[21] Prof. C.D. Buck in Decennial Publications of the University of Chicago (1903, vol. 6).

[22] There was an insurance of $88,634,122 on the losses, of which about a half was recovered. F.L. Olmsted estimated that one-third of the roof surface and one-half the cubic contents of the city’s buildings were destroyed.

[23] Four were hanged, 1 committed suicide, 2 had their death sentence commuted to life-imprisonment, the eighth was sentenced to imprisonment for 15 years. 981 men were panelled in selecting the jury. Governor J.P. Altgeld in 1893 pardoned the three in prison on the ground that the jury was "packed" and consequently incompetent, that no evidence connected the prisoners with the crime, and that the presiding judge was prejudiced. See an article by Judge J.E. Gary, who presided at the trial, in the Century Magazine (April 1893).