Posts taken from my cityplanningnnews.com blog
The scope of the disaster was hard to fathom. Tribune reporters and photographers who raced to the scene that bitterly cold January night in 1967 sent word that McCormick Place was ablaze, engulfed in flames, raging — destroyed. Back at Tribune Tower, the night editor said, "It can't be."
But it was. The gleaming white convention center, which had opened in November 1960 and was the centerpiece of the city's dominant trade show business, was gone.
The building that was supposed to be fireproof and "outlast Rome's glories" was consumed frighteningly fast. Smoke was reported by janitors at 2:05 a.m. on Jan. 16. By 2:30 a.m., when Fire Commissioner Robert Quinn arrived, he upgraded it to a five-alarm fire. Eighteen minutes later, he ordered the first special alarm.
One person died in the fire, a 31-year-old security guard named Kenneth Goodman, whose burned body was found in the rubble.
Dialogue below from Facebook Page Growing up in Chicago
https://www.facebook.com/325488420983547/photos/pb.325488420983547.-2207520000.1453134566./489465334585854/?type=3&theater