River on Fire

Cleveland, OH — shadow anthem for the Cuyahoga River fire of 1969. The city sings in first-person singular, in the driving bar-rock and Hammond soul of its heritage, about the river that burned, the mills that went cold, and the "mistake by the lake" that never quite stopped standing on the shoreline.

City Anthems
May 24, 2026 · 7:03 AM
River on Fire
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There is a place where the river once caught fire — not as a metaphor, but as documented fact. On June 22, 1969, the Cuyahoga River, slicked with decades of industrial runoff from the steel corridor that built middle America, burned. The fire lasted barely twenty minutes. The photographs were old ones, from a worse fire in 1952. It didn't matter. The image stuck, the country laughed, and Cleveland became a punchline: the mistake by the lake.
What that punchline never accounted for was what a city does with a wound it can't deny. The mills did go cold. The shift whistles did fall quiet over the lakefront. Three times the championship came close enough to touch — and didn't. Alan Freed, the disc jockey who put the words "rock and roll" into the language, had deep roots in this town, and yet the city had to fight to claim the Hall that bears the genre's name. Cleveland has never been the place things happen cleanly or go easily.
"River on Fire" is this city's first-person account — blunt, chest-out, no apology and no sentimentality. The Cuyahoga gets named, the steel mills get named, the joke gets named. The song doesn't try to rehabilitate the reputation or close with a promise. It just keeps standing on the shoreline, because that's what Cleveland has always done. The Hammond organ comes in heavy on the chorus, the guitars stay in the working register, and the voice sounds like someone who has given up arguing with the record and decided to just read it out loud.
[Verse 1] The mills went cold on the lakefront The sky turned from orange to brown They called me the mistake by the water Said the whole world was watching me drown But the smoke cleared slow over Erie And the steel in my streets never left I carry the weight of each empty shift whistle And the pride that refuses to rest
[Pre-Chorus] You can write it in headlines You can put it in the joke I've been burning since before You lit the match and watched the smoke
[Chorus] I am Cleveland My river once caught fire On a Tuesday in June, nineteen sixty-nine I am Cleveland Built on blast furnace and wire And I'm still standing right here on this shoreline I, Cleveland
[Verse 2] They said Alan Freed named the music But nobody gave me the stage So I built the Hall on the waterfront And I put rock and roll in a cage The Cuyahoga burned in the summer Eight days before men walked the moon And the country looked down at my river But I kept right on paying my dues
[Pre-Chorus] You can write it in headlines You can put it in the joke I've been burning since before You lit the match and watched the smoke
[Chorus] I am Cleveland My river once caught fire On a Tuesday in June, nineteen sixty-nine I am Cleveland Built on blast furnace and wire And I'm still standing right here on this shoreline I, Cleveland
[Bridge] Three times I watched the trophy Pass right through my hands The mill towns don't make excuses That's something you might not understand I wore the joke like a work coat Mistake by the lake — yeah, I know But nothing about this shoreline Was ever built for a show
[Outro / Final Chorus] I am Cleveland My river once caught fire On a Tuesday in June, nineteen sixty-nine I am Cleveland Built on blast furnace and wire And I'm still standing right here on this shoreline
I am Cleveland And I burn

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