Category: Labor Fear
- The Great Chicago Fire (1871)
This theory held that the Great Chicago Fire was not an accident but the work of a coordinated radical conspiracy—often described in later retellings as the “Communist International,” though contemporaries more commonly blamed “communists” or “the International.” In the fire’s aftermath, rumors spread that organized incendiaries had deliberately set multiple blazes in order to destroy the city, destabilize social order, or launch class war. The historical record clearly shows that such rumors circulated and that Chicago newspapers used explicitly anti-communist language about alleged “North Side incendiaries.” What remains unproven is the conspiratorial claim itself. The fire’s true origin was never established with certainty, and no evidence demonstrated a coordinated revolutionary arson campaign.