The Great Molasses Flood!

Stepharoonie!

<font color=teal>NOTHING is scarier than Wilford B
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Oct 3, 2003
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Interesting true story I found on Snopes....very odd!!


Forty minutes past noon on 15 January 1919, a giant wave of molasses raced through Boston. The unseasonably warm temperature (46 degrees) was the final stress needed to cause a gigantic, filled-to-capacity tank to burst. 2,320,000 gallons (14,000 tons) of molasses swept through the streets, causing death and destruction.

Eyewitness reports tell of a "30-foot wall of goo" that smashed buildings and tossed horses, wagons and pool tables about as if they were nothing. Twenty-one people were killed by the brown tidal wave, and 150 more were injured. The chaos and destruction were amplified -- and rescue efforts were hampered -- by the stickiness of the molasses. Those persons attempting to aid others all too often found themselves mired fast in the goo.

The day after the disaster, The New York Times reported:


A dull, muffled roar gave but an instant's warning before the top of the tank was blown into the air. The circular wall broke into two great segments of sheet iron which were pulled in opposite directions. Two million gallons of molasses rushed over the streets and converted into a sticky mass the wreckage of several small buildings which had been smashed by the force of the explosion.
The greatest mortality apparently occurred in one of the city buildings where a score of municipal employees were eating their lunch. The building was demolished and the wreckage was hurled fifty yards. The other city building, which had an office on the ground floor and a tenement above, was similarly torn from its foundations.

One of the sections of the tank wall fell on the firehouse which was nearby. The building was crushed and three firemen were buried in the ruins.

Boston is not a city that forgets anything easily. There are those who claim that on a hot summer day in the North End, you can still smell the molasses.
 
Yes some people still talk about the great molasses flood like they were there when it happened. (all born post 1919) I think the north end smells like yummy food.
 

YIKES! A tidal wave of molasses? I'm glad I didn't have to clean that up.
 
My dad always talks about the great Molasses flood!! He wasn't around for it but surely knows all about it!!! LOL!!

My sister does live in the North End and we visit often..........I have never smelled anything even close to molasses...........Garlic yes, but molasses, no!!!
 
There's a marker there where the tank used to be, or at least there was a couple of years ago, the last time I walked past there.
 
I saw some pictures last night of the aftermath...it just looks like a giant wave of water came through the town. I wish there were color photos back then!
 
Hey stepharoo I live in somerville which is a few minutes to boston by the T (subway)
 
My son's class actually read the story about that in class a few years ago. He was fascinated by it.
The illustrations the kids did for class were something else!

I think that was third or fourth grade.
 
Hmm...I like old "true story" tales like this one. I may have to go up there to Boston one day to check this out.
 
Actually, "Yankee" magazine did a great piece on this story a few years back. Showed some artifacts that actually are "preserved" in molasses. My DD also learned about this in school just a few months ago. And it is a true story!......................P
 
What kinda of artifacts were "preserved" in the molasses? Are they things that are in a museum, or out on the ground somewhere?
 
Check out what was in the local paper today. Talk about coincidence.

MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA -- Sometimes the truth is harder to believe than fiction.

A 50-foot-tall steel tank filled with 2.3 million gallons of molasses did collapse in 1919, sending a 15-foot tidal wave of the sugary goo sweeping through Boston's North End at 35 miles an hour.

More than 85 years later, molasses mania has taken hold in Manchester. Residents can't get enough of the story. The library's 91 copies -- that's right, 91 -- of a nonfiction account of the deadly disaster are being checked out as fast as they are turned in, with some residents waiting in line for a copy of the book.

Residents chose "Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919," written by Weymouth resident and first-time author Stephen Puleo for a community reading program with a goal of getting everyone in town to read the same book.

The book is a historical account of the molasses tragedy and the trial that followed. In the trial, jurors had to decide whether Italian anarchists or the tank's owner, United States Industrial Alcohol, were to blame for the disaster, which killed 21 people and injured more than 100. In order to recount the tale, Puleo read 25,000 pages of testimony from the trial.

Puleo said he had hoped people would find the book interesting, despite its factual nature.

"I'd like to say that the history goes down easy," Puleo said. "There's the nice story, the nice drama of the flood itself and the larger concepts, like immigration, that weave in with the story."

But who would believe a whole town would read a 233-page nonfiction book about molasses?

"It probably wasn't a book I would have picked up on my own, but once I started it, I couldn't put it down, it was just so interesting," said Town Clerk Gretchen Wood.

Pleasant Street resident Lois Kiefer agreed.

"I remember I thought, 'Ugh, I don't think I want to read that,' but once I got into it, it was really interesting and I couldn't put it down," she said.

Even librarian Dorothy Sieradzki, who ordered the books, had her doubts in the beginning.

"I was not prepared for how fast the books would fly off the shelf," she said. " I thought I would really have to push them around town. I was getting kind of a lukewarm response and then I got the books and I can't keep them on the shelf."

Sieradzki ordered a stack of shopping baskets and was prepared to leave copies of the book all over town to entice people to read, but the stack of shopping baskets sits empty in a corner of the library while all 91 copies of the book are in circulation.

Sieradzki signed the library up for a $7,500 grant for "On the Same Page," a community reading program run by the state Board of Library Commissioners. The point of the program is to try to get everyone on the same page -- or at least to get as many people in town as possible to read the same book.

Manchester residents voted on which book the town should read based on a list of four drawn up by Sieradzki. The losers included "Empire Falls" by Richard Russo, "Sea Room" by Norman G. Gautreau and "Our Town" by Thornton Wilder.

The book has made its way around Town Hall. Assistant Town Accountant Athena Thibodeau and her husband, Joseph, both read and loved it. The selectmen each have a copy.

An 18-member group of sixth- through eighth-grade readers and their parents have taken on the book and it is even making its way into surrounding communities.

Peggy Finn of Beverly read it because people in her exercise class were talking about it. She handed the book on to her sister. Gloucester resident Ellen Lufkin read it because she works part time at Manchester Town Hall.

Those who read the books are supposed to put an X on the inside cover before they pass it on, so Sieradzki can track how many people read them.

Molasses mania doesn't stop there.

A molasses cookie recipe contest and a presentation by the author will round out the March activities. On April 21, for the grand finale of the project, the library will offer readers a trip to Boston for a Historic Trolley Tour of the city.

Even Puleo can't believe it.

"You have to pinch yourself," he said. "I'll tell you, I knew it was a good story -- a story that had never been told and when I would tell people they were always fascinated and couldn't really get enough of it. I thought it would be well received but it has far exceeded my expectations."

Puleo will be in Manchester March 23 at 7 p.m. at the First Parish Chapel to talk about what went into writing the book and to sign copies.
 















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