The tragic true story of the Cocoanut Grove nightclub fire

<p>First opening in 1927 at Boston&rsquo;s 17 Piedmont Street as a prohibition-era &ldquo;speakeasy,&rdquo; the then-mobster-owned Cocoanut Grove fell on hard times during the depression but was enjoying new life during the early years of World War II, becoming THE place to be seen.</p> <p>The building was one story, containing a dining room, a ballroom with several bar areas, including the 48-ft long Caricature Bar and a bandstand. A basement contained a massive bar and dining area called the Melody Lounge, along with storage areas and freezers.</p> <p>Boston College had planned a celebratory post-bowl game party that night but canceled it after their somewhat humiliating defeat, yet still, the Grove was packed beyond its 600-person capacity with post-Thanksgiving revelers. These included the cast of the Irving Berlin musical &ldquo;This Is the Army&rdquo; and celebrity movie cowboy Buck Jones, who was in Boston for a war bond campaign and was told by his agent he should have dinner there.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/lessons-from-history/the-tragic-true-story-of-the-cocoanut-grove-nightclub-fire-fdf884be629"><strong>Visit Now</strong></a></p>