- Rhythm Night Club Fire
The Rhythm Night Club fire took place in
Natchez, Mississippi ,United States onApril 23 ,1940 and killed 209African-American party goers, while severely injuring many others. Thenightclub , which was once a church and convertedblacksmith shop, was located in a one-story frame building on 1 St. Catherine Street, just blocks from the city's business district. It remains the second deadliest fire at a night club in the United States. The 11:30 p.m. inferno began as members of the local Moneywasters Social Club were enjoying the song "Clarinet Lullaby" performed byWalter Barnes and His Royal Creolians orchestra fromChicago . Starting in front of the main entrance door of the building, the fire quickly engulfed the structure in flames due to the decorativeSpanish moss that was draped over the rafters. Due to the dry conditions, flammablemethane gas was generated from the moss, resulting in the torching of the structure within an hour.With windows boarded up to prevent outsiders from viewing or listening to the music, more than 300 people struggled to leave after the blaze began. A handful of people left by the door or through the ticket booth, while the remainder of individuals attempted to leave through the back door.
Blinding smoke made movement difficult, with many of the dead either perishing by smoke inhalation or by being crushed by the furious stampede of people trying to escape. Bandleader Barnes and nine members of his band were among the victims, with one of the group's three survivors, drummer Walter Brown, vowing never to play again. At the time of his death, Barnes was considered a strong contemporary of both
Duke Ellington andWoody Herman .What was first thought of as an accidental fire set by the careless discarding of a match by two women changed quickly the day after the blaze when five African-Americans were arrested after reports they had drunkenly threatened to burn the building down. Charges were later dropped.
Three local
funeral home s were inundated with bodies, with many eventually buried in mass graves. In the aftermath of the tragedy, citizens of Natchez raised more than $5,000 to help the localRed Cross , while new fire laws were established to prevent the overcrowding of buildings.The disaster has been acknowledged with songs such as "Mississippi Fire Blues" and "Natchez Mississippi Blues" by the
Lewis Bronzeville Five ; "The Natchez Fire" byGene Gilmore ; "We The Cats Shall Hep You" byCab Calloway ; "For You" bySlim Gaillard ; "You're A Heavenly Thing" byCleo Brown ; "The Death Of Walter Barnes" byLeonard "Baby Doo" Caston ; "The Natchez Burnin" byHowlin' Wolf ; "That Night" byStompy Jones ; and "Natchez Fire" byJohn Lee Hooker .A memorial marker stands in Natchez's Bluff Park.
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