『A City of Sorrow, a Voice of Fire — Edith Franklin Wyatt & the Eastland』のカバーアート

A City of Sorrow, a Voice of Fire — Edith Franklin Wyatt & the Eastland

A City of Sorrow, a Voice of Fire — Edith Franklin Wyatt & the Eastland

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A disaster can strike twice—first when it happens, and again in how it is remembered. Today, we bring back another “lost” voice of the Eastland Disaster history that has been silent for too long.

Chicago writer and social critic Edith Franklin Wyatt visited Hawthorne soon after the Eastland capsized. She wrote about what she saw in the homes of families still waiting for answers.

In Wyatt’s “Hawthorne, A City of Sorrow,” she shares the details that make history feel real: closed shops, sleepless nights, photos clutched in trembling hands, and birthdays overshadowed by grief. Her reporting keeps the voices of working-class and immigrant residents of the Western Electric Hawthorne Works community alive, showing how mourning spreads through a neighborhood and changes everything.

Wyatt goes beyond heartbreak. She asks the questions that come after the shock: Who allowed an overcrowded, unstable ship to leave? What did government inspectors do, and what did they overlook? Her claim of an “absentee government” makes the Eastland disaster a lesson in public safety, accountability, and the conditions that let preventable tragedies happen again.

If you are interested in Chicago history, the Eastland disaster, genealogy, labor history, or investigative journalism, this story connects the dots clearly and respectfully. Subscribe or follow, and share this episode with anyone who loves hidden history.

Resources:

  • Edith Franklin Wyatt, “Hawthorne, A City of Sorrow; Community Hushed by Death,” Chicago Examiner (Chicago, Illinois), July 26, 1915.
  • History of Mary Queen of Heaven Church
  • Clarke, Sue Ainslie, and Edith Franklin Wyatt. Making Both Ends Meet: The Income and Outlay of New York Working Girls. New York: Macmillan, 1911. Accessed via Internet Archive.
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