Eighty years ago, on November 28, 1942, just after 10 p.m., a 16-year-old busboy had been ordered to fix a light bulb located at the top of an artificial palm tree at the Cocoanut Grove “restaurant-supper club” in Boston, Mass. (legend has it the bulb had been unscrewed by a patron desiring more intimacy with his date in the Grove’s basement lounge). He lit a match to locate the socket for the light bulb, and moments later, a flicker of a flame in the palm tree quickly spread to the highly flammable cloth-covered ceiling.

The Cocoanut Grove’s Piedmont Street entrance after the fire. The entry’s revolving door—inset from arched openings below the club’s marquee—became jammed as patrons rushed to escape the rapidly spreading inferno.
U.S. Army Signal Corps, Boston Public Library The Cocoanut Grove’s Piedmont Street entrance after the fire. The entry’s revolving door—inset from arched openings below the club’s marquee—became jammed as patrons rushed to escape the rapidly spreading inferno.

The official Boston Fire Department report states that “from the first appearance of flame until it had explosively traversed the main dining room and passed, almost 225 feet away, to the entrance of the Broadway Lounge, the commissioner estimated at total time of five minutes at most. At this point in time all exits normally open to the public, of which each had something functionally wrong, were useless for a safe escape.” A revolving door at the main Piedmont Street entrance was the worst culprit; it became jammed as patrons pushed toward the door to escape. See “Cocoanut Grove: Estimated Path of Fire and Timeline,” below.

Army personnel help document the fire damage in the new cocktail lounge on Broadway. The Broadway lounge had opened only 11 days earlier, and planned fire doors separating the lounge from the rest of the club were not installed. See plans, below.
U.S. Army Signal Corps, Boston Public Library Army personnel help document the fire damage in the new cocktail lounge on Broadway. The Broadway lounge had opened only 11 days earlier, and planned fire doors separating the lounge from the rest of the club were not installed. See plans, below.

A combination of corruption, greed, and wanton disregard of local fire regulations led to the deadliest “nightclub” fire in U.S. history (Chicago’s Iroquois Theatre fire in 1903 ignominiously holds the title of deadliest fire in an assembly occupancy, with 602 fatalities). So lethal was this disaster—which occurred somewhat ironically in the National Fire Protection Association’s own backyard—that it is still taught to this day in architectural and engineering schools, as well as by the NFPA itself, as a cautionary tale.

Lessons learned. As a result of the fire, building codes were amended in Boston and elsewhere. Revolving doors were outlawed (and later reinstated, provided a revolving door is placed between two outward-opening exit doors). Exit doors were to be clearly marked, unlocked from within, and free from blockage by screens, drapes, and furniture. No combustible materials were to be used for decorations in places of public assembly. Sprinklers were recommended in any room occupied as a restaurant, night club, or place of entertainment. The definition of places of “public assembly” was changed (surprisingly, “restaurant-supper clubs” had not been considered as places of public assembly in many jurisdictions).

By the Numbers
The estimated occupancy of the club at the time of the fire (more than twice its legal capacity): 1,000

The total number of egress doors on the grade-level floor (all deemed “functionally wrong … useless for a safe escape”): 8

The number of egress doors in the basement: 1

The official number of victims: 492 dead and 166 injured (the number of deaths is disputed, the Boston Fire Department fire report states “490 deaths”).

The approximate number of bodies found piled up at the Piedmont Street revolving door entry: 200

The approximate number of bodies found at the in-swinging Broadway entry: 100

The number of victims received in one hour by Boston City Hospital (the highest admission rate ever recorded by a hospital in the U.S.): 300

The years served by Cocoanut Grove owner, Barney Welansky, of a 12-to-15-year sentence for involuntary manslaughter before being pardoned for health reasons: 3.5

Cocoanut Grove: Estimated Path of Fire and Timeline

A calamitous event like Cocoanut Grove doesn’t just happen. In this case, years of unethical behavior and negligence laid the groundwork for what would become the deadliest nightclub fire in U.S. history. The lion’s share of the blame was attributed to the following factors: a total disregard of local fire regulations and building codes; a politically-connected club owner who sought maximum profits by regularly exceeding the nightclub’s legal capacity (all while cutting corners on the quality of construction, wiring, and interior finishes); and city inspectors—corrupt at worst, inept at best—who signed off on the veracity of the building’s safety.

The following illustrations are adapted from plans in the official fire report , the Boston Fire Historical Society, NFPA “Last Dance at the Cocoanut Grove” (2007), and “NFPA Case Study: Nightclub Fires (2006)”. Also, from eyewitness accounts noted in “Fire in the Grove” (2005) by John C. Esposito. The plans may be inaccurate; fire pathways and timeline of events are estimated.

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According to the official Boston Fire Department report, the fire began at 10:15 p.m. in an artificial palm tree in the basement lounge. Within two minutes, it had spread to the room’s suspended cloth ceiling, gained momentum, and crossed the 35-by-55-foot space toward the stairway—the only public exit from the basement room. Fire Commissioner William Reilly wrote, “The fire did not burn itself out in the Melody Lounge primarily because in that confined space it lacked sufficient oxygen for complete combustion and lacked also adequate means for dissipation of heat produced by the partial combustion … instead, it projected a large quantity of extremely hot, partially burned but still inflammable, gasses toward and up the stairs.” (The Melody Lounge’s décor included rattan, bamboo, unfinished wood walls, light fixtures with low-wattage bulbs in placed in cocoanut shells, and a suspended cloth ceiling that, according to Reilly’s report, may have contained “pyroxylin”—a highly flammable nitrocellulose compound used to make munitions and celluloid or "nitrate film" for early motion pictures.)
According to the official Boston Fire Department report, the fire began at 10:15 p.m. in an artificial palm tree in the basement lounge. Within two minutes, it had spread to the room’s suspended cloth ceiling, gained momentum, and crossed the 35-by-55-foot space toward the stairway—the only public exit from the basement room. Fire Commissioner William Reilly wrote, “The fire did not burn itself out in the Melody Lounge primarily because in that confined space it lacked sufficient oxygen for complete combustion and lacked also adequate means for dissipation of heat produced by the partial combustion … instead, it projected a large quantity of extremely hot, partially burned but still inflammable, gasses toward and up the stairs.” (The Melody Lounge’s décor included rattan, bamboo, unfinished wood walls, light fixtures with low-wattage bulbs in placed in cocoanut shells, and a suspended cloth ceiling that, according to Reilly’s report, may have contained “pyroxylin”—a highly flammable nitrocellulose compound used to make munitions and celluloid or "nitrate film" for early motion pictures.)

Click to enlarge

Within seconds, the fire had flashed past the first-floor foyer and into the main dining room. By 10:20 p.m., it had traversed the grade-floor level to the Broadway entrance, some 225 feet away. A tremendous amount of energy was released in a short time period. Witnesses described the flame as a “ball of fire traveling below the ceiling” and that it was “yellowish” and “blueish” in color—a possible indication of incomplete combustion. (The décor in the grade-level rooms included a mix of rattan, artificial palm fronds, suspended cloth ceilings, and faux leather, or “leatherette,” wall coverings and upholstered furniture; the burning leatherette contributed to the toxicity of the smoke).
Within seconds, the fire had flashed past the first-floor foyer and into the main dining room. By 10:20 p.m., it had traversed the grade-floor level to the Broadway entrance, some 225 feet away. A tremendous amount of energy was released in a short time period. Witnesses described the flame as a “ball of fire traveling below the ceiling” and that it was “yellowish” and “blueish” in color—a possible indication of incomplete combustion. (The décor in the grade-level rooms included a mix of rattan, artificial palm fronds, suspended cloth ceilings, and faux leather, or “leatherette,” wall coverings and upholstered furniture; the burning leatherette contributed to the toxicity of the smoke).

Officially, the Boston Fire Department report lists the “cause or causes” of the fire as “being of unknown origin.”

Credit: Illustrations by Tim Healey