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The 1900 Big Game Disaster | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror

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  • Опубликовано: 15 авг 2024
  • "On the 29th of November, 1900, huge crowds gathered at Recreation Park Stadium in San Francisco..."
    As always, THANK YOU to all my Patreon patrons: you make this channel possible.
    / fascinatinghorror
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    CHAPTERS:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:40 - Background
    01:55 - The 1900 Big Game Disaster
    07:14 - The Aftermath
    MUSIC:
    ► "Glass Pond" by Public Memory
    ► "Underworld" by Myuu
    SOURCES:
    ► "The Big Game Disaster of 1900" by Sam Scott, published in Stanford Magazine, December 2015. Link: stanfordmag.or...
    ► "Stanford vs Cal: A Brief History of the Big Game" by Cameron Satterlee, published by Rule of Tree, November 2017. Available via: web.archive.or...
    ► "Famed Deaf Sculptor Died 75 Years Ago in Berkeley" by Steven Finacom, published by The Berkeley Daily Planet, August 2010. Link: www.berkeleyda...
    ► "Big Game’s most grisly incident: 'Sizzling, Shrieking Human Mass'" by Scott Ostler, published by SF Chronicle, November 2016. Link: www.sfchronicl...
    ► "Big Game horror in 1900 was quickly forgotten" by Steven Finacom, published by The Mercury News, November 2015. Link: www.mercurynew...
    ​​​​​​​#Documentary​​​​ #History​​​​​​​​​ #TrueStories​

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @dyamonde9555
    @dyamonde9555 Год назад +2293

    After hearing the way the setup was described, i was incredibly surprised at the comparatively low deathtoll of only 23. 400 people on a roof made to only support its own weight, 5 stories high above a factory with a burning furnace... i really thought this would go into triple-digits. these people were incredibly lucky

    • @furygeist
      @furygeist Год назад +138

      Seriously. It's amazing the death toll wasn't higher.

    • @billjones642
      @billjones642 Год назад +60

      perhaps the furnace and pipes they bashed into on the way down helped break their fall.

    • @Ozymandias1
      @Ozymandias1 Год назад +140

      @@furygeist it’s amazing thet this event with 23 deaths is the deadliest sports disaster in US history. Meaning that the US has been spared bigger disastes like Bradford, Heysel and Hillsborough. Not to mention the disasters in Latin America with hundreds of deaths.

    • @stevie-ray2020
      @stevie-ray2020 Год назад +49

      I reckon the lucky ones were the spectators who died in the fall rather than those who survived but received horrific burns &/or injuries (although some may have been truly fortunate to have been cushioned by those they landed on)!

    • @sumiterxeroslargosiuscrosi7819
      @sumiterxeroslargosiuscrosi7819 Год назад +18

      Not luck bruh... that's a freakin' miracle.

  • @kathyjones1576
    @kathyjones1576 Год назад +2202

    Sometimes the fault truly does fall on the victims and this is one of those cases. At least the adults. Children tend to follow adults lead, even with something they know they're not supposed to be doing. "If the grown ups are doing it, it must be ok".
    They ignored the factory workers, broke into the area, then after noticing the roof wasn't safe, they joked about it instead of getting down.

    • @andrewkelley9405
      @andrewkelley9405 Год назад +252

      an actual IRL Darwin award.

    • @Mandrake42
      @Mandrake42 Год назад +216

      Yeah they had to sneak or get past various people warning them, including people who would know best, the workers, and the even the police. The fact that the were joking about it shows they knew very well what they were doing was dangerous but they didn't care and stayed regardless. Like you I feel sorry for the kids the most, they look to the older people for guidance and they were all up there. A tragic disaster but one they brought on themselves by joking about danger instead of taking it seriously. In so many of the videos on this channel its the fault of poor construction, cut corners and poor safety and the victims are truly innocent. I think this may be the first one I have seen where I feel that isn't the case.

    • @alastor8091
      @alastor8091 Год назад +29

      But muh victim blaming.

    • @annod6
      @annod6 Год назад +279

      @@alastor8091 maybe because the victims were to blame. Being a victim doesn't always absolve someone of guilt.

    • @angelachouinard4581
      @angelachouinard4581 Год назад +137

      @@annod6 Mr Ballen's channel has a whole series on places you aren't supposed to go but people went anyway. It nearly always ends badly. People continue to endanger themselves and their potential rescuers, so yes, such people are not guiltless.

  • @carli8575
    @carli8575 Год назад +610

    Props to the factories workers. They tried every way to prevent this and were repeatedly denied help. Then they had to be the first to witness the horrific scene and jump in to rescue them.

    • @Bloodbain88
      @Bloodbain88 Год назад +29

      I was surprised at how well the factory workers tried to stop people. Usually during these stories, especially back then the more likely responses are "ahhh you little rascals. Oh well. I'm sure nothing bad will happen." As hundreds of children climb up to the 5 story high roof of a factory above a gigantic burning furnace.

    • @porcus123
      @porcus123 Год назад

      So many I toll you so were said

    • @pissiole5654
      @pissiole5654 Год назад +11

      one guy even found the time to dab in the middle of it all 5:25

    • @christianpetterson1784
      @christianpetterson1784 Год назад +1

      AND they were some of the first to be blamed for the incident!

    • @knownnuisance7512
      @knownnuisance7512 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@pissiole5654 first ever recorded

  • @thedrunkenelf
    @thedrunkenelf Год назад +1184

    You don’t want to fall through a roof. You REALLY don’t want to fall through a roof ONTO a caged furnace.
    Holy shit.

    • @daffers2345
      @daffers2345 Год назад +66

      Especially when the furnace is RUNNING!

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Год назад

      Proof that Americans have always lacked common sense

    • @Kevinrothwell1959
      @Kevinrothwell1959 Год назад +19

      And yet a celebrational bonfire is deemed appropriate!

    • @catsinpajamas
      @catsinpajamas Год назад +22

      I worked with hot glass at art school. I had to stick a metal rod into an orange-hot furnace to gather the hot glass. It was like staring into the pit of hell as my eyebrows were singed off. Absolutely terrifying. I love glass art, but working with hot glass is not for me. I cannot IMAGINE what it would be like to fall into, or even onto, a furnace like that. Horrifying beyond all comprehension. But nobody cares because it was just a bunch of poor kids.

    • @jesuszamora6949
      @jesuszamora6949 Год назад +14

      @@catsinpajamas I dunno if you can say NO ONE cared, but at the same time, the fault was there own.

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat Год назад +1071

    Geez...falling five stories only to land on a 1000+°F furnace. I hadn't heard of this disaster before now. Great video!

    • @FArkhanor
      @FArkhanor Год назад +68

      Not one furnace, but the ONLY furnace at operational temperature of 1700°C (3000°F), if that's not bad luck I don't know what is.
      Fall Guys : The floor is hotter than lava Edition

    • @aaronburratwood.6957
      @aaronburratwood.6957 Год назад +12

      Also, how did the game finish at 5 - 0? How does a team get only 5 points in football. It said (last minute field goal) won the game, we’re FGs 5 points back than?

    • @biffbastion301
      @biffbastion301 Год назад +21

      @@aaronburratwood.6957 They could have had a safety which is 2 points and a 3 point field goal. Not sure if that's the case here though.

    • @christopherweise438
      @christopherweise438 Год назад +26

      @@aaronburratwood.6957- This was 1900. The forward pass had not come into it's own yet. Single digit totals were common back then. We know that Stanford had a field goal. So, the only other score they could've had was a a safety.

    • @tjenadonn6158
      @tjenadonn6158 Год назад +6

      Talk about adding injury to injury.

  • @SuzanneU
    @SuzanneU Год назад +705

    I'm an historical archaeologist. While researching early glass making in the San Francisco Bay region, I came across this story. It has haunted me ever since. Conditions in the glass foundries were appalling, with boys as young as six running miles every day with gobs of molten glass for a pittance. Injuries were frequent and deaths not unknown.

    • @RHR-221b
      @RHR-221b Год назад +2

    • @brandonmusick77
      @brandonmusick77 Год назад +65

      Thank God for labor unions.

    • @biggiouschinnus7489
      @biggiouschinnus7489 Год назад +39

      ​@@brandonmusick77 yep. And they had to fight to get even those.

    • @klondikemom3658
      @klondikemom3658 Год назад +46

      @@biggiouschinnus7489 still fighting. We need more.

    • @stevie-ray2020
      @stevie-ray2020 Год назад +7

      I was thinking that this had to be well before the more modern glass-manufacturing techniques such as continuous float-glass kilns and automated moulds!
      Also wondered whether the factory was affected by the earthquake the following decade?

  • @Niskirin
    @Niskirin Год назад +110

    What pisses me off about this case is that the factory workers were even MOMENTARILY considered a possibly guilty of this event, even if ultimately let go. They did their due diligence by trying to drive the idiots away.

  • @arandompasserby7940
    @arandompasserby7940 Год назад +899

    As tragic as the whole story is, the sight at 5:15 of a worker from 1900 clearly dabbing on the dummies who wouldn't stay off the roof does undercut the mood ever so slightly lmao
    All humor aside, thank you for bringing attention to these forgotten tragedies!

    • @LostLargeCats
      @LostLargeCats Год назад +71

      I thought the same thing.

    • @D0NU75
      @D0NU75 Год назад +110

      of all the things, a worker dabbing on the injured was the most unexpected thing in this video. I bet if you search carefully enough, you might even find an amogus too.

    • @chatteyj
      @chatteyj Год назад +10

      dabbing?

    • @thetman0068
      @thetman0068 Год назад +82

      Homie hit the hardest dab of the 20th century.

    • @Cold-Blooded-Jay
      @Cold-Blooded-Jay Год назад +71

      @@chatteyj Dabbing is when you put one arm out to your side and the other crossed over your face and you look down slightly. It's a silly thing that kids and adults pretending to be kids do today. Look it up for more information.
      It's hilarious that the guy is doing an absolutely PERFECT dab in the picture.

  • @censusgary
    @censusgary Год назад +116

    Considering that 100 or so people fell through the roof, dropping five stories onto a hot furnace and other equipment, it’s kind of surprising only 23 of them were killed.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist 9 дней назад

      The fall to the top of the furnace was 35 feet not 5 stories, the whole building was 5 stories high, the top of the furnace was estimated to be 500 degrees F it was 3,000 degrees INSIDE it

  • @ChristieAdamsKangoo
    @ChristieAdamsKangoo Год назад +101

    This might be the first story on FH where the factory managers/owners are not to blame. The foreman and the workers tried to chase the crowd off, even going so far as to threaten them; when that didn't work, they turned to the authorities for help but were rebuffed. And when disaster struck, they shut the furnace off and began trying to rescue everyone.

  • @hisdadjames4876
    @hisdadjames4876 Год назад +405

    Surprised that, in the US, no sports crowd crush disaster has surpassed this death toll. Those events, sadly, have often had terrible consequences in other countries.

    • @arandompasserby7940
      @arandompasserby7940 Год назад +22

      I guess the lion's share of us Americans generally have more going for us than who wins a sporting match.

    • @slypear
      @slypear Год назад +4

      Yet.

    • @JimAllen-Persona
      @JimAllen-Persona Год назад +35

      @@arandompasserby7940 I don’t know if I’d quite put it that way… culture is part of it though.

    • @arandompasserby7940
      @arandompasserby7940 Год назад +8

      @@JimAllen-Persona "I'd say culture is part of it" or maybe a lack thereof! ;^)

    • @hisdadjames4876
      @hisdadjames4876 Год назад +28

      @@arandompasserby7940 Maybe. A famous UK coach said, ‘Some people seem to think football is a matter of life or death. I can assure you that around here it is much, much more important than that. ‘😐

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 Год назад +553

    I have to agree, this is one of the times that the people did it to themselves. But Oh My God, the temperature of the furnace they fell onto! I shudder to think of the horrid scene in that place!

    • @ScaryStoriesAt2AM
      @ScaryStoriesAt2AM Год назад +24

      Falling five stories, only to land on the furnace and have oil spraying everywhere 😬 I can only imagine

    • @bookcat123
      @bookcat123 Год назад +59

      Mostly did it to themselves, yes. But the response from the police when the factory workers called in their concern was absurd. Not my job - take it up with the guy who is unreachable. Still a problem today, you know. In my town, if you call the non-emergency police line on the weekend, you’ll be forwarded to the 911 center who will yell at you for calling about a non-emergency (like a large stray dog in the yard and the dog catcher unavailable) and refuse to do anything. They’ll tell you call the non-emergency line. Which will once again redirect you back to them.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. Год назад +13

      @@bookcat123 We must always strive to blame business owners and police.

    • @bookcat123
      @bookcat123 Год назад +29

      @@eadweard. 😂 well in this case the business did try to chase them off AND called for police when they saw it was getting dangerous, so not their fault at all. All the police had to do was make a similar attempt, and instead of being 90% did it to themselves it would be 100%

    • @gohawks3571
      @gohawks3571 Год назад +27

      @@bookcat123 Yup. I feel sorry for the business! They tried their best, couldn't get help, got ignored, and had to rebuild? All because children and some adults couldn't be made to behave?! Terrible. They really tried☹️

  • @Simon-yp7rv
    @Simon-yp7rv Год назад +46

    Dozens of people falling literally into an oven, spilling themselved with hot oil and being trapped in their positions is insanely horrific, and while I learn about that I see the man at 5:15 hitting a point perfect dab.
    I could not have been prepared

  • @dominaincharge
    @dominaincharge Год назад +93

    I can't imagine falling onto the furnace and not being able to get off because of injuries from the fall. What a nightmare. You must have an unlimited number of disasters to draw from. It's so interesting and educational. thanks for sharing.

  • @planescaped
    @planescaped Год назад +145

    "Because the survivors were deemed to having contributed to their injury, they were not entitled to any compensation"
    As callous as it is, that's definitely the right call.

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 Год назад +37

      Hell, I'll go one step further- the survivors owed the factory for property damage. Either them or the negligent police who failed to respond to a mass trespassing in a timely manner. 'u should talk to da officer at da stadium' my ass...

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 Год назад +1

      to bad it is not that way to day

    • @OfficialNolanLaValley
      @OfficialNolanLaValley Год назад +7

      Definitely the right call, but imagine if someone concluded that today? In 2023 someone always has to be blamed for someone else’s stupidity.

    • @alanbeck7093
      @alanbeck7093 Год назад +3

      @@dknowles60 An inhumane response, not Civil Society.

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 Год назад +4

      @@alanbeck7093 what happened to personal responsibility

  • @frozarburst6350
    @frozarburst6350 Год назад +193

    One of the rare times the victims screwed themselves instead of a shady construction company screwing them

    • @AnthonyShevenock
      @AnthonyShevenock Год назад +6

      that and the game officials who decided that factory workers were the only thing needed to stop crowds from getting on a roof and the person who stopped said factory workers from getting help because the factory workers didn't have tickets.

  • @TornadoElle_
    @TornadoElle_ Год назад +250

    Its so sad that its been forgotten. Im so glad you find these and share it with us so the event isnt lost forever

    • @one8088
      @one8088 Год назад

      It HILARIOUS

    • @wellthisisinteresting4912
      @wellthisisinteresting4912 Год назад

      Disasters happen in the hundreds every day all around the world. Who can keep up with all of them

  • @DjVortex-w
    @DjVortex-w Год назад +224

    Thinking about my own younger years, in retrospect I have to consider myself incredibly lucky to be alive and uninjured today. Being young makes you so reckless as to do things you would never, ever, in a million years, do as an older wiser more experienced person. This story just reminded me of some foolish things I did as a youngster (I never climbed on top of flimsy roofs, but some of the things I did, especially with friends, wasn't too far from that, and sometimes even worse in terms of the dangers).

    • @bellyfulochelly4222
      @bellyfulochelly4222 Год назад +21

      Just thinking the same.
      "There but for the grace of God go I," for sure.

    • @deborahbarry9421
      @deborahbarry9421 Год назад +9

      @@bellyfulochelly4222 I have said that same, "there but by the grace of God there go I "
      So very sad those young men and children only wanting to see the game.
      The over crowding of the "make-shitf" field in the industrial park had much to do...
      So very sad😥

    • @billp4
      @billp4 Год назад +14

      I cringe at some of the stupid stuff I did, especially when drunk.

    • @jwwj30
      @jwwj30 Год назад +15

      As a young boy, we used to play in an abandoned train depot, piling up forgotten mattresses & leaping 2 stories down onto them. We were pilots, parachuting out of airplanes. Praise our Lord, we were never injured & I’m so thankful I wasn’t.

    • @D0NU75
      @D0NU75 Год назад +6

      I remember being a kid and almost falling down a very deep ravine, i tripped and one, just one lucky arm swing got me back to my balance. There are times i stop and think "what if" and how life would be if any at all, should had i just not thrown my arm to the side as a counterweight.

  • @felixcat9318
    @felixcat9318 Год назад +6

    I particularly respect that you include information that the buildings shown were of a similar type, and not the actual incident structure, likewise your other information of a similar nature.
    Your integrity and thoroughness are greatly appreciated.
    This incident is so horrific, with spectators that somehow survived their five storey fall, landing on the scalding hot roof of an operational blast furnace!
    The photograph of spectators crowded onto the apex of the roof, moments before its catastrophic collapse is eerily unnerving...

  • @joannewilson1162
    @joannewilson1162 Год назад +128

    I hadn’t heard about this before. And it was sad but the victims had no one to blame but themselves. You never think things like this will happen to you until it does…😢

    • @PataPannu
      @PataPannu Год назад +14

      Except when just like one of the survivors said, they joked that if the roof collapses they'll all go down with it, telltaling that some awareness probably was included, but they accepted the risk over seeing a game.

    • @johnmurray9526
      @johnmurray9526 Год назад +8

      Well nowerdays an investigation would totally blame the factory for not stopping people and not having signs and other things to warn people about not climbing on the weak roof.

    • @christystewart4567
      @christystewart4567 Год назад +3

      I hadn’t heard about this either and I grew up in the Bay Area. It’s amazing some of the history in places people think they are familiar with are unknown but were big stories when they occurred.

  • @tedsmith6137
    @tedsmith6137 Год назад +191

    I was surprised to hear the death toll was only 23.

    • @memevisitor6679
      @memevisitor6679 Год назад +7

      Me too. 23 is still a lot but i actually thought there had been more given hundreds of people being on top of a roof of a 5-storey factory & caged furnace. Then again, remember Victoria Hall disaster?

  • @rodrikforrester6989
    @rodrikforrester6989 Год назад +158

    A tragic event, of course, but I can't overlook the patented safety dab at 5:15

    • @mayaluski7736
      @mayaluski7736 Год назад +20

      Came straight to the comments for this haha glad someone acknowledged it

    • @Notme195
      @Notme195 Год назад +17

      Back then it was called the boiler shuffle

    • @misterflibble6601
      @misterflibble6601 Год назад +4

      A tragic event, of course, but let's go ahead and make a joke out of it anyway.

    • @sshamble
      @sshamble Год назад +34

      @@misterflibble6601 thank you internet defender

    • @guyvanarsdall7686
      @guyvanarsdall7686 Год назад +5

      Wondered if I was the only one who noticed that!

  • @ImCurrentlyNaked
    @ImCurrentlyNaked Год назад +20

    When you showed the images of the fire and talked about the active furnace, and noted it was all children on the roof, I literally said "oooh noooo" with my hands covering my face.

  • @Propanesucka
    @Propanesucka Год назад +32

    And if you ever need evidence of America's all-consuming obsession with football, here's two papers reporting on the game not even acknowledging the people falling to a firey death within shouting distance.

  • @Scorpio45Libra
    @Scorpio45Libra Год назад +29

    This is why I like this channel, we learn a little history with a factual account. Thanks for keeping it real!

    • @daffers2345
      @daffers2345 Год назад +2

      I love this channel for that very reason. There's no speculation, no poking fun or opinions, and no shilling for likes/subscribes. Amazing channel; I wish more were like this one.

  • @sketchyskies8531
    @sketchyskies8531 Год назад +24

    "10,000 tickets were printed for that first game. Twice the number of spectators showed up."
    "I don't like where this is going."-JonTron

    • @119Agent
      @119Agent Год назад

      Still more than a South Florida Bulls game.

  • @kenyastarflight
    @kenyastarflight Год назад +54

    Thank you for covering this. I never would have heard of this without your channel.
    One possible suggestion for a video -- the disaster at the Our Lady of the Angels School in Chicago, Illinois in 1958. I'm currently reading a book about it (To Sleep With the Angels) and boy is it heartbreaking.

    • @macgeek2004
      @macgeek2004 Год назад +6

      I second this!!!

    • @daffers2345
      @daffers2345 Год назад +8

      He has an email listed in the description. Try emailing him with your suggestion. He was courteous enough to respond to my emails :)

    • @molmer2380
      @molmer2380 Год назад +1

      I wonder if we watched some footage of this during fire safety classes in the late 1960s early 70s!

    • @jaelzion
      @jaelzion Год назад +1

      Yeah, this is definitely worthy of a video. The 64th anniversary is coming up on December 1.

  • @Jared_Wignall
    @Jared_Wignall Год назад +48

    Keep up the great work with these documentaries and shining light in some of the events that aren’t talked about much or are almost forgotten.

  • @davidanspach1624
    @davidanspach1624 Год назад +30

    Been following your channel since you were 3 videos deep and I haven't missed a single anytime you post one. As always, your work is unequaled in its quality and your use of that background music and cadence has become a signature of your work you should always be proud to have produced.

    • @DiscoDashco
      @DiscoDashco Год назад +1

      Hellz yeah, when it was all theme park accidents still? Like, how did I come across THIS?! Subbed for the comfort in the narration.

  • @als3022
    @als3022 Год назад +18

    As others have stated before it's interesting when it's not company negligence. And it's unfortunate that the valiant efforts to stop people putting themselves in danger by the factory workers didn't work.

  • @elliottprice6084
    @elliottprice6084 Год назад +51

    Lost to the mist of time, but this tragedy had a huge impact on me. Not least for the sense of impending disaster. Falling 5 storeys is horrific enough, but falling that far and landing on a fully operational furnace just makes it all the more unbearable

    • @DinnerForkTongue
      @DinnerForkTongue Год назад +6

      Hope that instilled into you the fear to never clamber on top of an industrial facility alongside a huge mob.

    • @elliottprice6084
      @elliottprice6084 Год назад +2

      @@DinnerForkTongue I'm scared of heights so that in itself is enough to makes sure I'd never do a thing like that

    • @elizab8844
      @elizab8844 Год назад

      I think that those in the furnace did not fall but 10 feet. There was the protruding part of the building which was the furnace. Everyone else fell 5 stories.

  • @constantlycomic1290
    @constantlycomic1290 Год назад +3

    The fact that the game is remembered more than this disaster is exactly why I don't trust sports fans to display suitable amounts of empathy.

  • @Matt-dg6ue
    @Matt-dg6ue Год назад +210

    What's sad is if this happened today, family of the dead and the survivors would've sued the factory and probably would've won the case, despite the factory workers doing their best to keep them off the roof

    • @wyokaiju992
      @wyokaiju992 Год назад +48

      We really need to reign back laws that allow lawsuits with situations of blatant disregard for ones personal safety, like we had here....
      You really shouldn't be able to sue because you hurt yourself by breaking and entering.

    • @PutItAway101
      @PutItAway101 Год назад +24

      You gotta apply some sense and ask yourself "is this a stadium, or is it a roof?" If it's a roof, prob not good to go up there with hundreds of people.

    • @covcraig88
      @covcraig88 Год назад +4

      Good old USA..

    • @hisdadjames4876
      @hisdadjames4876 Год назад +16

      It was clearly negligent of the company to put the roof there, within sight of the field, making no effort to deter trespassers. Only a big fence that could be under-dug and a single guard with an iron bar. 😂

    • @jamesbarnes1897
      @jamesbarnes1897 Год назад

      Clearly they did.....you gotta watch till the end lol 😆

  • @RandomVideos-lt9to
    @RandomVideos-lt9to Год назад +11

    Grew up my whole life in California and locally in the bay area and no one ever talks about this. Wow. Thank you.

    • @opwave79
      @opwave79 Год назад

      Same. Odd that it hasn’t been mentioned once, while Loma Prieta gets talked about every year.

  • @achaides
    @achaides Год назад +76

    This is one story where I don't feel so bad for the victims. It's still sad that ot happened, but they knew they weren't supposed to be up there and were actively dodging people trying to keep them down 🙄

    • @ethanyoder9953
      @ethanyoder9953 Год назад +13

      Just because these people (many being children) were responsible for what happened to them, it doesn't mean they deserved to fall five stories onto a caged furnace. Sympathy is absolutely still warranted.

    • @chad9166
      @chad9166 Год назад +3

      @@ethanyoder9953 They did deserve it

    • @opwave79
      @opwave79 Год назад +10

      Good point. It’s sad that fellow human beings (and kids) died, but we can still shake our heads at their stubbornness and bad judgment.

    • @snow2267
      @snow2267 Год назад +5

      I was actually mad they pushed a any blame onto the workers. They tried and where doing everything they could. None of it was they're fault.

    • @Cec9e13
      @Cec9e13 Год назад +9

      @@ethanyoder9953 yes, there's an important distinction between "it actually was their own fault" and "they deserved it", and it's a VERY important distinction not much pointed out nowadays.

  • @sharonsmith583
    @sharonsmith583 Год назад +56

    Wow, I'm from the US and had never heard of this! Thanks for doing this one. As a graduate of UGA, I'm surrounded by SEC news. I've never heard of the "Big Game" either.

    • @Sunshine4
      @Sunshine4 Год назад +1

      GO DAWGS!!!! Me too =)

    • @bethpedone8771
      @bethpedone8771 Год назад +6

      I am surprised you’ve never heard of The Big Game!
      Then you must look up “THE PLAY” - it happened in the 1982. Pop-culture milestone for college football!

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 Год назад

      I'm a Georgian too but can't support making money off kids, possibly ruining them for life. Must we sacrifice our children to allow them to pursue their educational goals? The American dream is a nightmare! No longer proud to be associated with the crimes of my "representatives" or wealthy elites. They've corrupted education, medicine, law. Sad state of affairs for our youth 😢

  • @nyekomimi
    @nyekomimi Год назад +7

    I must say, it's rather comically dark to celebrate victims who died in a furnace with giant bonfire.

  • @angelachouinard4581
    @angelachouinard4581 Год назад +18

    I actually lived near Stanford and my brother went to Berkeley and I've never heard of this. Thanks for this, it was indeed fascinating horror.

  • @micheleshively8557
    @micheleshively8557 Год назад +28

    Wow even my Dad who seemed to know everything about baseball and football games back in his day never told me about this disaster! Scary and so sad! Ty FH 💕

    • @jaelzion
      @jaelzion Год назад

      My Dad never mentioned it to me either, despite being a huge football fan and the fact that I grew up in San Francisco. I'm just now learning about it.

  • @quantumfoam2843
    @quantumfoam2843 Год назад +33

    5:15 The earliest recorded depiction of a man doing a dab.

  • @AG-ng8gt
    @AG-ng8gt Год назад +13

    This channel is the only one for which I will sit and await the newest episode's release. No one else does it as well as FH

  • @HogMan2022
    @HogMan2022 Год назад +5

    I lived in the Bay Area for forty-five years and worked in San Francisco for thirty-five of them. This is the first I've heard of this tragedy. What a sad story!
    From a new subscriber, Thank you for posting this! 🙋👍

  • @vahgeuvje10
    @vahgeuvje10 Год назад +5

    The reason your one of my favorite RUclipsrs is you come up with accidents I’ve never would have learned about without your channel.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @Bealzbob
    @Bealzbob Год назад +8

    I agree with the judgements. Bring back personal accountability. And also, a 5-0 game with a late field goal? So one safety for practically the whole game 😂

  • @moohHa22
    @moohHa22 Год назад +17

    Fascinating Horror has the best delivery with this kinda content (in case I sound lacking compassion, I’ve only just started the video.)
    Love the vids and research you do, thanks for the hard work.

    • @craigdurso3005
      @craigdurso3005 Год назад +7

      We can all agree that what he covers is tragic in the very least ; that being said , yes , it’s his compelling delivery and and choice of words that keep me coming back ,I feel he’s giving advice that might save me one day

  • @LeafeonLive
    @LeafeonLive Год назад +4

    5:16 "I know it's imperative we rescue these guys sir, but I need to dab on the haters first."

  • @brandoncole5533
    @brandoncole5533 Год назад +10

    5:22 this was shown for too long for me but to acknowledge this guy dabbing

  • @garytaylor6961
    @garytaylor6961 Год назад +8

    I worked in a foundry with molten metal and the last place on earth you want to end up is in a furnace they are so dangerous, I really feel for those that died in such a painful way and the survivors with those burns that was always my fear working with furnaces.

  • @chillyourself5208
    @chillyourself5208 Год назад +12

    40 years ago in Grand Marais, Minn. A couple looking for UFO's died after getting stranded in their car. There is lots more to their story, but details are hard to find. Would be pretty fascinating to learn more.

  • @danielalexander8588
    @danielalexander8588 Год назад +14

    Fantastic content as always. I never miss an episode, every Tuesday! Great to remember disasters and victims that would otherwise be forgotten. Well done.

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Год назад +11

    You know its Tuesday when Fascinating Horror drops a video

    • @hybridShinx
      @hybridShinx Год назад

      Haha its tuesday innit ~!
      Yahah i chewed yah arm out !!

  • @meowedith
    @meowedith Год назад +16

    It's 5am and I'm still awake, stoked to be able to watch this video

  • @ebenezerkittoe9115
    @ebenezerkittoe9115 Год назад +9

    Here we are hearing about it 122 years later. May the dearly departed continue to rest peacefully

  • @t.michaelbodine4341
    @t.michaelbodine4341 Год назад +16

    Great episode! That would be an ugly way to die. I love your channel. \
    As a native Californian, I especially like the West Coast videos like one and the Saint Francis Dam collapse. Many locals don't even have any knowledge of these disasters. I've been to the site in this video and to the St. Francis Dam site (I still own a small chunk of the failed dam's concrete).
    If you haven't already, I'd love to see your take on the Mt. Saint Helens volcano eruption in Washington.

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Год назад

      Same here. Sometimes in small town museums, you'll find something. But small disasters in big cities get forgotten due to all the other history happening.

  • @CarlRottman25
    @CarlRottman25 Год назад +9

    Since we're on Sporting events, hopefully someday we get a video about the 1955 Le Man's disaster. Great, informative video!

    • @ghost.8836
      @ghost.8836 Год назад +1

      I also hope we get a video on that incident.

    • @josephjohnson448
      @josephjohnson448 Год назад

      That Le Man's disaster was gruesome

    • @PatriotCody
      @PatriotCody Год назад

      True but many channels have covered it.

  • @bobblebardsley
    @bobblebardsley Год назад +10

    Special mention for the use of stock photos and footage in this one, it must be very hard when there's little to no photography of the incident itself, and while they're probably not perfect, the 'similar to...' images still massively help to visualise the whole thing. Just wanted to express some appreciation for that rather than slapping a single static image on the whole video like some channels might do.

  • @janew2108
    @janew2108 Год назад +26

    The injuries were so beyond the crime. What a horrendous loss.

    • @drdrew3
      @drdrew3 Год назад +8

      What would have been the appropriate level of injury for the crime? I didn’t know there was a correlation

  • @RonDennisMum
    @RonDennisMum Год назад +9

    Brilliant as always, Kristian.
    (Really pleasing as I think I suggested this one in Dec last year...thank you for bringing it alive!)

  • @reddwarfer999
    @reddwarfer999 Год назад +11

    I'm very surprised to hear that the worst sporting disaster in the US is 'only' 23. Here in the UK we have had several since WW2 that were much worse than that.

    • @lgrismer6829
      @lgrismer6829 Год назад +6

      Part of that's just luck I'm sure, but another factor is that we never really had standing terraces in the US. Most of our stadiums were all-seater even back in those days (well, often bench seats, but seats). So it was easier to both separate and keep track of people which meant fewer crowd crushes.
      Also stadium violence in the US, while it exists (look up Bryan Stow), it is not on the scale of other parts of the world. For example, home and visiting fans are not separated. You just buy a ticket and walk in - you are allowed to support whichever team you want.

    • @rahowherox1177
      @rahowherox1177 Год назад

      ​​@@lgrismer6829es USA sports teams tend to be based on cities and regions, and not religion and class and political leanings like Europe

  • @namenamename390
    @namenamename390 Год назад +3

    I'm gonna be the one who says it: The man at 5:15 looks like he's dabbing and I don't know how to feel about that

  • @donmigueldecuenca
    @donmigueldecuenca Год назад +3

    I'm an avid fan of Cal football since the 1960s, and have attended many Big Games. This is the first time I've ever heard of this calamity.

  • @BasilKarampelas
    @BasilKarampelas Год назад +6

    I went to Stanford for college and business school and had never heard of this. Great job!

  • @GuukanKitsune
    @GuukanKitsune Год назад +4

    The workers at the glassworks were probably never able to eat cooked pork again without an attack of PTSD due to how much cooking human flesh supposedly smells like pork...

  • @JM-wx8ik
    @JM-wx8ik Год назад +6

    Thank you for this. I didn’t know about this but you do an important job of making us remember.

  • @horrortackleharry
    @horrortackleharry Год назад +7

    Organises big football game... pockets spilling with cash... forgets football. Sounds like the ideal politician and future President!

    • @ChaosCat79
      @ChaosCat79 Год назад +1

      Considering he was the president who's economic policies would pretty much lead to the Wall Street crash and the subsequent Great Depression that followed (which led to him losing the presidency to FDR as a result of his inadequate reaction to it ), this early example of his character is rather telling.

    • @horrortackleharry
      @horrortackleharry Год назад +2

      @@ChaosCat79 He no doubt believed that market forces would simply provide the football in good time, with no intervention required.

  • @wildcat1227
    @wildcat1227 Год назад +13

    So, I'm an emergency manager with too much disaster response experience, honestly. And I can confidently say that if I was working an event like this, and heard no one had thought to bring a ball, that would have been a massive red flag that the organizers were in way over their heads and I needed to do everything in my power to shut the event down. And if I wasn't able to get it shut down, my entire focus would shift from preventing a disaster to being ready to respond to the inevitable so I could at least try to mitigate loss of life.
    Sometimes it really is obvious from the outset that this was only ever going to end one way.

    • @auronius7332
      @auronius7332 Год назад +1

      Yeah, it seems pretty obvious the game was just a low-effort money-grab. Sorry to hear about the injured and dead.

    • @TheRealAsteria
      @TheRealAsteria Год назад +7

      Except the football was forgotten at the first game, not the game in this video. Plus this tragedy happened at the building next door where you wouldn’t have been contracted to work at all.

    • @wildcat1227
      @wildcat1227 Год назад +1

      @@TheRealAsteria My area of operation doesn't end at the stadium line. We have to handle traffic moving to and from events, protests outside the venue, etc. Given the workers couldn't contact police inside the stadium there's a chance we wouldn't have been aware of it but in present day that's doubtful. We monitor social media as part of tracking crowd movement so as soon as someone tweeted a pic of people on the roof it would have been pushed to Operations to go get them off the building.

    • @TheRealAsteria
      @TheRealAsteria Год назад +2

      @@wildcat1227 I’m actually a CSP so I fully understand the scope of your work and where it begins and ends

    • @wildcat1227
      @wildcat1227 Год назад

      @@TheRealAsteria Yeah? That's a breathtaking amount of arrogance right there.

  • @FM-hw8yv
    @FM-hw8yv Год назад +9

    I expected a crush, instead i got people melting and burning alive
    I thought of something terrible but got something even more horrible

  • @jakesanchez6621
    @jakesanchez6621 Год назад +3

    5:14 Remember, if people start falling through the roof of your factory, standard protocol is to dab on em.

  • @zippersocks
    @zippersocks Год назад +3

    Crazy and unheard of (to me). Thank you for sharing! This is why I love your channel and always recommending it when I have the chance.

  • @JJ-sx6de
    @JJ-sx6de Год назад +4

    This is why I don't like going to crowded areas

  • @davidstevensasidewayslook8831
    @davidstevensasidewayslook8831 Год назад +7

    very sad, these sort of things happen even today, a good friend of mines son (albeit 30 years ago) climbed up onto a buildings roof as a prank and fell through the skylight, he survived but broke his back and has been in a wheelchair ever since……. I remember doing similar things when I was 10/12+ and luckily survived the daredevil escapades…….. I'm now 74!

    • @peggypasson8794
      @peggypasson8794 Год назад

      It's amazing yet so dangerous it's hard to watch nowadays when my kids did the same crazy stuff I did .ride jet skis etc .

    • @davidstevensasidewayslook8831
      @davidstevensasidewayslook8831 Год назад +1

      @@peggypasson8794 its all about innate awareness of danger. As a youngster I got up to all a sorts of dangerous escapades BUT I was always aware of the danger I was in so never pushed it too far, as I could see what might happen. Some kids just have no inbuilt preservation sense. Like in this video, I would have quite happily climbed up on the roof but when I get there and found it well dodgy I would have retreated to somewhere a bit safer.

  • @patrickhamos2987
    @patrickhamos2987 Год назад +10

    this channel is well-rounded and all the content quite good. i like this channel

  • @countalucard4226
    @countalucard4226 Год назад +6

    The 1982 ending of Cal vs Stanford is one of the most famous in history. Look it up if you have never seen it.

  • @Polymathically
    @Polymathically Год назад +12

    I grew up in the Bay Area, but I've never heard of this disaster. I'll definitely have to read more about it!

    • @christystewart4567
      @christystewart4567 Год назад +1

      I did too and didn’t know about it either.
      It’s weird the things you don’t know about places you’ve lived in for a while and think you’re familiar with. Two off hand that I had never heard of. San Francisco had an outbreak of plague starting around 1901. It lasted for a few years then after they thought it was over the 1906 earthquake struck and another outbreak occurred in 1907 as rebuilding was going on. The other is the St. Francis dam collapse in 1928. This dam was north of Los Angeles. I’ve lived in the L.A. area for years and only heard about it a few years ago. Yet the path of the resulting flood I’ve driven through many times.

  • @yeso505
    @yeso505 Год назад +6

    At 5:05 you see a window with flames in the background. If you look at the bottom middle pane. There's literally a face in the dirty window. It's kind of creepy seeing the face as the narrator is telling the story of people falling and being burned.

  • @measlyfurball37
    @measlyfurball37 Год назад +2

    This one's a difficult one to hear about as a safety professional- the number one rule of safety is to never blame the victims. Obviously, this one challenges that ironclad rule. The only solutions I can think of to prevent this from happening would be to increase capacity of the stadium or increase security around the glassworks plant, but neither of these are easy solutions and the deficiencies in both were not at all to blame.

    • @PatriotCody
      @PatriotCody Год назад

      Sometimes victims are at fault, lets not forget the multiple deaths at Yellowstone and other hot springs where people ignore warning signs and go where they should not go, the multiple people who have fallen to their deaths taking selfies at the grand canyon. And hate to say it but extreme sportman who put their life in danger climbing mountains and cliffs, diving etc.

  • @stephenmoerlein8470
    @stephenmoerlein8470 Год назад +2

    I am quite familiar with The Big Game, but had never heard of this associated disaster before. Thanks for posting,

  • @melissamarsh2219
    @melissamarsh2219 Год назад +8

    I don’t understand why college football is so important in the US

    • @reachandler3655
      @reachandler3655 Год назад +5

      I don't understand why kicking a defenceless ball around a field is so important at all, regardless of who's playing.

    • @misterflibble6601
      @misterflibble6601 Год назад +1

      I'll say the same for football in

    • @sweetpeach3649
      @sweetpeach3649 Год назад

      @@misterflibble6601 Are you against movies and theater productions too?

  • @tateg.7530
    @tateg.7530 Год назад +1

    At 5:20 the guy dabbing while it's raining men made me LOL

  • @failatlife1
    @failatlife1 Год назад +2

    I know this is a serious video about a serious tragedy, but that man at 5:15 is *LITERALLY* dabbing.

  • @mikaelafox6106
    @mikaelafox6106 Год назад +6

    How horrible. The ignorance before, during, and after such a tragedy is staggering. To think that the pain those people went though is lost to time…that’s crazy. That one person suffered for three years? Poor guy. I wonder if he would’ve done any better with the medical advancements we have today.

    • @daffers2345
      @daffers2345 Год назад +2

      I was wondering the same thing - if maybe with advancements he could have lived a longer or at least BETTER life. I hate to think what he had to endure.

    • @mikaelafox6106
      @mikaelafox6106 Год назад +1

      @@daffers2345 Yes it’s very sad. In the end it doesn’t matter that he was up there. It was foolish, and it doesn’t mean he, or any of them, should’ve paid for it with their lives. So sorry for them.

    • @suziesharp5974
      @suziesharp5974 Год назад +1

      I imagine antibiotics would have been a godsend.

    • @mikaelafox6106
      @mikaelafox6106 Год назад +1

      @@suziesharp5974 Definitely could’ve helped. Skin transplants for the burns.

    • @suziesharp5974
      @suziesharp5974 Год назад +3

      @@mikaelafox6106 In an age before antibiotics I'd imagine many of the amputations that occurred did so because dead/infected tissue had to be cut away, they couldn't save it. Considering how prone burn victims are to infection it must have been a nightmare for patients, families, and doctors.

  • @seblastoise9332
    @seblastoise9332 Год назад +10

    I love your channel. Keep it up!

  • @harley8047
    @harley8047 Год назад +2

    We need that law to come back.
    "Oh, you were where you weren't supposed to be and got injured? Sounds like a you problem broham."
    Seriously, the guards tried at the least.

  • @anthonydivon5571
    @anthonydivon5571 Год назад +2

    A new Fascinating Horror upload is how I know it's Tuesday morning.

  • @guillermo3564
    @guillermo3564 Год назад +11

    When 400 people get on top of a building, oblivious to the inherent risk, it makes me wonder how humanity has managed to survive this long.

  • @Megalon-qc8pf
    @Megalon-qc8pf Год назад +3

    5:15- *YOOOO BRO, HE’S DOING THE DAB!*

  • @Pattilapeep
    @Pattilapeep Год назад +3

    Great work as always. Kids really have no conception of danger. I used to play with my friends on the railroad tracks--I really cringe now when I think of it. It was very dangerous. My mother would know because I would always tear the belts on my dresses doing that. Lucky to still be here.

  • @Liusila
    @Liusila Год назад +2

    5:15 a historic dab for all the “what could go wrong” logic behind a complete lack of health and safety measures at the time.

    • @maxputhoff1436
      @maxputhoff1436 Год назад

      That's Wilhelm Dabowicz, inventor of the dab. I'm surprised they left that fact out of the video.

  • @rchltrrs
    @rchltrrs Год назад +2

    This sounds awful and I don't envy the recovery for those who survived but honestly I understand why they weren't given compensation. The spectators bypassed gates and ignored workers to trespass on the roof.

  • @spaceemanspiff
    @spaceemanspiff Год назад +10

    5:15 how rude of this survivor to dab on his way out!

    • @Kaimax61
      @Kaimax61 Год назад

      factory worker lol

  • @fatfreddyscoat7564
    @fatfreddyscoat7564 Год назад +4

    Who else is here because reading “BIG GAME DISASTER” made you think it would be a story about people being eaten by lions, tigers and bears?

  • @AutismTakesOn
    @AutismTakesOn Год назад +2

    While it's horrible that this disaster happened, and that businesses both back then and today, I think, are typically the causes of disasters, THIS is a situation where I 100% agree that this business couldn't have done anything to prevent this tragedy, and it was truly beyond their control.
    You could argue that they could've made the roof a bit stronger in case of bad weather, or used fixed oil pipes instead of ones that could easily break, but that STILL doesn't excuse the victims from trespassing and being on the roof in the first place, which, roof collapse or no, is a crime of itself. Not to mention the fact that nobody thinks "what if a crowd of people sits on my roof"? What designer would even THINK of a scenario of something which wouldn't happen under normal circumstances? No matter what, these people had no business being on the roof in the first place, and, had they NOT been there, regardless whether or not the construction of the building was up to par, this disaster wouldn't have happened.
    It's like climbing over a zoo fence and getting upset that the animals in the enclosure attacked you. At the end of the day, whether or not the zookeeper did his job right is irrelevant, because you shouldn't have climbed over that fence to begin with.
    There are smart ways to save money. Climbing on top of a roof of a building and trespassing so you won't have to pay a ticket to watch a football game is NOT one of them.

  • @TrixiLovesYou
    @TrixiLovesYou Год назад +1

    Factory worker is taking a dab while his colleague shouts "I told you so" at 5:15.

  • @garybarnes4169
    @garybarnes4169 Год назад +3

    08:00 "They were not entitled to any compensation." - Well, yeah, play stupid games, get stupid prizes.

  • @melvinshine9841
    @melvinshine9841 Год назад +3

    A bunch people falling five stories through a roof onto a scalding furnace and hot oil sounds like something out of a Final Destination movie.
    Back in the early, early days, college football was far more dangerous than it is now. I can't remember when it was, but college football almost got banned when something like a dozen players died on the field or from injuries sustained on the field in a single year.

  • @HyenaDandy
    @HyenaDandy Месяц назад +1

    Dude at 5:16 took the moment to start dabbing. I didn't even know you could photobomb a drawing.

  • @peachsangria8704
    @peachsangria8704 Год назад +2

    3:09 corrugated iron, wooden beams, the phrase " it was designed to support its' own weight."
    I'm dreading the next few minutes of this video...

  • @Spills51
    @Spills51 Год назад +6

    "Hey, lets all get on the roof!"
    "Where?"
    "Right over there....above the giant hot furnace!"
    Darwin smiled that day lol

  • @joshgreen2366
    @joshgreen2366 Год назад +3

    The man dabbing at 5:16 while people are dying around him.

  • @denisesaunders1616
    @denisesaunders1616 Год назад

    I am a huge fan of fascinating horror and have been a subscriber for the last few years and I love to listen to them! That being said, there are a couple of the stories, this being one of them, that completely leaves me seething! "The deceased had no business being up there." What the hell kind of attitude is that? It wouldn't surprise me to find out a majority of the children who died falling through that roof actually worked in those factories and having died the way they did probably saved them from an agonizing death in the future from some sort of debilitating industrial cancer. I mean truly, nothing was done as a result of this disaster. Nothing positive happened. No charitable funds opened up in any victim's name, no extra safety precautions or a little warning sign or two in the right place was introduced, hell, they didn't even stop the game! It was all for nothing. Society learned nothing.
    And that, my friends, is how you know a great storyteller! They make you emotional, no matter what that emotion is. Well done, another great video! Bravo!