The Boston Molasses Disaster of 1919

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июн 2024
  • In 1914, the demand for molasses was at an all time high. As a result, Purity Distilling Company installed a holding tank fifty feet tall and ninety feet across at 529 Commercial Street near Keany Square in Boston. On an unseasonably warm day, January 15, 1919, the tank collapsed. The History Guy remembers the Boston Molasses Disaster of 1919.
    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As very few images of the actual event are available in the Public Domain, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
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    All events are portrayed in historical context and for educational purposes. No images or content are primarily intended to shock and disgust. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Non censuram.
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    Script by DDC
    #ushistory #thehistoryguy #Bostonmolassesdisaster

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @curtisstewart9594
    @curtisstewart9594 4 года назад +382

    I work on these above ground storage tanks. In fact, I am in the process of upgrading a original 1920 Chicago Bridge and Iron 117'-6" diameter tank for crude oil storage. It was moved to its present location in 1942 for oil storage in Gaines County Texas. By the next inspection/repair cycle this tank will be 110 years old. Pretty good for a riveted tank.
    The Boston disaster is believed to have been caused by overfilling with material heaver than the designed liquid. The tank could have safely sustained a load of liquid with a specific gravity of 1.0(water). Instead the specific gravity of liquid molasses of 1.4. That is 40% more than the tank was designed to hold. The operator had regularly overfilled the tank probably increasing the cause of failure. The rivet holes were cold punched which was the process of the day. This resulted in cold working of the edge. Due to rudimentary quality control when the steel plate was made it has always been suspected the point of failure was caused by an anomaly in the steel plate at the rivet hole and brittle fracture of the cold worked plate. The temperature changes and time if year points toward this. The failure in January 2, 1988 in Pennsylvania spilling 1 million gallons of diesel into the Monongahela shed light on this tanks suspected failure. The closed vent is now believed to be only a secondary contributor to the failure.
    These riveted tanks were built with a safety factor of 5 where mass and thickness were substituted for engineering knowledge. Today we have the luxury of poo pooing what happened then. But the definitive book on Above Ground Storage Tanks was not written until 1997. American Petroleum Society 12C and 650 were not published until after WW2 and the first riveted standard was published in 1936.
    Even today there is no such thing as a Above Ground Storage Tank engineer. Most come from mechanical or civil engineering disciplines.
    A truly fascinating but obscure subject in my field of endeavor.

    • @TreeTop1947
      @TreeTop1947 4 года назад +35

      I enjoyed reading your comment, Curtis. Thanks for posting it.
      Semper Fi, TreeTop

    • @equarg
      @equarg 4 года назад +24

      Curtis Stewart
      I live in Gaines County Texas! 😅
      Thanks for ensuring that tanks are made/ensuring they are safe.
      It’s amazing what past disasters were forgotten, and the lessons they taught us.
      People complain about “big government and regulations”.
      I tell them about this disaster, the Halifax disaster, the Coconut Grove disaster in Boston, and the forgotten turn of the century Iroqui theater fire.
      The Iroqui Fire occurred in a massive theater during a X-Mas performance. Was rated safe and fire proof. Even had asbestos curtains.
      But a fire was caused by a lamp, the place was over capacity, and the exists were blocked and locked to prevent people from sneaking in.
      Over 400 people, mostly women and children, died.
      The nation was so shocked theaters across the country were suddenly closed, inspections were done, and new regulations were made.
      A new invention you see on emergency exits, the Panic Bar was invented as a result.
      People can’t enter the building, but simple pressure on a metal bar would cause the door to open.
      Sadly, this only applied to theaters.
      It was not until the Coconut Grove on Boston did these rules about occupancy and proper fire exits get applied to restaurants and other public buildings.
      Over 300 died in that fire. The exits had been bricked up (mafia fears from owner) and the doors only opened in, not out. So the doors could not be pulled in by the panicking people trying to get out due to the “Crush” behind them from desperate people.
      Thick windows forced firefighters to watch people helplessly die right in front of them.
      It was so traumatizing that the city and nation rewrote the fire code. The city of Boston even banned the name “Coconut Grove” to ever be used.
      Look up “Triangle Coat Fire”, “The Station Fire” too. A news camera man was there and he caught on film the fire starting due to outdoor pyrotechnics being used inside.
      Dear God. You can see the ”Crush” of human bodies at the door, dying.
      So after I tell those stories, the people don’t complain about “government meddling” as much.
      Some regulations, like the fire code, are not written in ink. They are written in blood!

    • @curtisstewart9594
      @curtisstewart9594 4 года назад +17

      @@TreeTop1947 thanks for reading my little missive. The oldest I ever worked on was a 1897 Graver tank built for Standard Oil in East Chicago. Just east of the Whiting Refinery. Put a new bottom in and caulked all the rivets. This was in 1995. The tank remained in service until 2015 when it was took down and scrapped. I always felt good it got another 20 years of service. Just like the one I am on now. With any luck it will still be in service in 20 more years and I probably will be gone by then.

    • @MajorMalfunction
      @MajorMalfunction 4 года назад +12

      Regulations may be different in your part of the world, but here you're required to have bunding (raised earth dams all around the storage facility) which can contain _at least_ the volume of the largest tank. And can be isolated from sewer and stormwater systems. As well as being well away from commercial or residential areas.

    • @ryandavis7593
      @ryandavis7593 4 года назад +12

      Curtis Stewart
      This is exactly the way I feel about the forty to seventy five year old locomotives I work on. If I can make them last another twenty five years I have done well.

  • @manthony1956
    @manthony1956 4 года назад +510

    Over forty years ago I worked for a company that retailed Muskin and Doughboy above ground pools. And you always had people who just wanted to put them up in their backyards as quick as possible. When we put them up for customers, we always leveled the area, and provided a sand base under the liner. People always complained about the costs, and "that sand is killing my lawn.' "It's only water." Well, each gallon of water is 8.34 pounds, and your 30 ft diameter pool holds about 19,000 gallons. It's not neurosurgery to figure out that's a lots of force. Every cubic yard weighs about what the original Volkswagen Beetle did, so, when you see that water coming toward your home because you put your pool up incorrectly, imagine a VW Beetle coming towards your sliding glass doors at 35 mph...

    • @dennisammann9104
      @dennisammann9104 4 года назад +47

      I recall as a 6 year old kid, back in 1957 having so much fun in a 'Doughboy' above ground swimming pool at a friend's home. It seemed like a giant ocean to me. My first car was a 1967 VW Beetle that I bought used in 1972. Great fun in that pool, great car that I owned until 1979. Your comment had double the affect on my ability to image a 1967 Beetle coming at my friend's living room window, not far from that swimming pool! Great comment Mr. Manthony1956! A little sticky, but GREAT history story Mr. History Guy!

    • @manthony1956
      @manthony1956 4 года назад +11

      @@dennisammann9104 I owned my last Beetle in 1994. I owned five Beetles between 1974 and 1994, and a fastback. I can honestly same I am overly familiar with the Beetle and repairs. Still have my copy of "How to Repair your Volkswagen. For the Compleat Idiot.

    • @johnmcmickle5685
      @johnmcmickle5685 4 года назад +4

      I used to watch Doughboy take advertising photos at the plant located behind my office. they would have people out there on a cold day getting in and out of those pools for the photos. They had plant on pallets so they could move them from pool to pool for land scaping.
      I do not know what the original VW bug weighted but a Cubic yard of ware weights about 1686 pounds.

    • @wistals3deniks
      @wistals3deniks 4 года назад +7

      manthony1956 Imagine how much more easy this calculation would be without retard units.

    • @peterwright4647
      @peterwright4647 4 года назад +9

      A friends above ground pool failed and the rush of water pushed his garage wall in. Lots of force there once it starts moving!

  • @dougcapehart
    @dougcapehart 4 года назад +387

    As soon as he said the "construction to be overseen by Arthur P Jell, their financial advisor," I knew 90% of the story.

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII 4 года назад +54

      An accountant cutting costs? Whoever heard of such a thing?

    • @raydunakin
      @raydunakin 4 года назад +60

      @@PhilJonesIII Not just the cost-cutting, but the total lack of engineering knowledge.

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII 4 года назад +20

      @@raydunakin Absolutely! I've seen engineering companies relocate to other countries where safety regulations are either absent or weak. The result: No safety equipment (as in guards on moving parts). The same companies that boast about how much effort they put into protecting employees.

    • @willdejong7763
      @willdejong7763 4 года назад +20

      @Andy Peek To make matters worse, it's not just that profit rules, but short term profit. As an example, the money saved by rushing the 737 MAX's initial development and certification is dwarfed by the long term costs. But of course the managers and exectives have already collected their bonuses.

    • @frameshade
      @frameshade 4 года назад +2

      The tank held. Issues was with the closed pressure release valve.

  • @peterunnels3311
    @peterunnels3311 4 года назад +100

    And on hot days in Boston you can still smell the molasses coming from the streets and the buildings that were there at the time.

    • @timc4765
      @timc4765 Год назад +2

      Liar

    • @CheeZyNutZ
      @CheeZyNutZ 9 месяцев назад +2

      No you cant😂🤡

    • @PB_pancake
      @PB_pancake 3 месяца назад

      @@CheeZyNutZhave you actually been there?

    • @lanceinthepants
      @lanceinthepants 2 месяца назад

      cap

    • @bfaymous
      @bfaymous Месяц назад +1

      You could for a few years after the accident, but you can’t smell it now.

  • @davidurban4730
    @davidurban4730 4 года назад +266

    As a Civil engineer we learn about this case every so often in our Engineering Ethics seminars.

    • @evensgrey
      @evensgrey 4 года назад +13

      I suspect that you studied every incident the Ideas program that went over this disaster also covered in some class or seminar, such as the Citigroup Center non-disaster, the business with the road bridge in New York State that collapsed because some bureaucrat decided that replacing the rip-wrap around the pier bases wasn't important enough to spend money on (luckily with no loss of life because it had a properly engineered failure mode that alerted everyone well before it fell), or the collapse of the bridge in the lobby of the Kansas City Hyatt-Regency.

    • @Harshhaze
      @Harshhaze 4 года назад +31

      In almost every story I've read so far, it either includes a company cutting corners or ignoring other safety concerns
      On a lighter note, the London sewage system still has remnants of the original construction. The Engineer (Joseph Bazalgette) had calculated the dimensions needed for the sewage to service 1800's London, and then doubled it

    • @vtkruza4733
      @vtkruza4733 4 года назад

      I’m

    • @johnhenke6475
      @johnhenke6475 4 года назад +23

      @@Harshhaze I have seen the drainage systems they built for the creeks and rivers that run under London now. The brick work is amazing and still in beautiful condition. Nothing like building something the right way.

    • @lisahinton9682
      @lisahinton9682 4 года назад +2

      @@johnhenke6475
      John, how did you get to see it? I would love to see it if it's on RUclips.
      TIA.

  • @KansaiSamurai
    @KansaiSamurai 4 года назад +219

    The molasses moved down the street at 35mph. Now we know how fast molasses is in January!

    • @jonrolfson1686
      @jonrolfson1686 4 года назад +18

      There must have been some well prepared person standing nearby with a pot of precooked bacon, beans and onion at the ready.

    • @kencarp57
      @kencarp57 4 года назад +15

      @@jonrolfson1686 Well, it WAS Boston, so... :)

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 4 года назад +18

      I have read elsewhere that the clean up was complicated because the warm spell ended and all of the molasses froze and turned the streets and sidewalks into a glassy, slippery surface, you risked your back and neck trying to walk on it.

    • @n04t73
      @n04t73 4 года назад +13

      luckily police had just laid out a speed trap earlier, clocking the wave well over allowed limits for the sugary substance.

    • @b1laxson
      @b1laxson 4 года назад +9

      Perspective... human running speed is ~25 mph. Molasses can catch you!

  • @seanshea8596
    @seanshea8596 4 года назад +6

    My favorite little factoid from the reports of this event is that the Molasses Flood made everything around it sticky. But humans tracked the stickiness everywhere. Due to trains, Sticky foot prints were reported as far inland as Worcester MA 45 miles inland.

  • @everythingstemporary603
    @everythingstemporary603 3 года назад +51

    The tank is leaking!
    That's OK, we'll paint it brown.

    • @defective.6192
      @defective.6192 3 года назад

      @@bobrennan9841 Well this totally seems legit.

  • @Soundwave3591
    @Soundwave3591 4 года назад +92

    This event is very close to home for my family: my Great Grandfather was nearly a victim of the spill, had he not swapped shifts. The man he swapped with was killed.

    • @lsusmuggler
      @lsusmuggler 4 года назад +5

      Was your grandparent, his child, born yet?

    • @nickw7619
      @nickw7619 4 года назад +4

      Thats incredible

    • @bugzyhardrada3168
      @bugzyhardrada3168 4 года назад +5

      Yeah i can imagine that haunted you for a good chunk if your life

    • @Soundwave3591
      @Soundwave3591 4 года назад +7

      @@lsusmuggler I don't think he was, which makes it all the more poignant

    • @jimmyfortrue3741
      @jimmyfortrue3741 4 года назад +1

      @Soundwave3591 .... I heard some places around there still smell like molasses... Is that true?

  • @bo_392
    @bo_392 4 года назад +200

    i have important stuff to do, but a "Molasses Disaster" story must come first.

    • @jeffsweeney8785
      @jeffsweeney8785 3 года назад +5

      ...kind of slows things down a bit. hehehe

    • @IrishAnnie
      @IrishAnnie 3 года назад

      Bo And you’re the better for it!

  • @majorlee76251
    @majorlee76251 4 года назад +62

    Thanks, I asked for this one. I can remember as a kid my father telling me this. Ah the days of old Boston!.

    • @SeanFKennedy
      @SeanFKennedy 3 года назад +3

      Same with my dad. He says on hot days you can still smell the molasses. I'm not sure that is true but still sounds like a story dad's everywhere like to tell.

  • @valeriehyman9955
    @valeriehyman9955 4 года назад +8

    My grandfather owned a laundry business and was making deliveries and on that day his horse refused to go any further on their delivery route and returned to his stable. My mother was told this story by her father and it is in our family history book that my niece put together in 2008.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 4 года назад +154

    There was a TV show called "Engineering Disasters" on the History Channel -- you know, back when the History Channel actually covered *HISTORY,* and wasn't just another high-numbered cable channel with "reality" crap being broadcast 24/7. Anyway, on that show, *many* years ago now, they featured an episode about this disaster. So surprising how many things have to go wrong at the same time for a disaster like this to happen. Thanks for reminding us of this important historical event, History Guy!

    • @vinyltapelover
      @vinyltapelover 4 года назад +7

      LMacNeill
      Yep I hate the reality garbage also. Thanks for mentioning where you viewed the story. I couldn;t remember, when making an earlier comment. I forgot that it was replayed on the History Channel about 3 weeks ago. I haven't had a chance to view this video's version, yet, because I'm recording a daily radio broadcast from over the internet. I can't listen to one while the other is recording. Anyway, THC's version showed a map of movement of the molasses, of rum and slaves as part of the business and the purpose of molasses. Like many, I hadn't known until view the THC episode Now that it's here, I can refer this easily to others. Have a great day..

    • @LMacNeill
      @LMacNeill 4 года назад +4

      @@vinyltapelover Yeah, I like THG's unique perspective on things. He delved into some details that the History Channel show didn't. I always enjoy learning more facts about an event, when possible. This is definitely one of my favorite channels on RUclips.

    • @carebear8762
      @carebear8762 4 года назад +12

      Today's History Channel would focus on the possible "Aliens?!" connection and have a "how to swim in molasses" reenactment.

    • @sabrinatscha2554
      @sabrinatscha2554 3 года назад

      Are you talking about the Holocaust Channel?

    • @nicholashursh9594
      @nicholashursh9594 3 года назад +2

      I loved that show, Tales of the gun was another good one. Its a shame history Channel is what it is now but RUclips and podcasts have pretty much filled that gap.

  • @ralphhildreth6115
    @ralphhildreth6115 4 года назад +3

    Some would consider it a frivolous documentary, but the consequences that resulted in the incident changed the legal responsibilities of companies.
    Another great and well told video!

  • @sodoffbaldrick3038
    @sodoffbaldrick3038 4 года назад +20

    My grandmother was a young nurse in Boston, and had very recently been through the Influenza pandemic in the city, and then this. She had been a little girl in San Francisco's 1906 earthquake, and she said though on a much smaller scale, this reminded her in many ways of that horror. She made fabulous molasses cookies when I was a child, but I remember her always talking about this when she poured the molasses.

  • @pitsnipe5559
    @pitsnipe5559 4 года назад +168

    I remember reading about this in Reader’s Digest while in Jr. High School in the mid sixties. The story said that when the weather us just right you can still smell the molasses in The North End.

    • @DennisinMA
      @DennisinMA 4 года назад +47

      Ed Springer Yes you can. To this very day.

    • @ronfad1756
      @ronfad1756 4 года назад +56

      I have worked in the North End and been in a few old basements and yes you can still smell the molasses that soaked into the wood.

    • @raydunakin
      @raydunakin 4 года назад +7

      That's where I read about it too!

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf 4 года назад

      I read that same article but I had forgotten many of the details. I thought it happened in Texas.

    • @randyleiter
      @randyleiter 4 года назад +19

      Absolutely true! I remember a while back the city was doing some work in the park near there on a really hot summer day, it wasn’t to strong but you could smell it.

  • @GaldirEonai
    @GaldirEonai 4 года назад +75

    On a related note: There was also a great _beer_ flood in London a hundred years prior. A brewery's tanks burst, with 8 people killed (mostly from being crushed by the debris the tidal wave of booze was pushing in front of it).

    • @welltell.
      @welltell. 4 года назад +7

      (insert joke here) I thought the 8 people died from alcohol poisoning from drinking too much beer that was floating away.

    • @mike62mcmanus
      @mike62mcmanus 4 года назад +5

      @@welltell. The drunks were rolling in the streets?

    • @welltell.
      @welltell. 4 года назад

      @@mike62mcmanus Were the drunks rolling face down or face up? lol

    • @jefferyindorf699
      @jefferyindorf699 4 года назад +2

      All that beer wasted😢😭

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf 4 года назад +32

      Yes. When it washed into the Thames, many fish died of..........Cirrhosis of the River.
      I will show myself out.

  • @TheParamotorGuy
    @TheParamotorGuy 4 года назад +5

    I have known the story of the great molasses flood but I had no idea just how massive the storage tank was until I saw that photo of it. And to top it off, finding out that molasses is 40% more dense than water makes it a more respectable story.

  • @honodle7219
    @honodle7219 4 года назад +52

    Puts a whole new spin on "slow as molasses in January".

  • @vilstef6988
    @vilstef6988 4 года назад +24

    I've heard numerous accounts of this disaster, and it has to be one of the strangest human caused disasters anywhere or any time!

  • @ironmantravisfulton4058
    @ironmantravisfulton4058 4 года назад +12

    I knew a man who was a history professor from Boston. He said on hot days you could smell molasses in this area well into the 1980s and 90s

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf 4 года назад +1

      Many say you can STILL smell it.

  • @garryturgiss8551
    @garryturgiss8551 4 года назад +18

    Thanks for remembering that. My grandmother told me about it when I was little. She was from the area and remembered when it happened

  • @assessor1276
    @assessor1276 4 года назад +9

    The Boston molasses tank collapse was one of the first detailed analysis of a failure that involved brittle fracture of a metallic structure and it contributed to the development of the science of fracture mechanics. This is quite different from normal quasi-static structural analysis and it is a crucial technique in the design of aircraft, ships and other large metal structures.

  • @bobsofia68
    @bobsofia68 4 года назад +10

    Growing up in Massachusetts I would see snippets of info about the 'Molasses Disaster' throughout the years. One memorable piece was interviewing older folks who grew up in the area of the disaster. It was said on hot summer days some areas of the neighborhood effected smelled of molasses well into the 1970's.

  • @g3heathen209
    @g3heathen209 4 года назад +70

    Legend says to this day 100 years later, on a hot day the faint smell of molasses can still be dected in the area on hot days.

    • @toosiyabrandt8676
      @toosiyabrandt8676 3 года назад +2

      HI
      Yes! It would have permeated EVERYTHING! Shalom to us only in Christ Yeshua.

    • @edmundcarter2610
      @edmundcarter2610 3 года назад +8

      Absolutely that is a FACT and not just a local legend. I confirmed this personally when I was in Boston on three different occasions during the Summer months of 2009, 12 and 16. The smell is light to moderate but definitely was present.

    • @markmeyer6800
      @markmeyer6800 3 года назад

      Levi Langershank bruh right!

    • @jenny2245
      @jenny2245 3 года назад +6

      Apparently there were certain areas in Paris that dogs, cats, horses etc wouldn't voluntarily go, or couldn't be kept calm, for many decades after the revolution. They had been the locations of guillotines, & the animals could still smell the blood in the pavement. It's surprising how smells can linger in a place.

  • @wwar5237
    @wwar5237 4 года назад +24

    I read about this about 5 years ago. I love telling people about it, so many find it hard to believe.
    definitely needs to be remembered 🤘

  • @rhondahuggins9542
    @rhondahuggins9542 4 года назад +12

    I learned little history in school. It was dates and names...no context to my world it seemed. It was only as an adult and better resources that history began to be fascinating. Thank you History Guy for always providing perspective and context.💜

  • @Hiatus3309
    @Hiatus3309 5 месяцев назад +1

    Most sticky uncomfortable for OCD. Geeze, it's got to be worst, feeling most annoyed, longest sticky feeling that won't go away

  • @catherineyoung3889
    @catherineyoung3889 3 года назад +8

    "The end of an era when big business faced no government restriction on their activities, and no consequences". Actually, we'll call it the start of the temporary hiatus.... cuz it seems to me big business gets away with anything these days.

  • @stevenpressley5956
    @stevenpressley5956 4 года назад +3

    If you haven't already done it, please do the history of denim. I live in North Carolina near the old Cone Denim Mills. So much history here..

    • @dougjb7848
      @dougjb7848 4 года назад +1

      This right here.
      Why was “denim blue” so prevalent that it has its own Pantone ID (17-4021 for Faded Denim, 19-4118 for Dark Denim)
      How did the pockets get their shape?
      Why do women’s jeans have few or no pockets?
      Who / what led the change in social perception that blue jeans are for laborers, thugs and (maybe a stretch but don’t all good stories involve) pirates, to runway wear?

  • @The_Highlander001
    @The_Highlander001 4 года назад +36

    I live in Boston, and growing up, in the summer we could smell the Molasses. When they work on the streets of the North End they always encounter a layer of Molasses under the road, and sidewalk.

    • @DavidPowisDow
      @DavidPowisDow 4 года назад +5

      My family is from Boston and the ‘great molasses flood’ is a legend in my family over a hundred years later.

    • @momcat2223
      @momcat2223 4 года назад +3

      Came looking for this comment. Had heard this was true, but am glad to hear from an actual Bostonian that this isn't an urban legend.

    • @nevermorefrompast-qx5wb
      @nevermorefrompast-qx5wb 4 года назад +1

      @@momcat2223 tis true

  • @mrmike2119
    @mrmike2119 4 года назад +2

    Best report/explanation of this disaster I have ever heard. Thank you.

  • @johncopple6479
    @johncopple6479 4 года назад +20

    Love " The History Guy " !! I have watched many episodes. One of my favorites is about Sgt. Reckless USMC! Semper Fi.

    • @gus473
      @gus473 4 года назад +6

      That was a great episode and a favorite of mine, too! My dad, on a 70 mm recoilless rifle, served with Reckless in the First Marine Division!

  • @crazy8sdrums
    @crazy8sdrums 4 года назад +20

    This is just one example of how much more difficult life was just 100 years ago....and then you hear the kids of today crying about how hard they have it... Another reason why History deserves to be remembered!

    • @klatubaradanikto
      @klatubaradanikto 4 года назад +3

      I don't know, I grew up in the '70s & there was no building in town where I could lick molasses off the walls.

    • @edlowry1
      @edlowry1 4 года назад +2

      "Dad, Netflix is buffering...."

  • @alexbuss3377
    @alexbuss3377 4 года назад +6

    I appreciate all of the time and effort you put into these videos! We all do!

  • @l-l
    @l-l 4 года назад

    I've seen this disaster covered on RUclips multiple times, but as always you teach me something new and do an amazing in depth yet concise explanation of events.

  • @deadfreightwest5956
    @deadfreightwest5956 4 года назад +121

    Leaving a technical project to the hands of a financial advisor ... some things never change. When will we learn?

    • @rom65536
      @rom65536 4 года назад +28

      Come on, buddy - don't you know we need to de-regulate! All these little nit-picky, tree-hugging rules are strangling business!
      (/sarcasm)

    • @jokuvaan5175
      @jokuvaan5175 4 года назад +24

      We usually learn when enough people are killed to make people angry and demand change from the policy makers. But we have a bad habit of forgetting the history end up repeating it

    • @kateackerly6559
      @kateackerly6559 4 года назад +5

      No kidding that.🙄

    • @shawnr771
      @shawnr771 4 года назад +7

      I could say something political but I wont.
      You are however spot on.

    • @VideoCesar07
      @VideoCesar07 4 года назад +16

      @@rom65536 It's a shame that there is always a big tug of war that unfortunately politicians use for their own ends. You have the ones who use disasters like this to put in regulations that are way over the top and increase costs and red tape to the point where it really can become hard to innovate or get into a particular field. Then you have the other ones who remove all regulations and say that businesses are responsible and have the best interest of their customers and will never deliberately endanger them ( extra helping of sarcasm there ). A happy medium can be found but policy makers are not interested in compromise.

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 4 года назад +129

    On January 15 2019, 100 years after the disaster, a ceremony was held at the exact location where the molasses tank once stood. Its location was detected by radar which it was buried under the baseball field at Langone Park. The names of the victims of the Molasses Flood were read out loud by attendees standing on the site.
    Also, there is a popular urban legend in Boston that on very hot days in the North End neighborhood, you can still smell the molasses.

    • @dale3404
      @dale3404 4 года назад +5

      I knew this seemed familiar. I must have heard of this on the anniversary. Very interesting.

    • @michaelembreyii1083
      @michaelembreyii1083 4 года назад

      Dale Stadler /

    • @doctoraj001
      @doctoraj001 4 года назад +22

      It's not an 'urban legend'.
      Does the smell 'fill the air'? No, it certainly does not, but....there are many old cracks and crevices in older streets and sidewalks in that neighborhood where traces of molasses can still be found and on very hot summer days, if you are standing very near one of them, you can catch a whiff of molasses.

    • @aprilrichards762
      @aprilrichards762 4 года назад +12

      @@doctoraj001 my ex-gf worked near there and she could smell it on hot days.

    • @Michael_______
      @Michael_______ 4 года назад +1

      @@doctoraj001 interesting...

  • @blondbowler8776
    @blondbowler8776 3 года назад +2

    I never would have known about this without you. Thank you.

  • @linusowens2858
    @linusowens2858 4 года назад +1

    THIS is why I watch your channel! Another amazing video.

  • @chocolatefrenzieya
    @chocolatefrenzieya 4 года назад +84

    "Unidentified girl, about 12" ugh, the horror. :(

  • @ExilefromCrownHill
    @ExilefromCrownHill 4 года назад +29

    There is still one building standing that has the high-water mark, er molasses, stained on it, visible to the public. Thanks, THG, I hope it was my suggestion from many months ago that prompted you to do this well-researched presentation!

  • @moderndaywyattearp5792
    @moderndaywyattearp5792 3 года назад

    I remember reading about this in a book. It had no imagery of the event. And I appreciate the care and passion you have for the subject of history.

  • @joetemple533
    @joetemple533 4 года назад

    I asked you to do an episode on this several months ago as I could not find very many details on it. You sir, have done an outstanding presentation with many details and pictures. thank you very much.

  • @nickford17
    @nickford17 4 года назад +60

    I just noticed the "THG" flag can easily be misconstrued as "THC", I immediately thought The History Guy was a lot cooler than I had previously...

    • @primoaurelius
      @primoaurelius 4 года назад +1

      I thought the same thing.

    • @tz8785
      @tz8785 4 года назад +16

      Sidenote - An episode on the history of cannabis (including the lies leading to its prohibition) would be pretty awesome.

    • @quanbrooklynkid7776
      @quanbrooklynkid7776 4 года назад

      Haha

    • @nicklacerte7134
      @nicklacerte7134 4 года назад +2

      I like your old openings.

    • @davidcooke8005
      @davidcooke8005 4 года назад +2

      Dude, the History Guy is so cool you can store ice in his pockets.

  • @thefareplayer2254
    @thefareplayer2254 4 года назад +21

    As a Bostonian, I am honored that you covered this!

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 4 года назад

      In Boston it cover you.

  • @nickw7619
    @nickw7619 4 года назад

    As other history lovers have said I too had already heard of this story, but your research into finding the old newspaper clippings was amazing! Another great video from THG!

  • @shereygould9307
    @shereygould9307 4 года назад

    I lived 6 years in Boston back in the 80s (Southie and Dorchester) and learned more about this event in your 11 minutes than in all that time exploring around the area... thank you!

  • @hazelkagey6739
    @hazelkagey6739 4 года назад +5

    That was sooooo facinating! How much more convenient it would've been if it had just leaked into the Boston harbor. Who could've ever thought such a chain of events could happen? Rivets exploding, like bullets being fired!
    Makes you wonder if the fishing business was effected for a long time. What a mess.

    • @frankieknuckles9610
      @frankieknuckles9610 4 года назад +2

      Probably all the fish in the area would become diabetic.

    • @randyrick8019
      @randyrick8019 4 года назад +2

      The lobster from the bay were particularly fat and sweet the following year! lol

  • @thejudgmentalcat
    @thejudgmentalcat 4 года назад +94

    Headline "Kitten Survived" helped me get through this.

    • @SuperPhunThyme9
      @SuperPhunThyme9 4 года назад +1

      That would make you like 110 years old

    • @thejudgmentalcat
      @thejudgmentalcat 4 года назад +8

      @@SuperPhunThyme9 My, aren't we edgy

    • @DavidSmith-sb2ix
      @DavidSmith-sb2ix 4 года назад +9

      Years ago we had a fire that burned the upper floors of an old building in our downtown. There was a book store on the first floor and apartments above it. Several days after the fire the inspector found a cat hiding under an old heating radiator in a burned room, alive and in relatively good shape. I always thought that lucky cat used up a few of its nine live surviving that fire.

    • @sharonmullins1957
      @sharonmullins1957 4 года назад

      I caught that too!

    • @RC.41
      @RC.41 3 года назад +1

      Levi Langershank
      Smash your own head completely please. You won’t be missed by anyone.

  • @treybryant7863
    @treybryant7863 4 года назад +1

    I remember this exact story. I’ve been to Boston. Me and my family had to hike across the streets of Boston just to get to the former North End of Boston. There’s only a plaque to remember the Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919.

  • @mjc11a
    @mjc11a 4 года назад

    Well done Lance. Thanks for posting and stay safe!

  • @verdatum
    @verdatum 4 года назад +3

    When I first learned about this, I had nightmares for DAYS. I still don't let myself think about it in too much detail; it's just horrifying.

  • @rom65536
    @rom65536 4 года назад +108

    We had to study this in my Industrial Safety Management class. A ' Wave of Molasses" sounds funny...but good Lord, this event would be terrifying in person.
    Every time I hear some knucklehead complain about OSHA, safety regulations or environmental law, I think of this and the Triangle Shirt Waste Factory fire.

    • @nottmjas
      @nottmjas 4 года назад +27

      There was a rather obnoxious individual on a construction health and safety I once attended who considered the whole premise of H&S as a waste of time and money for companies, that those who got killed or hurt deserved it for not paying enough attention, and that he was treating the event as a jolly.
      One of other attendees shut him up by stating that the hardest thing he ever had to do in his life was finding the strength to knock on the door of one of his employee's house to inform his wife that she had just become a widow.

    • @RKrk-jj2li
      @RKrk-jj2li 4 года назад +3

      @@nottmjas that guy sounds like a real jerk!

    • @pitsnipe5559
      @pitsnipe5559 4 года назад +17

      When I was taking the class to become an OSHA Outreach instructor, the instructor of that class used a fire in a poultry plant where several people were killed because an exit was blocked as a case study. What made it hit home was when she revealed that one of the fatalities was her cousin.

    • @briangarrow448
      @briangarrow448 4 года назад +12

      @@nottmjas I've gone to more funerals than I should have because someone took the cheaper or quicker solution to a construction problem. Yes, we absolutely need health and safety regulations. Which is another reason to vote for candidates who support worker issues.

    • @evensgrey
      @evensgrey 4 года назад +4

      @@asbestosfibers1325 The most obvious problem with OSHA is the observation that there's an inflection point in the graph of the rate of industrial injuries in incidents when they came into force, and the rate of decline dropped to almost nothing. Businesses care about financial risk, like what comes from appropriate tort law for death and injury on the job. As one of the coal mining companies in the Province of Nova Scotia once said, "We can't afford to operate an unsafe mine."

  • @brianhubble19
    @brianhubble19 3 года назад

    Thank you once again for a terrific video! I totally LOVE how your references to modern times come in so tongue-in-cheek that many won't catch them! How sneaky! Keep them coming, my friend, because history DOES deserve to be remembered.

  • @nunyabusiness8538
    @nunyabusiness8538 3 года назад

    really appreciate the effort put into these videos. finding accurate information and anecdotes from historical events seems to get harder and harder. which is weird because we live in an age where it’s never been easier to access information

  • @kbjerke
    @kbjerke 4 года назад +5

    Wow. "Slower than molasses" holds a new meaning for me now. And respect. Thanks for the video!

  • @anthonyvandeist2857
    @anthonyvandeist2857 4 года назад +32

    And to this day a Bostonian will shudder when they hear someone say, "..like molasses in the middle of winter."

  • @carolynking9536
    @carolynking9536 3 года назад

    I visited the museum in Dallas, NC to read about this. I photographed the plaque with what you have reported on my phone. This is one of the most amazing stories I have ever heard. Thank you for airing this story!

  • @briannicholas2757
    @briannicholas2757 4 года назад

    History Guy, this is My favorite of your new introductory themes by far. A heroic and victorious tune.

  • @bruceperry6315
    @bruceperry6315 4 года назад +6

    My father told me about this disaster when I was a kid. It happened a year before he was born in 1920.

  • @robertpierce1981
    @robertpierce1981 4 года назад +40

    I cannot imagine drowning in molasses, the Horror

    • @rabbi120348
      @rabbi120348 4 года назад

      @Idiot Online Wondering Aloud Are you from Iowa? I've seen that acronym, but with "outside" instead of "online."

    • @Equiluxe1
      @Equiluxe1 4 года назад +2

      A sticky end indeed.

    • @e.wintertashlin2903
      @e.wintertashlin2903 4 года назад +2

      In the book “Dark Tide” about the disaster, the author recounts the struggle of the fireman who died. He was pinned by rubble but by tipping his head back all the way, could get clear to breath. Eventually his strength started to give out, and his head would dip into the molasses, only to jerk back out again gasping for air. Before rescue could arrive, and with his buddies begging him to hold on (they couldn’t reach him either) his face went into the molasses one last time and he drowned.

    • @stevedietrich8936
      @stevedietrich8936 4 года назад +2

      @@rabbi120348 and Wandering, not Wondering

    • @rabbi120348
      @rabbi120348 4 года назад +1

      @@stevedietrich8936 Yes, I just noticed that, and Around, not Aloud. But it's the same basic idea. 3 million people, 20 million pigs...

  • @billjohnson6300
    @billjohnson6300 3 года назад

    Thanks for doing this piece. I served in the US Coast Guard, base Boston from '76 to '78, just blocks from this historic site. Your thorough analysis and presentation went far and beyond anything I have read about this in the past. Great work History Guy!

  • @bobwilliams6228
    @bobwilliams6228 4 года назад

    Bless you sir for your channel. Your love of history shows in your research, your entertainment value in your presentations and your fondness for levity when appropriate.

  • @robertminard5191
    @robertminard5191 4 года назад +4

    I had suggested this subject to THG some time ago. I was glad to see it this morning. Some of the injuries were just horrific. Bones broken and smashed. People in body casts suspended in twisted traction. My grandmother said that for years, people could smell the molasses on a hot summer day.

  • @TheSEBfamily
    @TheSEBfamily 4 года назад +35

    On a hot day in the North End of Boston you can smell molasses.

    • @Eotarc
      @Eotarc 4 года назад +1

      Really?? I'm genuinely curious.

    • @yank-tc8bz
      @yank-tc8bz 4 года назад +9

      @@Eotarc Yes really I used to work in the area and when it's hot you can smell it.

  • @FuriousFlamingFuckFires
    @FuriousFlamingFuckFires 4 года назад

    I love you History Guy!!! ❤️❤️ History does indeed deserve to be remembered..

  • @dawnreneegmail
    @dawnreneegmail 4 года назад

    I recently learned this history bit on another channel but I wanted your spin on it. History not confined solely on battles is my cuppa tea. Really enjoy your story telling.

  • @FuncleChuck
    @FuncleChuck 4 года назад +26

    I’ve heard this story many times and been even more horrified by each retelling

  • @GardensGuitars
    @GardensGuitars 4 года назад +6

    This is one of the most interesting stories in history. I knew of this, but you really brought the history to life, thanks for sharing this!

  • @tomjustis7237
    @tomjustis7237 4 года назад

    I'm glad to see the higher-tech and varied openings for your presentations, because it means you are obviously getting more financial support, which also means you will be able to continue providing us with information regarding these lesser known but worthwhile snippets of forgotten history that no one else provides. Still, as a long time fan, I kind of miss the old, "I'm the History Guy. I have a degree in history and I love history, and if you love history too..." Ah, well. When I feel nostalgic, I can always go back and happily watch one of your older episodes. Give the History Cat a scratch behind the ear for me and keep up the good work.

  • @altair458
    @altair458 4 года назад +1

    Thank you. I was first made aware of this in a high school history class...I sure wish that you had been my history teacher. Keep up the good work, we love your channel.

  • @sf-jim8885
    @sf-jim8885 4 года назад +10

    I remember some years ago when somebody first told me about this and about how much property and lives were lost, I thought it was some sort of urban legend or perhaps even a hoax- - but after looking it up, I was fascinated by the story. A couple of years ago I saw a book about it on Amazon and I bought it. Some of the photos were absolutely amazing. I especially recall one in which entire train cars had been knocked off their tracks by the wall of molasses. The book went in to quite a bit of detail - - for those who were unfortunate enough to perish, it was a horrible way to die.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 4 года назад +4

    I worked as a journeyman boilermaker for years and we built tanks and pressure vessels. Thank goodness there are safely standards for tank building today.

  • @bbt305
    @bbt305 4 года назад

    Thank you for that bit of Boston history. Definitely learned something new this Monday morning! Appreciate you.

  • @mtdover
    @mtdover 4 года назад

    Thanks for the lesson. I'd never even heard of this event. One of the best channels on youtube ever

  • @HarrisonGoldfarb
    @HarrisonGoldfarb 4 года назад +3

    I love all the new intros!

  • @Cydonia2020
    @Cydonia2020 4 года назад +3

    This is one of my favorite historical stories. Granted, it is sad but there is also an interesting irony to it considering how liquor was made illegal a short time afterwards. Reports say that the streets would run brown after rain storms and the harbor reeked of molasses for months afterwards. Some people say even today in the right conditions you can smell a subtle hint of the syrup in the air

    • @lolee1234
      @lolee1234 Год назад

      There could be worse smells. The lambskin tanning processing plant was not far from our house when I was a child 🙃.

    • @Cydonia2020
      @Cydonia2020 Год назад

      @@lolee1234 There is a creosote factory in my town that when the wind blows from the right direction, you get a sickening smell of burnt shellac.

  • @squillz8310
    @squillz8310 4 года назад

    I remember hearing this story in school, and I'm so happy to get a video about it from you! Keep up the awesome work!

  • @katiekofemug
    @katiekofemug 3 месяца назад +1

    This is one I missed during my many binge watchings. Tasting History with Max Miller had an old video on Brown Bread and this disaster. I noticed THG vid recommended by RUclips so, of course, I HAD to come over, see and hear! Thank you for always reminding us of the relevant. Big Biz accountability is an ongoing struggle and it is indeed a disaster that such horrible things have to happen to even consider new regulations in legislative bodies, locally and nationally. These episodes you work so hard on, DOES demand history be remembered!

  • @Thresher
    @Thresher 4 года назад +12

    This is a really good one. I'd like to see deep dives into the Halifax and Texas City explosions. They were incredible industrial disasters that could have easily been avoided.

  • @tonymontgomery5827
    @tonymontgomery5827 4 года назад +12

    My 9 year old son reads a series of books titled "I survived". This is one of those stories.

    • @tn_bob5740
      @tn_bob5740 3 года назад +1

      He reads for enjoyment? Obviously something you taught him since our schools no longer seem interested in teaching or advocating the accumulation of facts and knowledge. You are to be commended.

    • @tonymontgomery5827
      @tonymontgomery5827 3 года назад

      @@tn_bob5740 thank you sir.
      In our home reading is the main form of entertainment indoors.
      Social media does not exist in his world yet.
      Outdoor activities are our primary focus.
      We live on the Oregon coast so there are many exciting things to do.

    • @Brie.s
      @Brie.s 3 года назад

      @@tn_bob5740 OK boomer

    • @tn_bob5740
      @tn_bob5740 3 года назад +1

      @@Brie.s, LOL! Couldn't come up with a real response, huh?

    • @Brie.s
      @Brie.s 3 года назад

      @@tn_bob5740 I didn't think it was really worth the effort in all honesty. I enjoy conciseness when I have the opportunity for it
      Also though, I think my 'reply' Was a 'response' lmao
      A word or phrase's usage, common or not, as a slang term or colloquialism doesn't detract from it's meaning or intent, and if it gets my point across, why not use it? :P

  • @geneva760
    @geneva760 3 года назад

    Excellent documentary - thank you. Have a nice and safe day all. CHEERS from AUSTRALIA.

  • @taunyaw2181
    @taunyaw2181 3 года назад

    I love your stories! Please keep them coming :). I listen and take notes to add to my commentary and stories as a Boston guide actually. So I liked hearing this one too!

  • @victorhoe2321
    @victorhoe2321 4 года назад +9

    We did a tour of Boston's heritage walk. We heard about the molasses disaster of 1919. Now I know the score. Thanks.

    • @michaelmcnally1242
      @michaelmcnally1242 4 года назад

      The place where it happened is very close to the Copps Hill Cemetery, which is just up the hill from the front of the Old North Church. We used to stay around there on family vacations, and now that area is an urban park. In other words, it's a 5 minute walk at most from the "red line" trail through the city.

  • @MrDoeboy356
    @MrDoeboy356 4 года назад +18

    I used to live nearby. On hot days you can still smell molasses in that area. There’s a park there now.

  • @missinglincoln
    @missinglincoln 4 года назад

    I knew this story, but yours is easily the best video I have seen about it. So, thank you!

  • @ronniewatkins
    @ronniewatkins 4 года назад +1

    Excellent as always!!

  • @froush9546
    @froush9546 4 года назад +5

    I love the new intro flag with music. I know of a part of Appalachian history that you might want to share. It involves the largest civil insurrection since the civil war. After the prosperous years of coal mining that had moved west to the Appalachians, it declined after WWI. The "Owners" passed their losses onto the miners, cutting wages and controlling them using a script, and evicting them from their company homes, gunning them down, etc...you know the deal. The miners finally took up arms and fought against this including the United States Army which dropped bombs on the miners during the conflict. One of the pilots was Billy Mitchell himself.

  • @andrewjames1366
    @andrewjames1366 4 года назад +28

    35 mph wave!
    That’s ironic, given the expression “slow as molasses in January”

    • @edsmith2562
      @edsmith2562 4 года назад +4

      Kinetic energy is a strange and evil mistress, at times.

    • @Mrcaffinebean
      @Mrcaffinebean 4 года назад +3

      I thought the same, never again will someone mention that phrase to me without hearing this story!

    • @haroldwilkes6608
      @haroldwilkes6608 3 года назад

      @@Mrcaffinebean Good because the phrase originated from this.

  • @PJCmashtun
    @PJCmashtun 4 года назад

    You used my topic suggestion!
    I grew up just outside Boston and heard about the event many times growing up, but never with this much detail. Thanks!

  • @Monster11B
    @Monster11B 4 года назад

    You have the most amazing stories to tell. I love them. Thank you

  • @Noahrama
    @Noahrama 3 года назад +5

    they painted it brown to hide leakage!~ :\ can you imagine the liability of doing that today?

  • @itsjustkevin6652
    @itsjustkevin6652 4 года назад +21

    The thoughts of drowning in molasses is terrifying ... Or drowning in general

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao 4 года назад +1

      At least they didn't have to torch the town to deal with the released masses…

    • @DavidSmith-sb2ix
      @DavidSmith-sb2ix 4 года назад +2

      @@koppadasao I always remember as a kid reading a comic book story where Donald Duck causes a huge pile of eggs to cover a town. That's what they did in the story I recall. At least people didn't get killed in comics then.

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao 4 года назад +1

      David Smith The story is called Omelet

    • @JulieWallis1963
      @JulieWallis1963 3 года назад +1

      kevin kidd my worst fear is burning or drowning. Awful way to die.

  • @enekuda05
    @enekuda05 4 года назад

    I've heard this story so many times on youtube.........
    But to be honest there is just SOMETHING about the way you present it.....I could watch those other ones maybe ones but I find the way you present the information so delightful that I could watch this multiple times.
    Keep doing the good work :) your easily in my top 10 favorite RUclips channels!

  • @robertreisner6119
    @robertreisner6119 4 года назад +1

    If I remember correctly in 1934 the late comedian W.C Feilds had his own molasses problem in his movie It's A Gift.Thank you for your wonderful podcasts, they are informative, entertaining and a joy to view. Please stay happy and healthy during this pandemic.

  • @hithere8753
    @hithere8753 4 года назад +7

    Ah peaches and gravy! Back in my day we made own molasses and tied a jar around our belt, which was the style at the time.

  • @Trev794
    @Trev794 4 года назад +4

    Another great moment in history. I have shown your channel to quite a few ppl now, I allways say if thg has covered the subject you want it will be a great educational and well done video. Could you please cover the great Canadian sniper of ww1 his tale is great and a legend not many know. Thanks history guy

  • @sprint48219
    @sprint48219 4 года назад

    I so enjoy watching these, keep up the good work !

  • @leftofyou
    @leftofyou 4 года назад +2

    I remember randomly coming across this incident in an old newspaper researching unrelated topics. It must have been a surreal day.