History Daily - America’s Deadliest Nightclub Disaster
Episode Date: November 28, 2025November 28, 1942. A fire at the Cocoanut Grove in Boston kills 492 people, becoming the deadliest nightclub fire ever. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! Join Into History for a...d-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's 10.15 p.m.
on November 28th,
1942 in Boston,
Massachusetts.
Charles Kenny,
a 10-year veteran
of the Boston Fire Department
sit sipping coffee in the station as his colleagues mill around waiting for their next call.
It's not long before Bell jolts Charles and the rest of his crew into action.
Charles slams his cup on the table, grabs his jacket, and races toward the fire engine.
No sooner has he jumped on board than the engine siren cuts through the air,
and wheels screech on concrete as it pulls out of the station.
As the truck speeds through the streets of Boston,
Charles hears one of the crew talking about their destination,
the corner of Stewart and Carver.
A report has come in that a car has caught fire.
Minutes later, Charles sees the blaze himself,
flames licking every inch of the vehicle.
The engine screeches to a halt and firefighters stream out.
They move nosy onlookers back to a safe distance
while one crew member grabs a hose and connects it to a nearby hydrant.
Another of the crew manns the other end of the hose
and blasts water against the fiery car.
In under two minutes, the roaring flames are extinguished,
leaving just charred paintwork and wisps of smoke.
Charles and his crew breathe a sigh of relief.
There are smiles all around, and a few slap each other on the back.
One of them looks distracted, though.
Charles follows his crewmates' gaze
and sees a dark smudge of smoke rising a few blocks away
in the direction of the Coconut Grove Supper Club.
Sure enough, it's a fire,
and the men jump back in their engine,
start their siren, and hurtle down the road again.
There are no strangers to a busy shift,
but none of them are prepared for.
for the night that lies ahead.
Before this weekend is over,
almost 500 people will have lost their lives
in one of the worst single fires
in American history.
The subsequent investigation will highlight
a catalog of negligence
that contributed to the tragedy
bringing about sweeping legal changes.
But this reform will be too little too late
for the victims of the blaze
that engulfs the Coconut Grove
on November 28th, 1942.
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From Noiser in Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is November 28, 1942, America's deadliest nightclub disaster.
It's late afternoon on November 28, 1942 in Boston, where Fenway Park is playing host to a college football.
all clash. Actor Buck Jones settles in to watch what many expect will be an easy day at the office
for Boston College against the visitors from Holy Cross. 50-year-old Buck is a well-loved Hollywood figure
known for appearing in dozens of westerns. He's in Boston, though, as part of a drive to sell
government bonds to fund the country's effort in World War II, and he was invited to the game
by none other than the mayor of Boston. Boston College has remained unbeaten in all eight games this season,
but as the match starts, it's clear that Holy Cross College have no intention of rolling over.
Buck watches in disbelief as the visitors take control right from the start and cruise to an incredible victory,
winning 55 to 12, one of the biggest recent upsets in college football.
As hometown fans trudge off the field dejected, Buck glances at his watch.
His agent has arranged to have dinner with him at the Coconut Grove, a nearby night spot and popular destination with a checkered past.
It was once owned by a local mob boss who was gunned down nine years ago.
After that, it passed to the mobster's lawyer, Barney Wolanski.
Now the restaurant and supper club is one of downtown Boston's most popular establishments,
drawing many celebrity visitors like Buck.
But tonight Buck isn't so sure he wants to spend his night at the Coconut Grove.
The actor isn't feeling great.
He's been under the weather for a few days and would love nothing more than just to head
back to his hotel and crawl under the duvet.
But when Buck tries to back to his hotel,
out of his dinner plans, his agent won't hear of it. Buck protests for a while but finally gives in
and agrees to stay out for some food and maybe a few drinks. When Buck and his agent arrive at Coconut
Grove, there's already a line gathering, and despite feeling unwell, Buck smiles at several of those
waiting in line who recognize him and call out his name. He shakes a few hands and exchanges
pleasantries with fans before finally heading in through the front door. The single-story building
is deceptively large inside. It houses a dining room, a ballroom, and bare room.
stand on the ground floor, while the hidden basement below has a bar known as the
Melody Lounge, as well as the staff-only areas like the kitchen. Buck follows his agent as he
weaves through the sea of people. The Coconut Grove is the place to be seen on a night out,
but noticeably absent are any members of the Boston College football team. Buck had heard
talk of the Coconut Grove being the venue for a post-match celebration, but it seems to have been
canceled after their humiliating defeat. Even without them, though, the place is packed.
Records will later show that around 1,000 people will have flocked here tonight
more than double the building's maximum safe capacity of 460.
Regardless of the swelling numbers, a celebrity like Buck needn't worry about finding a table.
His agent has arranged at all, and they're all swiftly led downstairs to their spot in the
Melody Lounge by the Maturdy himself.
The Coconut Grove often has lavish live entertainment, and tonight is no different.
Surrounded by rows of tables and booths, a singer stands on a revolving stage,
serenading the supper guests. Buck looks around, taking in the themed decor. Fake palm trees
are dotted around the room. Their fons drooped down, creating a canopy that gives the place
something of a tropical feel that befits the club's name. Bulbs nestled in bunches of coconuts
provide a little mood lighting. But around 1015, Buck glances around again and notices a young
man fiddling with one of these lights. The bulb flickers out, the man sits back next to his
date, slipping his arm around her and smiling in the patch of dark privacy he's just created.
But when Bach turns back to look at the stage, he will be unaware that he's just witnessed
what many will point to as the cause of tonight's imminent tragedy. In less than 10 minutes,
the entire club will be a roaring inferno, turning into a death trap that will claim the lives
of Bach and hundreds of others, leaving many Bostonians distraught and desperate for answers.
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carefully as customers recite their next drink order. Then Stanley weaves his way to the bar
and is just about to relay the order when the bartender holds up a hand to stop him. The bartender
points over Stanley's shoulder. Stanley squins across the crowded table, unsure what he's meant to look at.
The bartender says he's just watched one of the customers, a young gentleman, unscrew a light bulb,
and create an area of darkness in the already gloomy interior. He tells Stanley to go switch it back on.
As Stanley heads to the table, he notices the young man,
cozying up to his date, one arm around her shoulder. Stanley awkwardly interrupts, explaining that
he needs to screw the bulb back. The guests protest, but Stanley ignores their objections and
climbs on a seat and begins tinkering with the ball. But with the light extinguished, it's too
dark to see what he's doing, so Stanley pulls a book of matches from his pocket and strikes
one. He holds the flame up to the light socket, tightens the bulb, and then blows the match out.
Stanley then steps down and apologizes to the couple before turning around to head.
head back to the bar. But before he does, something catches his eye, a flickering light up in one
of the palm trees. He stares at it, puzzled for a second. Then Stanley's confusion gives way to
concern, as he realizes it's not a faulty bulb, it's a fire. Several customers notice too, and they
call out an alarm. The bartender then rushes over splashing water and spraying a bottle of
seltzer at the flames. There's a little nervous laughter after this, because to Stanley and the
rest of the occupants of the Coconut Grove, this small flicker of flames doesn't look overly alarming.
But in reality, it's catastrophic. The club's owner, Barney Wollanski, has cut corners. The gas and the
club's air conditioning is a cheaper alternative to the usual refrigerant and is flammable. Worse
still, Barney has used unlicensed contractors to install his electrical wiring, sealed up a number of
emergency exits to prevent people from dining and dashing, and allowed the club to admit far more people
than is safe. Put together, these conditions are a recipe for disaster. Stanley looks on in horror and
disbelief as the small flicker everyone thought was extinguished begins to grow across the ceiling.
Customers begin shouting in terror, and Stanley joins countless others making a scramble for safety.
But the only way out of the Melody Lounge is a four-foot-wide staircase that leads up to the
ground floor. It's not wide enough to accommodate a fast escape. So stuck in the crowd, Stanley can do nothing but
stare as flames engulf more and more of the lounge. He barely has time to hurl himself to one side
as what looks like a ball of fire roars up the staircase, scorching many of the guests trying to escape.
Those who do make it up the staircase then have to struggle to make it out the club's front door.
The crush of customers trying to get out through the main revolving door just serves to block it
shut. The weight of pressing bodies is so bad it kills some of the guests trying to escape.
Luckily for Stanley, a member of the staff who knows.
the building, he manages to find an alternate way out, but hundreds of others aren't so lucky.
And the days that follow, there will be some amazing tales of quick thinking amongst the chaos.
One survivor will tell how he urinated on a napkin to cover his face from smoke and fumes,
buying precious extra seconds to escape. But these miraculous cases will make up the minority.
34 fire engines will race to the Coconut Grove before the night is out,
carrying 187 firefighters. Joining them will be dozens of
police officers as well as every man available at the nearby Boston Navy Yard. Together they will
launch an enormous rescue effort that will save some of the club's occupants, but for many more,
help will come too late. It's a little after 10.20 p.m. on November 28, 1942. As fireman Charles
Kenny and his crewmates arrive at Coconut Grove, they recognize right away it's a bad fire. Heavy plumes
of dark smoke pour out of the building, while countless people stagger through its doors, their eyes streaming
and bodies convulsing with coughs. Charles and his men get right to work, dowsing the fire
and helping those escaping from it. Fortunately, tonight they're not alone. Dozens more fire crews
arrive, along with Army and Navy personnel and members of the National Guard and Coast Guard.
Meanwhile, newspaper delivery trucks and taxis are commandeered as makeshift ambulances to ferry survivors
to hospitals for treatment. The rescue effort is vast and exhausting, but Charles has no choice
but to push through. If he stops, people will die. And every time he goes in to help somebody go out,
countless others grab at him, begging for them to be chosen next. Charles's job is made even more
difficult by the worsening weather. As temperatures plummet, ice forms between the cobblestones on the street.
At one point, Charles goes to tug a hose closer to the building to better direct the spray of water
only to find the hose as frozen tight to the ground. It's brutal, back-breaking work,
but Charles and others persevere long into the night.
Meanwhile, Boston City Hospital receives around 300 admissions in just one hour,
a rate of one every 11 seconds.
For those who make it to an emergency room, there's a stroke of luck.
As a precautionary wartime measure, hospitals have been stockpiling supplies
and running disaster drills.
But even with his fortunate preparation,
over half the patients die from their injuries.
By the time all is said and done,
490 people lose their lives as a result of the fire, making it the deadliest nightclub disaster
in America's history. During the following investigation, authorities are unable to confirm
whether the match lit by 16-year-old Stanley Tomashesky sparked the blaze or whether it was
the guest tampering with the light bulb. But regardless, the finger of blame is pointed at the
owner of the Coconut Grove, Barney Wolanski. Though the fire's exact proximate cause can't be pinpointed,
it's clear Barney is responsible for the conditions that allowed the flames to consume the club so quickly.
And in 1943, Barney is convicted of manslaughter, sentenced to 12 to 15 years, though he's released only after four.
The fire at Coconut Grove will drive a host of health and safety laws across many states designed to prevent a repeat of the accident in Boston.
Doctors who treated the Blaz's victims will also draw on their experiences to pioneer new ways of treating burns and smoke inhalation,
and the advances they make will save countless lives in the years to come,
a bittersweet silver lining to the tragedy that befell Coconut Grove on November 28, 1942.
Next on History Daily, December 1, 1934,
Leningrad Mayor Sergei Kirov is assassinated,
prompting Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin to purge the Communist Party of his rivals.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited, and executive produced by me,
Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by
Mohamed Shazi. Sound designed by
Misha Stanton. Music by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written in research
by Rob Scrague. Executive
producers are Alexander Curry-Buckner
for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
