Tissue injury leads to activation of resident stromal, parenchymal and immune cells to initiate reparative processes that, if unresolved, can lead to fibrosis and organ damage. The directionality of effect between fibrosis and inflammation in the lung has been a point of debate for many years. Here, we tested the hypothesis that Interleukin 11 (IL11) signaling in fibroblasts is of primary importance for pulmonary fibrosis and that this event is upstream of lung inflammation. We generated mice with loxP-flanked Il11ra1 alleles and crossed them to a Col1a2-CreERT strain to enable Il11ra1 deletion in adult fibroblasts (Il11ra1-CKO mice). Lung fibroblasts from Il11ra1-CKO mice were selectively deleted for Il11ra1 and refractory to TGFβ1 stimulation. In the mouse model of bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis, Il11ra1-CKO mice had markedly reduced pulmonary fibrosis and lesser lung damage, which was accompanied by diminished ERK activation in the stromal compartment. Bleomycin lung injury in Il11ra1-CKO mice was also associated with diminished STAT3 activation in inflammatory cells, fewer pulmonary immune cell infiltrates and almost complete inhibition of NF-kB activation. These data reveal an essential role for IL11 signaling in fibroblasts for lung fibrosis and show that inflammation in the lung can be secondary to stromal activation.