On January 15, 1919, in Boston's North End, a 50-foot-tall tank holding 2.3 million gallons of molasses burst, unleashing a deadly wave that rose nearly 25 feet high at one point. The destructive flood threw people and horses about, smashed buildings, and even damaged the steel supports of an elevated railway. Rescuers had to wade through knee-deep molasses and sticky debris to reach survivors. Twenty-one people died in the disaster, another 150 were injured, and the cleanup lasted for weeks. The cause of the failure was determined to be faulty construction and poor maintenance.I remember reading about this in Smithsonian Magazine when I was just a kid. Anyway, some more links: History Today, The Boston Globe, and Scientific American. And a copy of the Smithsonian article I read so many years ago.
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Thursday, January 15, 2015
Remembering the 1919 Boston Molasses Disaster.
From The Atlantic:
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Weekend Reading -- A New Weekend Knowledge Dump
Greg Ellifritz has posted a new Weekend Knowledge Dump at his Active Response Training blog . Before I discuss some of his links, I want to ...
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