
And that looks cool.
And I kind of want to see it.
There's also something I just saw called paranormal circus or paranormal circ.
And it looks really cool too.
It's spooky.
I love haunted carnival vibes.
We still have to go to that.
Remember it's like that like abandoned fairgrounds.
You covered it like when we were in the laundry room.
Yes.
I want to go to there.
We do need to go to there.
It starts with an S.
It popped into my head and then left.
Me too.
Yeah.
Shawnee. Whoa!
I was like, it's coming, it's coming.
You got a leaf out.
That was incredible.
Hey!
I wasn't looking at anything you could ask.
I was literally just touching my temple with my eyes.
She was touching her temple with her eyes closed
and going, Shawnee!
I was like, it's there, it's there, it's there.
All right, continue with the story.
This is giving old school morbid and I'm loving it.
Which every once in a while that is just,
but yeah, so sounds like this was awesome.
The cloud ballet, so cool.
High wire spectacle, dozens of girls,
swings, trapezes, aerial acrobatics.
That's crazy. So cool.
And Victoria, Rietta and Frank,
who hold a giant swing from their teeth while a young
woman does assorted turns in midair.
Can you say that one more time?
Victoria, Rietta, and Frank, who hold a giant swing from their teeth.
From their teeth, you guys.
While a young woman does assorted turns in midair.
From their teeth?
From their teeth.
I try to hold my keys in my teeth, which is gross, and you shouldn't do that.
It's not as hard.
It's still hard.
Weird.
But the positive reviews in the morning papers on July 6th was going to ensure that the next
performance was going to be packed full.
Big old crowd.
And that next performance was scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. that day.
So that day was what they described at the time as perfect weather for a day out. To me, it sounds horrific.
It's nearly 90 degrees in sunny without a cloud in the sky.
Fuck a whole bunch of that unless I'm like near a body of water.
I don't even want that. I'm inside with the AC. Fair enough. All the shades pulled. Too sunny.
Sweatshirt on. Hate it. But that, you know, there wasn't a lot going on.
So of course they're going to go out.
If it's 90, I feel like you need a cloud in the sky.
No, I need clouds.
But the grounds had been watered earlier that morning.
So they were keeping up with that.
But by the time the audiences started arriving
at the gate around 1 p.m., they had dried already.
And then the person responsible for keeping them wet
was distracted by how many people
were coming in.
Okay.
So they weren't getting it done.
That's not great.
No.
And it being, you know, the war years at the time, a significant number of American men
were sent to Europe and the in the Pacific.
So that's why the audience was mainly comprised of mostly women, children and elderly people.
Right.
Because like a lot of men were overseas.
Sure.
So despite the sweltering heat inside the tent, thousands of people showed up and just
waited patiently in their seats for 2 p.m. when the show would finally begin.
Oh man, that sounds horrible.
Now, the show began as it always did with Merle Evans's big show band performing the
opening number, which was the
star spangled banner.
Let's go.
And that says ringmaster Fred Bradnod led a parade of horses, elephants and other performers
into the ring to welcome all the guests.
Cool, I guess.
It's everything you think of for a circus, you know, the ringmaster coming in with all
the animals.
Yeah.
And once everyone was seated, the opening act started with dozens of showgirls dressed
in flashy military costumes performing a lion-taming act.
The opening act led into other animal shows, including big cats, Great Danes, and even
polar bears.
The fuck?
Polar bears in 90 degree heat.
Oh, those poor babies.
That's fucked up.
That's fucked up. That's fucked up.
Of course it is.
And also fucking polar bears.
Polar bears will fuck you.
You think a lion is scary?
A polar bear is going to fuck your shit up just for fun.
Aren't they?
Just for shits and giggles.
They don't give a shit.
They're also fucking massive.
They're massive.
Yeah, they are huge.
I don't need to see a polar bear in person.
I don't need to.
I don't want to. I don't need to see a polar bear in person. I don't need to, I don't want to, I don't request to.
So as the animals and their trainers slowly exited the ring through a very special like
tunnel that they use to get the animals inside and out, the fly, you guys might recognize,
people listening might recognize this name, the flying walendas.
Maybe it's a very, you might just recognize it because they're very well known act.
They're a family who's been doing it for decades and decades and decades.
They're the act.
They started getting into position.
They were up next.
They were one of the circus's most popular acts and remained that way forever.
They were an acrobatic family.
They were known very much for their high wire act that performed without a net. So the flying Willendas were like a huge draw
for the Ringling Circus. Like apparently. So a little past 2.30 PM, just as the Willendas were
about to begin their act, Usher Ken Guinell noticed a small fire on one of the tent wall panels on the Southern side.
Again, this was common and they could put out small fires.
The reason that fires happen so often
were also because men would go in there
and smoke cigars and cigarettes.
Oh.
Women would smoke cigarettes too,
but mostly at that time it was men smoking cigars.
Sure.
And they would toss them.
So if it was dry, then they're going up.
It's a canvas.
Like this is essentially kindling on the ground.
Literally.
So this was just behind a row of audience members seated in the bleachers.
And from what he could tell, the fire was about five feet up on the panel and hadn't
reached the ground yet.
So Gwinell ran to get the other ushers
and the three of them grabbed the water buckets,
like special water buckets for fires
and started to douse the flames, but that didn't work.
Oh shit.
And so usher Mike Diadrio attempted to pull the panel down
cause that was part of the protocol.
You pull that panel down and you step on it.
You stomp it up.
Okay.
And in the seconds it took the men to reach the protocol, you pull that panel down and you step on it, you stomp it up. Okay. And in the seconds it took the men to reach the wall,
the fire had doubled in size
and was now climbing up the panel.
Oh my God.
They realized that the fire buckets were not gonna work.
So when they tried to pull the panel off,
it was secured too tightly to the roof panels
and they couldn't pull it away.
Oh no. Normally they could,
but they had done it too, too quickly.
And so they realized that the fire buckets
weren't gonna be enough to stop this.
And they began the process of escorting people
out of the tent.
Okay.
For most of its existence,
Ringling Brothers safety protocol for fire
was pretty simple.
Like I was just explaining ushers were tasked
with monitoring the big top for any signs of smoke
or fire, which would be like a dropped cigarette or a drop cigar.
And when one was spotted, one or more of the ushers would grab the red and silver fire
safety buckets from under the front row of seats and extinguish the flames.
In the event that they couldn't do that with just the water in the buckets, the panel or
panels would be pulled down or cut
down and then they would be smothered on the ground.
Which, you know, if that thing was able to, as we see, if it's able to spread to the top
of the tent, that's when catastrophe strikes.
You have to get it before it goes there.
That's leaving a lot to chance.
Yes.
Because also fire moves so rapidly, so unpredictably.
Oh, wait until you hear what this big tent was covered in.
Oh no.
For weatherproofing.
Oh no.
So in the event that the fire couldn't be brought under control through either of those two
things, either with the buckets of water or by cutting the panel down, two ushers, or
excuse me, any of the ushers that they could find would evacuate the tent and the local fire department would be called
emergency responders and they would take care of it.
Now, as the largest circus show in the country,
Ringling's big top tent was fucking huge.
It was a hundred thousand square feet in size,
the size of a large warehouse.
Holy shit. It was huge.
The massive size was intended to house multiple shows
at one time.
So it was by design that individuals on one side
of the tent wouldn't or couldn't easily see or hear
what was happening on the other side of the tent.
At first, audience members slowly started to become aware
of the fire, starting with those in the upper bleachers
of the Southwest side of the tent.
But some people who had noticed the fire
started moving towards the exit on their own.
While others needed to kind of be like prompted by ushers,
like we gotta go.
Yeah.
But they didn't want to start panic either.
They thought they could contain this.
But others thought the fire was part of the act.
And so they remained seated
and they assumed the fire would just be extinguished
and it would just keep going.
I mean, you can understand why people thought that.
It's unpredictable.
Yeah, while the ushers worked quietly
to evacuate the audience on the Southwest side,
one of the men notified the band leader, Merle Evans,
and he was instructed to play Stars and Stripes Forever,
which is the circus's so-called Disaster March. Oh.
Now, the Disaster March was something that signaled all circus staff and performers that
there was a catastrophic emergency happening.
Oh, fantastic.
In the circus and other parts of the theater industry, this is very normal.
That song was a universally recognized signal of an emergency that could be used without
starting a panic among the audience in a tight space.
Mm-hmm.
And so, confusion, desperation, panic is not good to have.
No, because they're obviously running amok.
And you want everyone to be signaled very subtly.
Like everybody that works there.
Without getting everyone upset, everyone that works there so that they can all jump into action without getting everybody freaked out.
Right.
I'm going to need to play you a quick little piece of this because imagining this playing
as what happened, like the tent is literally burning down around you or starting to, or you know, is really horrifying. So this is what the disaster march was.
No.
Yeah.
And the walls are just burning down around you.
As like fire is starting to consume. And people are like running out of the tent.
And this is having to be played to like not panic everybody.
I'm like, I'm panicked.
I'm panicked.
But also you can understand why people thought that it was part of the performance because
they're still playing the fucking circus music.
And it feels very circusy, very like entertainer, very like, you know, everything's happy, everything's fine, which again is the intent.
Right.
And when you have the situation under some semblance of control, it makes sense.
It makes perfect sense to have a disaster march where you alert the people who need
to be alerted without making everyone else panic.
But fuck.
But when you look at it in hindsight, how terrifying that, because as we know, like
I always say it, that kind of music, music playing during some kind of horrific event
that's not at all like, scary, darker, scary, feels so much scarier to me.
Like upbeat music.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like something like that is just so much scarier to me. Like upbeat music. Upbeat, yeah. Yeah, like something like that is just so much scarier.
I hate it.
["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]
I'm Dan Tuberski.
In 2011, something strange began to happen
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I was like at my locker and she came up to me
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I'm like, stop f***ing around.
She's like, I can't.
A mystery illness, bizarre symptoms and spreading fast.
It's like doubling and tripling and it's all these girls.
With a diagnosis the state tried to keep on the down low.
Everybody thought I was holding something back.
Well, you were holding something back intentionally.
Yeah, yeah, well, yeah.
No, it's hysteria.
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Is this the largest mass hysteria since The Witches of Salem? Or is it something else entirely?
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She struck him with her motor vehicle.
She had been under the influence that she left him there.
In January 2022, local woman Karen Reed was implicated in the mysterious death of
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But either way, they started playing this and at this point, the fire was still contained
to the West side and the rest of the audience hadn't become aware of it yet.
So there was still the possibility
for an orderly evacuation,
which is why they started playing that.
Okay.
But as the band began playing the song
and the emergency call began to register
with the performers inside the tent,
it was already too late.
Years later, members of the Wallenda family
recalled hearing the song being
played and scanning the tent from their position because they were high above the crowd waiting
to do their act.
Oh God.
And they said that's when their eyes landed on the fire on the west side. And that was
just as it had reached the decorative fringe on the outer edge of the canvas roof. And
this was an all weather performance space, rain or shine. So the canvas
roof and other parts of the big top were waterproofed using a mix of gasoline and paraffin wax.
I'm sorry, what I thought you said was gasoline?
Yep, you heard that right. And paraffin wax to highly flammable substances.
I don't have words.
Yeah. Also a paraffin wax.
I'm pretty sure that's like what they put on your heels during a pedicure to like
rip your dead ass skin off. So like it's weatherproofing. Apparently that's some
crazy shit. Weatherproofed big tops.
What? Yep.
Gasoline and wax? Yep.
Why?
Just get a waterproof tent.
It gets so much worse too with that wax.
Oh no.
Because I don't know if anybody's anticipating what's going to happen with that.
I sure am.
But when the fire reached the fringe on the roof, it ignited a literal flash.
Like the Willendis said, they literally saw it explode.
Like it just poof.
And they said it filled the tent with toxic smoke,
sent the audience into a panic,
and then everyone went-
Crazy.
Bulkers for the exits.
Now, while the most obvious danger
in situations like this is the fire,
there are additional factors
that pose a nearly equal threat here. Trampling.
Not the least of which are the live animals that are typically present in the tent. In
a fire, a frightened lion or tiger can make this a lot worse. Fortunately, when this fire
broke out, the one fortunate thing, May Covar, who had
just finished her lion act, had seen the fire early and managed to get the cats and all
the other animals out of the tent early through that tunnel underneath the audience that house
the animals. So she was able to like corral them all out.
That's good. The people on the other hand were much less fortunate.
Not long after the roof caught fire, this, this will give you chills.
Not long after the roof caught fire, the generator blew.
So it cut the power and plunged the entire tent into darkness.
What the fuck?
So the generator cut out and they went into complete darkness in that tent with chaos.
And just flames fucking everywhere.
The only thing that's going to light the way is flames.
Oh my God.
Now Ringmaster Fred Bradna tried desperately to calm the crowd and try to get them orderly
out of the tent and was encouraging them, please move towards the exit in a quick and
orderly fashion so we don't hurt people.
But the power went out.
So you can't see anything. So then he don't hurt people. But the power went out.
So then he couldn't be heard over the screams of the crowd. The power is out. So he's trying
to scream it to everyone, but everyone's screaming. Oh my God. To make matters worse. And this
is the part that I was like, holy shit. As the paraffin wax on the ceiling canvas heated,
as the increasingly desperate crowd of mostly women and children
are rushing around towards the exits,
large droplets of lethal, molten, paraffin wax
started falling on the fucking audience below.
Oh my God.
So they are now being pelted with lethal, molten,
like literal lava wax is falling on them.
It caused catastrophic burns and only increased the panic because now they're being rained
on by essentially lava.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
In the dark.
Those who are familiar with the interior of the big top quickly made their
way to the performer exits because the performers knew where those were.
Yeah.
And managed to get out of the tent, but the audience knew only of the main exit and entrance,
which quickly became completely clogged up and people just kept pushing.
People were getting stampeded.
Like it was awful.
And among the last performers to exit the tent
were the Walendas who climbed the ropes down to the ground
and headed towards the animal exit
that May Kovar had ushered the cats through moments earlier.
And Herman Walenda told a reporter,
but people were so crowded in there
that we saw we didn't have a chance.
We climbed over the cage that lines the exit.
That was easy for us, we're performers, but the public couldn't get out that way. Right. Cause they just jumped
up on it. Like they're used to flipping around everywhere. Like they can climb on things.
It's, in fact, when the fire was finally extinguished and firefighters were able to access the site,
many of the dead were discovered piled up near inaccessible exits.
Like the ones that the one just tried to go through.
Oh my God.
Just to think of people, like you said, mostly women and children and elderly people just
piled on top of one another covered in fucking paraffin wax.
Now those who were higher up on the bleachers managed to honestly fare a little better than
those closer to the ground who got caught in the stampede of people.
Dorothy Carvey, who was in attendance with her young son said, I was up as high as the
fire and it was coming in my direction.
I got down to around the fourth row and I fell and everyone stepped on us.
Oh my God.
She said, a circus attendant kept yelling, watch out for the kid, watch out for the kid.
He finally pushed all,
and I'm like, this circus attendant was amazing.
He finally pushed all the adults off.
Then he grabbed my son and I held onto his waistband.
Now Carvey was among the lucky audience members
on the opposite side of the tent
from where the animal shoot was located
because that ultimately just ended up acting like a large steel barrier in front of several of the exits.
Now Maureen Creakian, I think it's Creakian, was 11 years old at the time and was attending
the circus by herself for the first time, an 11 year old.
Oh my God, that just made my-
By herself in this situation.
I'm not kidding you, that just made my stomach flip.
She said, I remember somebody yelling
and seeing a big ball of fire near the top of the tent.
And this ball of fire just got bigger and bigger and bigger.
And like many of those who made it out relatively unharmed,
she jumped down from the grandstands
and was able to get out over most of the obstructions.
And in the confusion, she was able to make her way
to an exit and she said, there was a young man, a kid,
and he had a pocket knife.
He slit the tent, took my arm and pulled me out.
Wow.
Yeah.
So there are like heroes in attendance this day.
Oh, there's many heroes in here.
Now some workers and performers heard stars
and stripes forever and came running,
while others only smelled the smoke
and followed it back to its origin.
Regardless of what made them come running,
when they finally reached the tent,
and this was like people outside of the,
because that was the other thing,
that's Stars and Stripes Forever,
is for the entire carnival.
Rats going all around.
All those people could hear it and were like, fuck,
and went running towards there.
But when they finally reached the tent,
none of them were prepared for what they saw.
A well-known clown named Felix Adler said,
I thought the Menagerie fire in Cleveland was the worst thing I could ever see, but no one in the
circus business had ever seen anything like this. Now outside the tent, the crew and bystanders
watched in absolute horror as audience members crawled out from under the tent walls, attempted
to break through the canvas and toxic smoke is just pouring out of every crack in this tent.
And you're just hearing people fucking screaming.
Oh, and it even gets, it's even worse.
Now according to John Davis, who was a writer for the Hartford Current, he said circus men
were forced to restrain parents from dashing back into the fire to search for missing children.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
That's fucking terrible.
Because they were just trying to save whoever they could.
Now, meanwhile, other circus workers and performers gathered around the edges of the flaming tent
to try to usher, and in some cases, pull people out of the tent until they were eventually
forced back because of the heat and the smoke.
They just couldn't stand it anymore.
Now within a few minutes of the roof catching,
the fire had burned through much of the wax
and the gasoline soaked canvas
and had made its way to the ropes
that held the support beams.
Stop it.
Once the ropes caught,
it was only a matter of seconds
before the entire big top collapsed
on top of those remaining inside.
And as one reporter put it, quote, the shrieks of the dying and injured were muffled.
That's so dark and chilling.
It is haunting.
Haunting.
Now it's unknown how many people exactly were there that day, but most agree the number
was nearly 7,000 people.
Holy shit.
By 2.50 PM, the fire had consumed the entire tent and burned itself out and left a pile
of smoldering rubble behind.
And this had started at two, right?
And the show started at two?
That's what I mean.
It took less than 10 minutes to burn the entire thing to the ground.
Oh my God.
That's how fast this happened.
Oh my God.
So the initial count of the dead at this point was estimated at 136 people,
but the total was expected to rise as hospitals all over Connecticut were just flooded with
people injured by this fire.
And by most accounts, those who managed to escape the fire relatively unharmed had been
in the upper tier of the bleachers and were able to jump or climb over the metal cages
and you know, other obstacles that blocked a lot of the exits.
So you were in better shape if you were up there.
Which is crazy because you wouldn't think so.
And like I said, the piles of the dead were found really huddled around those blocked
exits or had been crushed by stampeding crowds rushing the exits.
According to the press, quote, many escaped through the heroism of circus performers and
refreshment vendors.
We either led them to the nearest of 10 exits or through lifted sidewalls.
And others did their part to mitigate the disaster by leading the animals away from
the fire to avoid further tragedy.
Because again, you can't have a lion running in the middle of this crowd.
Like that's even worse.
That's the thing.
I think that's one of the only things that is good.
Yeah.
Because by so by midnight, 51 victims had been identified, but at least 85 remained unidentified
at the time. Um, because there was extensive burns that left a lot of people completely
unrecognizable.
And imagine knowing like your loved one or your kid went to the circus that day.
And now you have to go see if you can recognize them. And unable to accommodate that many
bodies, the coroner was like, we can't
house this many people. Like I don't have this. So they had to establish a temporary
morgue at the state armory in downtown Hartford, just steps away from the Capitol. Wow. Inside
the bodies were all arranged on tables along the wall, children on one side, adults on
the other. Oh my God, that must've been.
To have to, I can't even imagine.
To have to clean up that scene
and like collect all those bodies and go through them.
Like so many children attending the circus,
they came to the circus.
Like that's what, I'm like,
for a kid, that's like the most innocent.
And it's so exciting.
And they were so excited.
I'm sure it's the, it's the greatest show on earth.
Like so excited.
And a lot of these are like kids whose dads are away at war too.
And it's like, and the mom is just trying to take them out for a day to like, for a
distraction and it's like now these, who knows how many fathers heard that their kid died in the circus
fire or their wife or their, Oh my God, their loved ones.
Yeah.
So inside, like I said, it was children on one side, adults on the other.
And then the days that followed this, a steady stream of people would be admitted a few at
a time.
People just hoping or not hoping to see their loved ones.
And you're just looking across a sea of bodies and trying to identify your loved one.
How do you ever recover?
Like I can't the PTSD people must have suffered.
Oh, it must've been unbelievable.
Yeah.
Unbelievable.
Meanwhile, local police were overwhelmed by reports of missing children and adults who
were supposed to be in attendance that day.
And by late that evening, at least 113 mothers and children had been reported missing.
And police had found at least 20 unaccompanied children wandering the circus grounds in search
of their parents.
Oh my God.
At the same time, a surprising number of adults arrived at local police precincts through the evening
to report that they had found frightened unaccompanied children on the grounds and taken them home
to get them away from the chaos. But they were bringing them now to be like, I didn't
kidnap this child. I just couldn't leave them in this chaos. But by the evening time, they
had still not figured out how to find these parents. Tragedy isn't even the word. No, it's really not. While countless state workers and volunteers
tried to deal with identifying the dead, state and local authorities started investigating what the
fuck caused this fire to begin with. In a statement to the press, Ringling Brothers publicity agent,
Roland Butler, told reporters he believed the fire was caused by defective wiring resulting
in a short circuit in the men's room near the main entrance. Butler added that in addition
to the human costs, the human loss of life, the fire also resulted in more than a hundred
thousand dollars in property damage and the circus would be canceling the remainder of
the season and returning to their headquarters in Florida.
I mean, I can't imagine anybody wanting to go to the circus after that.
The show must go on at that point.
Now, despite Butler's claim about faulty wiring,
there were other theories about the origin of the fire.
According to Ken Guinell, the usher,
who first attempted to put out the fire,
he said the blaze originated from a cigarette
thrown against the sidewall of the tent
by a man using the men's toilet.
Now, three Hartford detectives who were also in attendance at the circus that day, and
they had tried to help douse the flames. They agreed that the fire appeared to have been
caused by a dropped cigarette in the men's room.
I wonder if they just didn't want people like hunting down this guy. And that's why they
were like faulty wiring. Faulty wiring. Now as police officials continued to investigate what caused the fire, DAS Burr
Leakend issued a warrants for a warrants for arrest of four circus officials and Hartford
police arrested J.A. Haley, who was the vice president, John Bryce, who was the circus
chief of police. That's a real thing. Wait, what? The circus
chief of police. I think they have their own like thing. Oh, to keep order. Like I couldn't
find exactly what it was, but he was literally listed as the circus chief of police. But
like, did the police see them as the police? No, I don't think it's the same. I don't think
it's the same thing. I shouldn't say no, but I don't. I think it's like its own thing.
Okay. Interesting.
Yeah. George Smith, who was the general manager and Leonard Alesworth, who was the boss canvas man,
quote unquote. I would not want to be the boss canvas man that day.
All four men were charged with manslaughter and held on $15,000 bail with a likened announcing
that he expected other arrests to be forthcoming. Now, within a few hours, eyewitness accounts started circulating
and the public started to learn the extent of the horror and tragedy
that occurred on those fairgrounds.
Army Private Bob Ensworth wrote,
the most amazing sight as I stood in the backyard
was the fact that 17 tons of Big Top Canvas went up in smoke
like a piece of cellophane in less than 10 minutes. Just standing in your backyard. 17 tons of big top canvas went up in smoke like a piece of cellophane in less than 10
minutes.
Just standing in your backyard.
Seventeen tons.
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Now according to Ensworth, he said many of the circus performers were burned considerably
about the hands and arms as they rushed patrons to safety. Children were tossed from top row
bleachers down 15 feet to workmen outside the blazing tent. They're catching children being
thrown to them as their hands and arms are burning. He said it was early evening before
stage workers stopped to have their burns and wounds
treated.
And at that point, they're probably not even like when it was all happening, they probably
don't even realize they're burning because of adrenaline.
But they're just trying to save kids.
Yeah, just trying to get people out.
Bob ends worth comments about the courageous circus performers not withstanding many residents
did turn their anger towards the circus.
I'm sure they blamed Ringling Brothers for the tragedy, which like, how can you not one Many residents did turn their anger towards the circus itself.
They blamed Ringling Brothers for the tragedy, which like, how can you not?
One performer asked a reporter, why is the town saying that the circus is to blame for
what happened?
Don't they know how we feel about this?
Don't they know how awful it was to see those children knocked down and trampled on by men?
Yes, men.
Which that's also the same kind of like, you know,
it was a tragedy all around.
Yeah.
Many pointed to the heroic acts of well-known clown Emmett Kelly,
who led dozens of children to safety from the tent.
Wow.
He said, I got all the kids out that tried to run towards the exit
where the blaze was.
When the arena was clear, I saw that the fire had reached the point
where the gasoline engines were close to the flames. So I grabbed my buckets again and did what I could to soak
the canvas. I did what I could. It wasn't much.
No, it was a lot. You rescued a bunch of kids.
They were rescued by a clown. Like that's like, what a fuck it. Like I can't even, these
kids, the memories and like, just like the things that are going to stay with them, the visuals
and the feelings and the like flashbacks and hearing this, like imagine hearing that song.
Oh my God, I can't, that must trigger something just dark inside of you.
Well, I said you right back to that moment.
So viewing of the bodies resumed at the armory the following day and by midnight all but
15 bodies had been identified.
And claimed. Wow.
The unidentified that still remained were moved
to a facility with better refrigeration.
And by the end of the weekend,
all but six had been identified.
That's incredible.
Among those still remaining was a little girl
that the press dubbed little miss number 1565.
Oh, God.
Which was a reference to her identification number
assigned by the coroner.
That's horrific.
Um, of all the victims, this little miss number 1565 really stood out and really stood out
to a particular detective.
Detective Edward Lowe said, I remember when the little girl was brought into the state
armory at about three in the morning after the fire.
She was practically unmarked, a beautiful little girl with honey colored hair. She was put with those we believed
would be most readily identified. And day after day, night after night, people passed
her by. And given that so many victims had been burned beyond recognition, investigators
assumed that this girl would be quickly identified by her family, but she wasn't.
Is it possible that her family died in the fire?
It's possible. And there's a little bit of a theory conclusion with that.
So don't worry. Eventually detectives came to believe that the girl's family had actually
mistakenly claimed another child as their own. In little miss number 1565 was eventually buried in Windsor Cemetery and the moniker
that everyone had used for her was what she was buried under and ultimately six victims
did remain unidentified.
Wow.
Now, the day after the fire, an investigation into the tragedy was opened by the state and
led by state police commissioner Commissioner Edward Hickey
Who had been in the tent that day to see the show with his nieces and nephews
Stop it. In his statement to the press, state's attorney James Kennedy told reporters
He has evidence that the circus failed to provide adequate firefighting equipment or sufficient personnel to operate it
And that the 520 foot canvas tent itself was a dangerous fire hazard
Having been treated with paraffin diluted with gasoline.
Can you fucking-
Which is like undeniable.
Whose idea was that?
Yeah.
Like I'm sorry, but like you knew that that like sure that's waterproofing it.
Yep.
But it's literally making it the perfect spark for a fire.
Yeah, exactly.
So Hickey's investigation focused mostly
on the six ushers who first noticed the fire
and tried to extinguish the flames.
After hearing their version of events
and visiting the site again with them,
Hickey determined that they were telling the truth.
But he remained unable to determine
whether the fire had in fact been caused by a cigarette.
There were also two stories that concerned Hickey. The first was from a food vendor who claimed that
the fire could have been prevented if the fire extinguishers had actually worked. And
the second was regarding quote, a drunken circus employee seen by a concessionaire leaving
the men's toilet as the fire started. So now they're saying like it could have been this drunk circus employee that flicked a
cigarette.
Yikes.
These stories were collected by Hartford detectives who had been actually sent, this is how they
heard these.
This is very interesting.
They had been sent to local taverns in the days after the fire to listen in on conversations
between circus employees.
I love it.
To try to get additional evidence.
I fucking love it.
I don't know why I love that.
I was like that's-
Because it's spying and spying is fun.
It's so down and dirty detective 1940s kind of detective work, you know what I mean?
You see it in your head as like a movie.
Yeah.
And you see the hats they're wearing and everything listening to these conversations while drinking
like a little, you know, some whiskey, you know?
Alcohol.
Alcohol.
Now, by the end of the year, the fire commission had completed its investigation as had the
coroner's office and both determined that several Ringling Brothers staff were quote,
guilty of such wanton or reckless conduct,
either of commission or of omission,
where there is a duty to act, which makes them
criminally liable for the deaths.
Based on those findings, investigators arrested James
Haley, the vice president and director of the circus,
George Smith, the general manager, Leonard Alesworth,
boss canvas man, Edward Versteeg, the chief electrician, David
Blanchfield, a superintendent of Rolling Stock, William Cayley, who was an usher, and Samuel
Clark, who was another usher.
According to the coroner's report, Cayley and Clark, the ushers, quote, left their places
under the bleachers when it was their duty to remain there and watch for fires that might
occur.
The fuck? Where were you?
Ultimately, all but Samuel Clark were found guilty and went on to serve between six months
and seven years in prison.
Wow.
Now nearly five years went by and the residents of Hartford had started to move on with their
lives when the circus fire case was revived because there was a new arrest.
In March 1950, police in Columbus, Ohio received
a tip about a young man who claimed to have set the fire in Hartford.
Set it? Yep. And they arrested 21-year-old East St. Louis resident Robert Sege. According
to Ohio State Fire Marshal Harry Callan, Segui was quote, being questioned
about a series of fires in three states, including the circus fire in Hartford.
And also not only did Segui have a history of setting arson fires, but he also worked
for the Ringling Brothers and was traveling with the show when the fire occurred.
Stop it.
Now during his initial interview, he told investigators that he had been working as
a rustabout, which is like a casual laborer.
Okay.
With Ringling Brothers in 1944, he claimed that on the day of the fire, and this is his
quote, this is what he said, it's offensive.
He said, the Red Indian awakened him and ordered him to set a fire.
What?
After that, he claimed his mind went blank.
And when he came to again, the big top was already in flames
and he was burned in the fire.
It quickly became clear to investigators
that he was mentally ill.
But he had nonetheless confessed to a very serious crime.
So he was held for further questioning.
But chief Charles Lamonda told reporters,
we're gone as far as we can with him.
Psychiatrists will have to work him out now and I think we'll get the Hartford case cleared
up.
Now Robert Sege continued talking to investigators and by July he had confessed to four murders
and also said that he had set more than 80 arson fires, including the Hartford circus
fire.
According to Segi, his quote,
career of crime started at the age of nine
with the murder of a nine year old girl
in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
But the Portsmouth police official told reporters
that his confession to the murder
of nine year old Barbara Driscoll,
he said, looks fishy to me.
Okay.
Also at the time of the murder, police had a strong suspect, of nine-year-old Barbara Driscoll. He said, looks fishy to me.
Also at the time of the murder, police had a strong suspect, but that suspect was later
acquitted.
And the same official admitted that Segi was living near the victim at the time and it
was possible he did commit that crime.
Nine-year-old cover up murder for that long.
It's an awful crime.
I looked it up.
It's awful. She was a nine-year-old.
She was assaulted and murdered and she was killed with a rock at a railroad track and was found
with a clump of her attacker's hair in her hand. What the fuck? And it's like, did he go home with
a clump of hair missing? That's what I'm like, I wish we could have figured that out. Oh,
go home with a compa hair missing. That's what I'm like, I wish we could have figured that out.
Oh, her name was Barbara Derskill.
It's really sad.
Barbara.
Now while Ohio law enforcement officials had already begun claiming credit for capturing
a serial killer and the person responsible for the Hartford fire, because he's a serial
killer at this point, he's saying he murdered four people.
Yeah.
And then also set these fires that killed other people.
Hundreds and hundreds.
Many like the Portsmouth, Portsmouth, that's really hard to say.
Portsmouth is hard to say.
Portsmouth police officials remain skeptical of his claims.
I feel the same right now.
When he was questioned about Seggie's employment at the time of the murder of the fire, a Ringling
Brothers spokesperson told reporters, though they didn't have employment records going
back to that time, he doubted very much that the circus would have hired a teenage
boy for the job.
I don't know about that.
I don't know about that.
In fact, after Seguin claimed he was interviewed by police following the fire, Edward Hickey
reviewed the list of Ringling Brothers employees questioned at the time and his name was not
among them.
Okay.
That doesn't mean he was an employee.
Yeah, he also could have just hopped on another train.
Yeah, that just means he wasn't officially questioned.
Or in or on record.
Despite their doubts, at least 10 of the arson fires
that Segi claimed to have started
were substantiated by the police.
Giving his story at least a little bit of credibility.
Also in investigative reports from the time
and interviews with his parents, they claim
he ran away to join the Ringling Brothers Circus in 1944.
So all these claims that he couldn't have been, his parents agree that he ran away to
the circus.
Now in July 1950, Robert Segui prepared and signed a written confession in which he took
a full responsibility for the Hartford fire. According
to the statement, he regularly hallucinated the spirit of a Native American man who encouraged
him to set fires and commit acts of violence, including the murder of Barbara Derskill in
Portsmouth. He also said that this included the murder of a 12-year-old boy in Portland, Maine,
and the murder of a boy in Japan
while Segi was in the military.
What the fuck?
A few months later after evaluating him,
psychiatrist Dr. Roy Bushong of Lima Hospital said that
although he was quote, essentially neurotic
and capable of committing serious crimes,
he was not insane in the legal sense of the term.
Okay.
I think he was just lying about hallucinating things.
So he's also racist.
Cool.
Exactly.
So Robert said he's dubious confession not withstanding because it's still a little like
that's a lot.
The fact that he was deemed sane meant that investigators had no choice but to accept
that confession to the Hartford fire and the other murders.
So on November 3rd, 1950, he appeared before a judge in Ohio and he pleaded guilty
to a variety of crimes ranging from arson to murder. And he said, I've never been in
trouble before and I would like to ask the court to grant me leniency.
I don't think so, buddy.
So after accepting Segui's plea, Judge William Radcliffe sentenced him to two consecutive
terms of two to 20 years in prison, which
was the maximum allowed under Ohio law at the time. When asked why he committed the
crimes, he responded, when you got a bunch of brothers who call you dopey all your life,
you'd understand a little bit. Actually, I never had a happy day in my life. So now he's
saying people were mean to me.
People call me dumb all the fucking time. People call me dumb left, right, center, above, below.
And you're not gonna go do that.
And I'm not trying to set fires.
No.
Fuck that excuse.
People called me dumb, okay.
And it's not even people, my brothers,
my siblings called me dumb.
How many people in your life have called you dumb
before, ready?
It's like that scene in Mean Girls,
raise your hand if you felt personally victimized
by the people that called you dumb. By your siblings. Fuck you. Fuck you. It's like that scene in Mean Girls, raise your hand if you felt personally victimized by the people that called you dumb.
By your siblings.
That's so cute.
I'm outraged by that excuse.
As you should be.
Now years later, Robert Segui actually recanted his confession and insisted he had not worked
for Ringling Brothers and had nothing to do with the fire.
I feel like it was just convenient though, because at first I wasn't convinced, but then
when his parents said he ran away. Yeah.
And like.
Well, and he had never technically been charged
with the Hartford fire.
He had been charged for the other things.
Okay.
So there were no consequences for his confession
of that crime.
So though he remained in prison on the Ohio arson charges
for which he had been convicted
until he was paroled in 1959,
he maintained his innocence about it
until he died in 1997.
Bitch, I was born.
And also he served nine years.
That's it.
For those arsons,
because that's what he was convicted for.
But he got two to 20 and he only served nine.
He was paroled.
The fuck?
You paroled that man?
Like what's going on?
Ohio, honey. Ohio. So the eagerness with which some investigators accepted Robert Sege's confession
isn't really difficult to understand, like we were saying.
I'm sure they wanted somebody to...
In the wake of this kind of tragedy, you want someone to blame.
And if someone's willing to take the blame, you want to believe it.
And if somebody who's willing to take the blame has also committed multiple other arsons and
killed people, I'm going to believe them.
And he offered a very convenient explanation that could potentially happen.
But the fact is, whoever or whatever caused the Hartford Circus Fire has never and honestly,
I want to believe it can be fixed, but they have never been identified.
I believe there's always hope in these situations.
In 1991, Hartford Fire Lieutenant Rick Davey told reporters he had strong
reason to believe the fire had been deliberately set in the men's room and was not an accident.
So following his announcement, the state fire marshal reopened the case and spent two years
investigating the claim, but eventually concluded there wasn't enough evidence to support that
assertion, but there wasn't enough evidence to not support it either.
So we're literally in a place of limbo of like, it could have been.
And the fire marshal said, we reviewed tons of old documents, talked to survivors and
spent four hours in Ohio interviewing Robert Sege, but we gleaned no new information as
to how the fire might've started.
Now, while the cause of the fire was one more mystery
that was remaining unsolved for the time being,
Rick Davies investigation did unearth some new information
that likely solved at least one
of the Hartford fires mysteries.
Is it our girl?
Like many investigators at the time,
Rick Davies formed a kind of attachment
with little miss 1565 and became determined to identify her, which I
was really hoping someone would, because I was like, I'm going to be determined now.
Yeah. So he actually told a reporter in 1991, she became family to me. She is in effect
a surrogate daughter. I spent more time looking for her than when she was alive, probably.
What a sweetheart. And according to Davey, during his research, he found a photograph among the evidence that
appeared to depict a girl that bore a striking resemblance to Little Miss 1565.
And after tracking down the origin of the photo, he learned that the girl's name was Eleanor Cook.
Eleanor Cook.
And the photo had been obtained by the girl's aunt, Emily Gill, who brought it with her to Hartford when she was searching for her niece after the fire.
Now Eleanor Cook had attended the circus that day with her mother Mildred and her younger
brothers Edward and Donald.
When the fire broke out, the family became separated in the chaos and unfortunately Edward
died in the fire and their mother was burned over more than 90% of her body
and was hospitalized for months and months.
So that's why nobody came.
Nobody came.
Davey believes Emily Gill came to Hartford
from her home in Southampton, Massachusetts
to search for her sister and her nieces and nephews,
but left after a few days
because she had never seen the body of Little Miss 1565.
And it took considerable time, but eventually, Davey tracked down Donald Cook, who was her brother.
Stop it.
Who agreed the girl was certainly his sister.
And the two men were able to get the Connecticut State Medical Examiner to legally declare body
number 1565 to be Eleanor Cook. And in 1991, Donald and Mildred Cook, mother, was able to bury
Eleanor in a nearby cemetery in Southampton.
With a marked grave. Oh my God.
So now she's finally buried with her name.
All that tragedy, even though that's still so tragic, at least she was able to be like
lead to actual rest.
Cause I'm sure they just thought she's just gone.
Yeah. Like I don't know where thought she's just gone. Yeah.
Like I don't know where she is.
And in the wake of the fire, most people in Hartford honestly did their best to put the
tragedy behind them and kind of move forward.
But these things are very not easy to move forward from.
Of course.
The memory remained on, it was like an open wound.
Yeah.
Finally, in 2004, victims and family members received some closure because the city unveiled
a memorial to the victims on the 60th anniversary of the fire.
It took 60 years.
A lot of time.
The memorial, which shows a basic design of the layout of the big top, lists the names
of all those lost in the tragedy and provides a brief description of the event, ensuring
neither the fire nor the 167 in the
end lives that were lost will not be forgotten anytime soon.
Wow.
But that is the story of the Hartford Circus Fire.
And it was one of the most haunting things I've ever read.
I believe it.
I mean, it's one of the most haunting things I've ever heard.
Dave was saying that too.
He was like, this one is like chilling.
Because it's just layer upon layer of traumatic tragedy.
It's fascinating at times because it's like things like the paraffin wax and gasoline
to weatherproof are things that you don't see now.
So they're things that are just fascinating to like hear that they did, you know, like
that's why these like older cases are so fascinating to me
because these things that you're just like,
what did they do?
You know, like what the fuck?
That's just mind boggling.
And then you hear the good updates.
Like when people are able to identify Little Miss 1565,
like Eleanor Cook, it's like,
at least those things come out of it like decades later.
And just from people who are so determined and like just like angels.
Yeah.
And hearing like the clowns that help children get out of there and it just like breaks my
heart.
Yeah.
Because it also is really sad.
Like the people who ran that circus, obviously a lot of them were convicted and did need
to face consequences for being lax.
But some of those workers that weren't owning the place,
you know what I mean?
Like some of the clowns, the performers,
the people who like helped, they all lost their jobs too.
They all lost their livelihoods.
They all lost what, you know,
you're obviously passionate about that
if that's what you're doing for your work.
But then it's like, also,
do you lose that passion afterwards?
That's the thing, like did they lose any of the love
that they had for that? I have to assume like a portion of them were able to perform again.
Because I feel like being, especially clowns, like when you really look into what it takes to
become a professional clown, it's not like you just like throw, you know, paint on your face and go
about it. Yeah, it's a legit thing. You have to really learn about it. And you have to like,
you're working with kids and you can't scare them. So it's like, and that's inherently a scary thing.
And there's like a whole psychology behind like the face paint and everything.
So to know that these people probably dedicated so much of their lives to this kind of thing.
And then this happens. And to like, have to deal with that later.
What a case, Alaina.
Yeah.
Alainer.
I know. It's an early one.
We hope you keep listening.
We hope you keep it weird.
But not so weird that you cover anything flammable in more flammable things.
Yeah, don't do that.
Bye.
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