Boston Molasses Disaster
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[edit] Disaster
At 529 Commercial Street, a huge molasses tank 50 ft (15 m) tall, 90 ft (27 m) in diameter and containing as much as 2,300,000 US gal (8,700,000 L) collapsed. Witnesses stated that as it collapsed there was a loud rumbling sound like a machine gun as the rivets shot out of the tank, and that the ground shook as if a train were passing by.[2]
The collapse unleashed an immense wave of molasses between 8 and 15 ft (2.5 to 4.5 m) high, moving at 35 mph (56 km/h) and exerting a pressure of 2 ton/ft² (200 kPa).[3] The molasses wave was of sufficient force to break the girders of the adjacent Boston Elevated Railway's Atlantic Avenue structure and lift a train off the tracks. Nearby, buildings were swept off their foundations and crushed. Several blocks were flooded to a depth of 2 to 3 feet.
"Molasses, waist deep, covered the street and swirled and bubbled about the wreckage. Here and there struggled a form — whether it was animal or human being was impossible to tell. Only an upheaval, a thrashing about in the sticky mass, showed where any life was.... Horses died like so many flies on sticky fly-paper. The more they struggled, the deeper in the mess they were ensnared. Human beings — men and women — suffered likewise."[4]
The Boston Globe reported that people "were picked up by a rush of air and hurled many feet." Others had debris hurled at them from the rush of sweet-smelling air. A truck was picked up and hurled into Boston Harbor. Approximately 150 were injured; 21 people and several horses were killed — some were crushed and asphyxiated by the molasses. The wounded included people, horses, and dogs; coughing became one of the biggest problems after the initial blast.
...Anthony di Stasio, walking homeward with his sisters from the Michelangelo School, was picked up by the wave and carried, tumbling on its crest, almost as though he were surfing. Then he grounded and the molasses rolled him like a pebble as the wave diminished. He heard his mother call his name and couldn't answer, his throat was so clogged with the smothering goo. He passed out, then opened his eyes to find three of his sisters staring at him[1]
[edit] Aftermath
First to the scene were 116 sailors from the lightship USS Nantucket training ship that was docked nearby. They ran several blocks toward the accident. They worked to keep the curious from getting in the way of the rescuers while others entered into the knee-deep sticky mess to pull out the survivors. Soon the Boston police, Red Cross, Army and other Navy personnel arrived. Some nurses from the Red Cross dived into the molasses while others tended to the wounded, keeping them warm, and made hot coffee as well as keeping the exhausted workers fed. Many of these people worked through the night. The injured were so numerous that doctors and surgeons set up a makeshift hospital in a nearby building. Rescuers found it difficult to make their way through the syrup to help the victims. It took four days before they stopped searching for victims; many dead were so glazed over in molasses, they were hard to recognize. Two who could not be identified were found on the fourth day.
[edit] Cleanup
It took over 87,000 man hours to remove the molasses from the cobblestone streets, theaters, businesses, automobiles, and homes.[4] The harbor ran brown until summer. Local residents brought a class-action lawsuit, one of the first held in Massachusetts, against the United States Industrial Alcohol Company, which had bought Purity Distilling in 1917. In spite of the company's attempts to claim that the tank had been blown up by anarchists (because some of the alcohol produced was to be used in making munitions) it ultimately paid out $600,000 in out-of-court settlements (at least $6.6 million in 2005 dollars).[5]
United States Industrial Alcohol did not rebuild the tank. The property became a yard for the Boston Elevated Railway (predecessor to the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority) and is currently the site of a city-owned baseball field.
The smell supposedly lingered for many years; according to local folklore, molasses left from this disaster can still be smelled on hot days.[1]
[edit] Causes
The cause of the accident is not known with certainty, but the company was found liable and paid damages. [6]
Several factors that occurred on that day and the previous days may have contributed to the disaster. The tank was poorly constructed and insufficiently tested. Due to fermentation occurring within the tank, carbon dioxide production may have raised the pressure inside the tank. The rise in the local temperatures that occurred over the previous day also would have assisted in the building of this pressure. Records show that the air temperature rose from 2°F to 41° F (-17°C to 4°C) over that period. The failure occurred from a manhole cover near the base of the tank, and it is possible that a fatigue crack grew here to criticality. The hoop stress is greatest near the base of a filled, cylindrical tank. The tank had only been filled to capacity 8 times since it was built a few years previously, putting the walls under an intermittent cyclical load.
An inquiry after the disaster revealed that Arthur Jell, who oversaw the construction, neglected basic safety tests, such as filling the tank with water to check for leaks. When filled with molasses, the tank leaked so badly that it was painted brown to hide the leaks. Local residents collected leaked molasses for their homes.
Based on the date of the accident, some have claimed that the tank may have been overfilled so that the owners could produce as much ethanol for liquor as possible before Prohibition came into effect. But the 18th Amendment, enacting Prohibition, did not become law until more than a year later, and the Volstead Act did not ban the production of industrial alcohol, so these claims would seem[attribution needed] to be groundless.
[edit] References
- Puleo, Stephen (2004). Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919. Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-5021-0.
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c Park, Edwards (24 November 2004). "Eric Postpischil's Molasses Disaster Pages, Smithsonian Article". Eric Postpischil's Domain 14 (8): 213-230. Smithsonian Institute. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
- ^ Great Molasses Flood. Massachusetts foundation for the Humanities. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
- ^ The Great Molasses Flood of 1919. The Ooze. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
- ^ a b Puleo, Stephen, “Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919”, page 98. Beacon Press, 2004, ISBN 0-8070-5021-0
- ^ Was Boston once literally flooded with molasses?. The Straight Dope. The Chicago Reader. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
- ^ Robert Knox (11 January 2004). "The untold story of Boston's Great Molasses Flood". The Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2006-12-16.
[edit] External links
- Listen online - The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919 - The American Storyteller Radio Journal
- Equistar Chemicals, successor to United States Industrial Alcohol (Purity's parent company)
- What caused the great Boston Molasses Flood? from the Massachusetts Historical Society
- "The Molasses Disaster of January 15, 1919", reprinted from Yankee Magazine
- An interview with Stephen Puleo, author of the book above
- Molasses flood site, present-day pictures and list of 1919 inhabitants, at archive.org
- "Joshua's Song", children's book (fiction) centered upon the incident
da:Melasseulykken i Boston
fr:Désastre de mélasse de Boston
he:אסון הדבשה של בוסטון
ja:ボストン糖蜜災害
no:Melasseulykken i Boston
sv:Melasskatastrofen i Boston
Categories: All pages needing cleanup | Wikipedia articles needing factual verification since December 2007 | Environmental disasters in the United States | 1919 disasters | 1919 in the United States | History of Boston, Massachusetts | Boston cultural history | Industrial disasters | Disasters in Massachusetts

