Last Podcast On The Left - Episode 628: The Great Molasses Flood of 1919 Part II - The Boston Molassacre
Episode Date: August 1, 2025The boys are back and things are heating up as we return to The Great Molasses Flood of 1919, this week diving into the thick of it and treading through the brutal devastation caused when 2.3 million ...gallons of molasses exploded from its faulty tank, flooding the streets of the north end of Boston, killing 21 people and injuring over 150 in a disater unlike anything heard of before. For Live Shows, Merch, and More Visit: www.LastPodcastOnTheLeft.comKevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of Last Podcast on the Left ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
there's no place to escape to this is the last hot task on the left
that's when the cannibalism started
who's that
I don't know how to do this episode without Hulk Hogan being here
when Hulk Hogan died my spiritual center of me I've been working
wow you really work
Yeah, man.
That's nice.
Yeah, I work without distraction.
I, fuck it.
I blare it all out, ma'am.
No, Hulk Hogan, he died.
Yeah, man, he's clean.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
He looked like molasses.
Also, Anne Burrell from Food Network, the female equivalent of Hulk Hogan,
turns out she committed suicide.
Yes.
Super sad.
It's very sad.
It's almost like you shouldn't start an episode with it.
Yeah, that's a really terrible thing to start the episode with it.
We could have just joked about Hulk Hogan.
He's a monster.
Elst stuff is way more important, it's way sadder.
You mean the nice food lady?
Was sad? I guess that's what you want to talk about?
Yeah.
She was super sad. She did in a weird way.
Yeah. Well, Hulk Hogan's heart exploded because it was the size of a pumpkin.
Yes.
And that was because it was filled with love.
Welcome to the last podcast on the left, ladies and gentlemen.
My name is Marcus Parks. I'm here with a death reporter, Henry Zabrowski.
Death reporter Henry Zabrowski.
that is both between
because this is the problem
I don't know if anybody else
I'm certain audience has like
one old friend text chain
that does eventually devolve
into just the
how we all find out somebody dies
right yeah that's all it is now
the old murder fist text chain
is just like who's it's like
they're first
always they beat TMZ sometimes
each time
I woke up to Holkogen being dead
like two hours before it broke
it was interesting how much like
I was unaffected
by it. I guess like if it's like a day
and a half, two days after Ozzy, like
I don't, I could care less. Yeah, who gives
his shit? He's a bad guy. The only thing I do
remember is that nothing will take back
that big bloated carcass
making love to Bubba the Love Sponge
Wife while he was absolutely filled
to the max brisket. I feel like a
fucking pig. I feel like a fucking pig.
And we have a man who
sometimes feels like a pig, sometimes not.
It's Ed Larson. That's right. I'm a squeal.
American.
Oh, yeah, I love that.
And today, we are here
with the Great Melasses Flood of
1919, Part 2,
and yes, we are
well aware that it's blackstrap molasses.
Yeah. Not backstrap
molasses. Yes. This podcast is
a weekly grind. Sometimes
a typo becomes another
typo, becomes another typo, and then
that becomes an entire bit.
And we made... Because that's the problem.
Yeah, we made an entire character out of backstrap
molasses and that's where you can't then backstrap out of the bit no when you've already committed
to it no I loved her yeah I miss her I wish she would come back she can't know where is she
she's different I invented her I saw her in my mind's eye and now she's gone she's dead she's been
replaced by black strap molasses see I feel like pretty much it sounds like a pimp from a Rudy
Raymore movie yeah black strap molasses is a much harder edged name oh yeah yeah no
definitely beats the fucking shit
out of anyone, especially
especially if you look like me.
He may be fat and he may be sweet,
but black strap molasses
motherfucking owns the street.
Yeah. Yeah, man.
You may hide, you may run for cover,
but black strap molasses is going to
drown your mug. Come on, that's funny.
Ain't no one sweeter, ain't no
one meaner than the man
with back teeters and a
pulverizing demeanor.
His name is backstrap molasses.
And he's going to slap all the asses.
That's amazing.
Thank you.
I took time with it.
You did say backstrap again.
Fuck it.
Cut it.
Now we have to cut it.
I miss her.
So when we last left the tale of the great molasses flood of 1919, the wheels of history were
continuing to turn.
And with each major event of the early 20th century, the molasses flood came that much closer
to becoming a North End nightmare made real.
After World War I and the Spanish flu,
the prohibition of alcohol in America
was up next in a list of historical events
that would push the molasses tank
towards its breaking point.
And in early 1919, the new law of prohibition
was right on the verge of being ratified
as the 18th Amendment.
Yes. You know what I like about the 18th Amendment
and the 21st Amendment?
It's a great way to remember it.
18, you're not allowed to drink anymore.
21, you could drink again.
Boom, done.
Yeah, never forget.
It's the only amendments I know.
Yes.
Did we lower it to 182 to die in the Army?
Did we lower it?
Did he used to be higher than 18?
I think it was always 18 to die in the Army.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure it was like 12 at one point.
Yeah.
Yeah, we went up and down on the drinking age, and then it became state by state.
And then once they started attaching, you know, highway revenues to drinking age,
that's when it all raised to 21.
Yeah.
I say 27 across the board.
Everything.
I'm strict as I get older.
Well, as a result of prohibition, the industrial alcohol manufacturers who owned the 50-foot-tall
molasses tank sitting atop Boston's North End, they were racing to manufacture as much grain
alcohol as possible, as fast as possible.
This was being done so they could sell the grain alcohol to other companies who would make
as much rum as possible, because there was going to be a one-year grace period between
the ratification of the 18th Amendment
and the actual beginning
of the Prohibition era. Alcohol would
still be legal in that one year
grace period. That was specifically put
in just so all these guys could like catch
up and get their stuff together for when
alcohol became illegal? It was
specifically put in to kind of get
America ready for it. Like you
like you couldn't just one day say like all right like
Monday alcohol's legal
Tuesday it's illegal. They gave
everyone a year to kind of get used to the idea.
They thought it would be better but instead all it did
was it gave a organized crime
a year to prepare.
Yeah, it's almost like it was done on purpose.
Yeah, almost.
Now, this industrial alcohol manufacturer,
USAIA, they were throwing their weight
into rum specifically
because even though their profits
were still astronomically high,
earnings had dropped following the end
of World War I and the beginning
of the Spanish flu epidemic.
USAIA were still set to make
just as much money as they had made
before World War I, but the ever-gaping
maw of capital meant that profits had to be on an upward trajectory at all times no matter
what. So any concerns people may have had about the safety of the North End molasses tank,
which included constant leaking, constant vibrating, and constant groaning, those concerns were
ignored, all so the tank could be filled to its maximum capacity of 2.3 million gallons
so USIA could make as much grain alcohol as possible before the prohibition deadline. Is this
A commentary on Joe Biden's campaign in 2024.
Is that what this is?
Is this a subtle dig at that man?
You know, it wasn't, but I'm glad that you, I'm glad that you saw it that way.
It's a constant leaking, vibrating, and groaning.
They're like, you need to do something.
No, that's fine.
We don't need to do anything.
Hunter, you got to get backstrap molasses out of your room.
You got to get a...
He's just been like, peddi.
That's how I learned to make crack cocaine.
Dad, did you know you could make crack out of molasses?
He was so cool talking about crack on that documentary.
He was talking about Hunter Biden knows crack.
It's nice to see.
Now, Arthur P.GEL, the man who'd rushed the construction of the tank in the first place
and had overseen its operation in the years afterward,
he'd given the tank only the most cursory of repairs
before the arrival of the biggest shipment of molasses that the tank had ever
Taken. Aside from the time that
Jell had the tank painted brown
to hide the molasses leaks, he'd
also hired a team in December
of 1918 to put a
fresh layer of culk on all
the streams, as if
colk alone could hold back
26 million pounds of molasses.
Cock alone can do nothing.
Takes a
entire team.
Two balls.
I thought to say four balls at one time.
One hard-ass taint.
But just a few days before the tremendous molasses shipment from Cuba was supposed to arrive,
it seems as if the anarchists that we mentioned in the last episode,
it seemed like they were finally going to make a play to take down the tank.
Or at least, that was what their public pronouncements proclaimed.
They're allowed to do PR releases as anarchists.
Everyone is.
I didn't know that they could get it together so quickly or so organized.
Oh, of course.
No, that's the thing.
They're very organized in destruction.
just after the destruction. They don't want to be
organized. I got a, or anarchism
was more explained to me over the last week
or so, and it's interesting. It's just everybody
seems to have a different definition of it.
Oh, of course. There are a million different
definite. There's anarchists. There's
anarcho pacifists. There's
a anarcho communists.
Anarcho dash
is the favorite subtext. I love
that. I love anarcho dash.
Being multiple types of
anarchy is anarchy.
It's wild. That's wild. I love this.
Well, on January 10th, 1919, Arthur P. Jell was contacted by the Boston police, who told Jell that a number of placards, threatening violence, had been tacked onto buildings near the tank.
The placards have been posted in response to congressional action made two months before that had toughened the already stringent Immigration Act by making it easier to deport anarchists specifically.
But really, the point of this was not to make it easier to deport anarchists, but easier to deport anarchists, but easier to deport.
to deport Italians, because Italians were the most hated immigrant group of the day,
and it just so happened that many anarchists in America were also Italian.
And it's not a perfect one-to-one comparison, but the anarchist Italian argument was sort of like
the 1919 version of the more recent fear-mongering about MS-13, where xenophobic dipshits
used a small sliver of an ethnic immigrant group to demonize an entire segment of our population.
Unfortunately, the American people usually buy into these arguments because Americans have a bad-hastard.
of gross overcorrection when they get scared and angry.
See our reactions to 9-11 and Pearl Harbor, as well as our current immigration policy for more examples.
Pearl Harbor was appropriate, but F.G.R. allowed it to happen.
You said Hiroshima and Nagasaki were appropriate?
The first four years were appropriate.
Maybe Iwo goddamn Jima.
Yeah, but I'm talking more about Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
And the fire bombing of the rest of the country.
bombing of Tokyo. That was even worse.
Killed far more people than the time
of bombs. But hey, we got microwaves.
And we got
Killion Murphy's fantastic performance.
So it's all worth it.
It's still, Oppenheimer
was good. I still say it didn't go hard enough.
This is my thing. 9-11 will finally
be worth it once we get one decent
9-11 movie. We've had some
great World War II movies.
You don't like any of them, huh?
Which one's good? I like the
airplane one. United 93?
Yeah, that one's all right.
Nah, propaganda.
Of course.
They're all propaganda.
Savant Private Ryan's also great.
And I almost joined the military because of it.
I'll watch it any time.
It did make my grandfather cry.
Even if Ryan made my grandfather cry.
I want to hear one from the building seven's perspective.
Oh, yeah.
Talk about someone who saw everything.
Fucking offed himself.
Fuck it.
Well, as a result of the Immigration Act of 1918,
the leader of the Italian anarchists
in Boston, Luigi Galliani, he'd received an order for deportation.
Luigi and his associates were considered the most dangerous foreign anarchists yet found
within this country, but legal bureaucracy had delayed Galliani's deportation, and he
thus remained free.
So, when notices threatening violence began showing up around the tank in the north end,
cops figure that those notices were probably posted by Luigi's men.
Address to, quote,
Man, it's funny how
History just keeps repeating itself
addressed to quote
The senile fossils ruling the United States
The main notice said
Do not think that only foreigners are anarchists
We are a great number right here at home
Deportation will not stop
A storm from reaching these shores
The storm is within
And very soon will leap
and a crush and annihilate to you
in a blood and a fire
you have shown
no pity to us none
we will do
and like a wise man shown
we will dynamite you
sign American and a kiss
you don't sound American
American
we're very
way I is a mediocrine
as anyone he owned
though
actually
and that's actually
one of the rare ones you can do
because your mother's
you are Italian
yes
again that's the last accent yeah italian it's that Jamaican because there's white
Jamaicans no canadian chit hanks
and other guy who had a stroke that came out with the pets I'll give you can say bumbleclot
how's about that boombo clot okay oh man what can I say
nothing he hasn't earned it yet now as we said last episode anarchists rightly believe
that pure capitalism and perpetual warfare were deeply intertwined by design, and the molasses
tank was by far the biggest symbol of both capitalism and warfare in the North End. As such,
Jell claimed to have taken the threats posted by the anarchists seriously. But Jell had laid off
most of his molasses guard after World War I officially ended on Armistice Day, November 11th,
1918. Why? Because he thought because the war ended overseas that he wouldn't have to worry about the
Well, because it was, he thought that he wouldn't have to worry about sabotage because the molasses was, of course, used to make industrial alcohol, which was used to make munitions, which were used in the war.
So he figured that if the war was over, then he wouldn't have to have as many guards out to protect the molasses.
All of these anarchists, though, are telling them they're angry with the jelly.
They're angry with the molasses.
They want to attack the molasses.
That's what Jell's hearing.
Unbelievable.
But while Jell did reconsider hiring his molasses guard back after the threatening notices,
Jell also took the shrinking value of post-war molasses into account.
So after crunching the numbers,
Jell declined to rehire his molasses guard,
which to me means one of two things.
Either Jell knew that the anarchists weren't going to actually blow up a tank
above an immigrant neighborhood,
that of course contradicts his later statements,
or he did believe that the anarchist could blow up the tank,
but he decided that saving money on security was worth more
in the lives of everyone
who lived in the shadow of the molasses.
Wow, so Joe was the anarchist himself.
Yes, he killed his own molasses.
But also, I bet sometime he's just looking at me,
he's like, it's molasses.
How could that hurt anybody?
You know, there's, hey, who did that molasses?
How could the poor molasses hurt anyone?
Listen, no one blames maple syrup
for what happened to the Native American.
No one blames people getting into pine,
bone art for the
destruction of the force
oh man
see it's crazy about it
is if he
he was doing it so why does he
care about it destroying one way but not the other
what do you mean like he
why does he care about the anarchist blowing it up
but not like it's just like blowing up
itself well that's the question is that
does he really care about the anarchist blowing
it up does he does he really think
that it is going to
at the end of the day the only thing that matters
to Arthur PGL is what's going to cost the least amount of money
and what's going to make him look best to his corporate masters
and what's going to bring him up the corporate ladder further.
So whatever is going to be best for profit
is going to be best for Arthur PGL,
and that drives every single decision he makes in his entire life.
So on January 12th, 1919, a Cuban ship called the Milliero
pulled into Boston's Harbor carrying 1.3 million gallons
of black strap molasses.
The plan was to pump 600,000 gallons into the North End tank in Boston and take the rest to USAA's other molasses facility in Brooklyn.
Oh, there's a Brooklyn molasses tank?
Yeah, no, there's a whole Brooklyn molasses facility.
Where is that at?
I think it was around the naval yards.
Oh, why they put it by the sailors.
They love molasses.
Oh, I don't know what sailors like.
You always like's dick and ass.
Yeah, there you go.
Now we're having fun.
And will molasses be a good lube?
No, I think, I think, no, terrible lute bottoms of all the, of all those traveled
men.
You're right, yeah, it's going to rip it out.
It's going to be like a Brazilian wax wild.
You know when Georgie has diarrhea?
Mm-hmm.
And get it all in the hairs.
Yeah, it's almost like you would jam it up your ass to protect yourself from having sex.
Yeah, it's called a stopper.
I got the most round, but dude, anybody?
Zine on the USS Luby
And everybody's looking
to plummet and that's why I
jam it up with some good old-fashioned weapons grade
Black strap
Black strapped
molasses
Now despite the freezing January
morning the molasses
ran smoothly from the ship to the north end
tank but there was good reason for that
I'm angry about the idea of just
guys just going to be like molasses
gotten smooth
yeah
and how's it going is pumping good
Yep, looking at it right now, real smooth.
There was actually one guy who gave testimony.
He's like, you know, molasses.
Melasus has a mind all of its own.
Sir, you're bad at your job.
It's in one place, sir.
Man never knows how molasses is going to behave
till you get the molasses to where molasses need to go.
You really should know.
Well, molasses holds heat extraordinarily well.
And since all that molasses had been in Cuba just a few days before,
it was still quite warm.
The molasses already in the North End tank, however, that was quite cold, because it had been
congealing in the Boston winter for weeks.
Now, when warm and cold molasses mix in these quantities, it creates a chemical reaction
in which microscopic yeast triggers a fermentation process that produces carbon dioxide.
If you haven't figured it out already, this chemical reaction is what it caused all that
vibrating and rumbling inside the tank over the years.
Now, the warm molasses, cold molasses chemical reaction usually wasn't a problem.
But after this particular shipment, the 50-foot-tall north-end tank was filled with 48 feet
and 9 inches of molasses.
I feel like you could give, you don't got to fill it to the very tippity top.
You don't have to, but that's the thing is that they wanted to make as much alcohol as possible.
So they did fill it to the very tibody top.
Yeah, and the guy filling it, there could have been a chickwatch and he wanted to impress her.
You'd be like, see how much, do what I can do?
Oh, my God, the molasses is so smooth.
Isn't it?
I didn't do anything about that, though.
That's just molasses.
Melasses is one of the most unpredictable substances in the whole world.
Oh, is it?
Yeah, go ahead and put your bottom against the tank there.
I have a little party.
I want you to see here this little hole in the molasses I made with my penis last week.
You can see the exact earth to this day.
Well, that meant that there was only three inches left in the tank.
That meant that the carbon dioxide gas didn't have anywhere to go.
So the newly created gas began to put constant pressure on the tank's steel walls.
And if you'll remember, the steel walls of the tank were 10% thinner than what was required to safely store and hold so much molasses.
I felt that way myself.
Yeah.
When he met a good old Lexington steel.
The original blackstrap molasses.
And so, when the millierro departed Boston, the tank was filled with 26 million pounds of molasses.
And as the millierro pushed off, the captain could hear a noise emanating from the tank that was loud enough to be heard all the way from his ship in Boston Harbor.
Oh, I'm full.
I'll never make it on the ballet
There was also just like less noise back then
It was a lot less noise
Yeah, so noises were new to them
Yeah
Now the tank would hold
Yeah, he never heard noises before
Oh man, there's a whole thing
Actually, there really is a whole thing about noises
And like, well, you know, how human beings
Just really like aren't built for this much noise
And it's really fucking with us.
How much noise we have to deal with nowadays.
Really?
But you like it.
Yeah, I like it.
Well, city people like it.
I like it.
Yeah, I like it.
But for some people, it actually drives them insane.
That's why you see so.
That's why white noise is, like, white noise, quote unquote, podcasts are like so much higher
rated than ours are.
Like, those get millions upon millions of hit because people, they're trying to actually
block out the incredible amounts of noise that we have to deal with every day.
I'll have to check it out.
I hate the silence.
Silence makes me upset.
Yeah, because you grew up in a city.
Yes.
Right from your blade.
Now, the tank would hold for three more days
while the fermentation process continually created more carbon dioxide.
But the pressure that was put on the tank's walls
finally reached the breaking point on January 15th, 1919.
Now, by all accounts, January 15th was a beautifully mild 40-degree day.
And for the residents of Boston's North End, it almost felt like an early spring.
It's time for me to get up real early and go out there and say something hateful.
I'm not going to let Providence take, I'm spot as the most racist town in the north.
But as city workers sat outside eating their lunches and teamsters drove their horses down commercial street delivering produce, beer, and leather goods, a terrifying sound echoed through the,
the neighborhood at 12.41 p.m.
Oh, no.
I'm so fooling.
I'm sorry, everybody.
I'm going to go.
Oh, I can't hold it anymore.
Oh, my God.
I'm so foolish.
I just like it.
That's the most terrifying noise I've ever heard.
What's noise?
Quite suddenly, a sound
Not unlike a machine gun.
Something like tach-t-t-t-t-t-t-t-t-t-tit-tit-t is heard by all present,
followed by a noise that was described as sounding as if it could come from a wounded beast.
Oh, God, no, I was supposed to get a mate this year.
I'm two-year-old wildebeest.
I can't hold it anymore.
What's noise?
Yeah, like a man.
All they know is talking and I know Hobbs,
God. What else is a noise?
What's coming out? What's happening
in the air? What's
that?
The Velasus tank is like a man
holding in diarrhea on a bus.
Also, this is a tip. That's how you sit
alone on a greyhound. You should make those
noises. The first noise
had been the tank's thousands of
rivets popping off, finally
forced outward by the carbon dioxide
gas, while the second noise
had been the steel plates tearing
away and grinding against each other as the molasses broke free.
And so, the people of the North End could only stare in utter disbelief as an enormous black wall
of thick liquid, 25 feet high, and 160 feet wide, came to destroy their neighborhood,
their families, and their lives.
And that was the morning, the big brown wave came for busting.
Big Eiffle that, Big Brown, it's working its way downtown.
Beans can't fix that.
Nope.
Nope.
Goodbye, Bruins.
Goodbye man who called me F word.
Here comes, the big brown.
Now, unlike an ocean wave whose momentum is concentrated in one direction,
the wall of molasses burst out in every direction at once.
In fact, it'd be more appropriate to call it the walls of molasses.
When the rivets popped, the tank's roof had fallen almost straight down.
And as it fell, it spewed the molasses in all directions,
creating four walls of viscous liquid that smashed their way through everything in their path.
That's fucking cool.
Truly, I'm rooting for the molasses.
Like right now, I'm on the molasses steam.
The molasses should be free.
We caged it.
See, while molasses is famously slow, the 2.3 million gallons of molasses here moved at a speed of 35 miles per hour.
And that's not even to mention the damage caused by the wreckage of the tank itself.
The steel walls turned into missiles, while the rivets that had popped out as a result of the gas, those were essentially steel bullets that shot in every direction, thousands of them.
In short order, the molasses
tore the houses in its path
into kindling, while other buildings
like the local firehouse were actually
lifted off of their foundations
and swept into the harbor.
What is even happening? It's the
fucking molasses.
Some guy, here's one who's like
Cowbunga.
Six up. See you guys
on the other side. And then he's just like
oh!
He's immediately scrunch.
Well, that's what we're going to see.
Fire hoses at him.
It's molasses
It's doing nothing
That's what we're going to see again and again
Is that that really was most people's reaction was
It's the fucking molasses
Holy shit
It's a building size tidal wave of molasses
It's my favorite
It's my favorite way to die
Obliterated by a super
funny catastrophe
Yeah
We could only hope
Well, even objects as large as freight cars were crushed under the molasses's weight,
while every living thing from men, women, and kids to horses, dogs, and rats,
all became ensnared in the now deadly goo.
But since the molasses was sticky, it picked up everything in its path.
Did you ever play Catamari Damasi?
It's like this old PS1 game where, like, you're this little tiny Japanese cute thing,
and you're pushing this ball.
The ball and it clicks things.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's like that.
Oh.
But real.
I thought it's like the Bob Dylan song.
Which one?
A rolling stone, but it's supposed to a rolling stone.
Well, that gathers no moss.
Exactly.
It'd be the opposite.
Fuck.
Well, the wave quickly became a wall of shrapnel and wreckage,
carrying debris, furniture, and even cars.
And these objects crushed, stabbed, or simply obliterated anyone and anything.
in its path, except for some of the stronger buildings.
But when the molasses wall hit those buildings, it would smash into building after building,
the wave just changed directions again and again until it finally subsided and settled into
a veritable molasses lake that was, in some places, chest deep.
Fuck.
A gungami.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
It is a gungami.
But thinking of it just for weeks, I hadn't come up with gungami.
Yeah, that's a great term.
Way to go.
Yeah, I'm about to do one.
You know, God, just like, you know, he's sitting there.
He's like, I try to think of anything.
Something innocent.
Something that could never hurt us.
Something that could never, ever be wrong.
The stay puffed marshmallow.
It's like the same thing.
Except you think of old grandma's molasses.
Yeah, it's all I thought about was shoefly pie
and the Amish man who sold to me, and I didn't know.
That would be the last thing that we ever saw.
No, that's just the destruction part of it.
Yeah, that's just like the, if there are no people there.
Yeah, the actual human stories of the Great Melasses Flood, they are, in a word, terrifying.
And each story shows a different perspective of how the flood maimed and killed not only the people of the North End, but the North End itself.
So, let's start with a testimony of a man named Martin Carty, who, before the flood,
was a boxing referee who specialized in Irish and Italian boxing matches.
Yeah, with the Irish ones, you've got to tell one and the others
had something about his mother.
With the Italian ones, you do the same thing.
So the Italian ones, actually, they get a little bit more angry if they're sister.
Oh, very much. Very much.
I saved that for the championship bout.
They got the gloves on so they can't use their guns.
That's what's so hard.
They can't comb their hair.
Clarity, he was actually having a great day.
He'd finally saved enough money to purchase a nice home outside of the North End after selling his portion of a night spot called the Pen and Pencil Club in advance of Prohibition.
Because he was given a year to prepare.
Exactly.
After a solid day's work, Clarity was taking a nap when he heard his sister scream that something awful had happened to the tank.
Oh, what do you mean?
Something awful happened to the tank?
What?
Somebody painted it brown again?
But that tells you that the people at the North End,
they were living in a constant state of worry about the molasses.
Because it was this giant shivering, constantly leaking, groaning,
just a, it's a, a disaster waiting to happen.
Yeah.
And they were watching it.
And they all knew it.
It's pretty fun.
Anyone who worked there was just like, you know, it's going to blow up one day.
Yeah, that's why I'm taking my paid time off.
Now.
Now, before Martin Clarity could even get up from his nap, he felt his entire bed overturned.
The molasses wave had broken through the walls of his home and overtaken Martin in a second.
What the fuck?
Yeah, which he said gave him the sensation of falling overboard and going underwater.
Liquid rushed into Martin's nose and mouth.
And he realized at that moment that, oh, fuck, I'm drowning in molasses.
can't be the way I go.
I'm not a pancake.
Martin said that he felt himself
slide downwards as though the
churn of the most violent river rapids
in existence were taking him under.
He began flailing, struggling
to lift his head above the flow
of molasses, but he eventually
used his powerful arms to
break the surface enough
to actually tread the molasses
as he rode the massive wave
that had taken him out of
his house and into the street.
Once the ride finally stopped,
Martin stood chest deep in molasses,
but wood and debris were pressing
against his back and neck.
Meanwhile, I looked over and saw
that his entire house had been
swept away and smashed
against an elevated railroad trestle.
So is insurance going to cover this?
Who'd think I'm up on my
molasses premium?
What's my
molasses deductible.
Uh, it's zero.
Uh, you're fucked.
Finally, Martin spotted a raft-like object floating on top of the molasses.
And after waiting towards it to get himself out of the goo, which clung to his clothes and hair like wet wool, he discovered that this raft was actually his own bed.
Oh.
Now, as Martin began calling for his family, he saw a thin hand protruding from the molasses, fighting his way through the quick sandlighting.
fighting his way through the quicksand-like substance while still on the bed,
Martin made it to the hand just in time to see his sister's head emerge from the black liquid.
Martin pulled her up onto the bed and wiped her eyes as she violently vomited molasses from her lungs.
But after she was safe, Martin left her to look for their mother and brother,
who would both, unfortunately, die as a result of the flood.
Now Martin's story is fucking harrowing, but it pales in comparison to what was witnessed and experienced by North End resident Giuseppe Ian Tosca.
Giuseppe was a father of six, and one of his children, Pasquale, was crouching behind the giant molasses tank when it failed on January 15th.
See, Pasquale and his friends, a pair of siblings named Antonio and Maria, they were some of the kids who regularly collected molasses from the leaking tank in Pale.
And Giuseppe and Tosca have been keeping an eye on the kids from his second floor kitchen window on that particular afternoon.
No, no, no.
See, we're all the same.
So, when the tank failed, Giuseppe could only watch as the dark wall of molasses consumed the children on its way towards destroying his own building.
And when the wave hit, Giuseppe's house trembled enough to throw him to the floor where Giuseppe hit his head and blacked out.
No, I cannot believe. This dessert. It ate him a baby.
My son
He made a candy
I really wish
It wasn't so funny
I can do an Italian accent
Yeah, you know, it's over a hundred years ago
Actually, it's not about the Italian accent
It's more about the dead children
Nah, fuck them
It's been a long time
Oh, I'm a baby
It turned into the rock a candy
Now the little girl, Maria,
She had been standing directly in the path of the wave, and she died almost immediately from exphyxiation.
A firefighter had later spotted her tangled hair swirling in the sea of standing molasses,
and he was therefore able to pull her body out of the liquid.
Maria's brother Antonio, however, had miraculously survived.
The wave threw him against a lamp post and cracked his skull,
but another firefighter had managed to catch Antonio before the child was swallowed by the molasses completely.
But, tragically for Giuseppe and Tosca, his son Pascuali, had completely disappeared.
Pascuali's body would not be found for another five days when rescuers pulled the battered corpse from behind a railroad freight car.
When you're talking about a molasses incident, battered takes on a different terms as well.
You know what I mean?
Everything's food now.
Breakfast terms.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it was flat as a pancake.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
You know, I'm trying to paint a picture here.
From what rescuers could surmise, the wave had picked up the freight car which smashed into Pasquale,
and the wave carried them both 50 feet before the freight car hit a wall.
Once the car had crushed Pasquale into the wall, his arms, legs, pelvis, and chest had all been broken,
and his face had been disfigured beyond all recognition.
In the end, the only way to identify him was by the red sweater he'd been wearing that day,
which, as far as Pasquale had been concerned, was supposed to be just another afternoon collecting free molasses
until a U.S. I.A. worker chased him away.
Damn. It's all about that molasses, man.
It is?
Yeah.
God damn.
Yeah.
Just these kids, man.
Caz addicted.
Now, Pasquale, Ian Tosca, was not the only person who'd been carried away by the molasses.
When the tank failed, a freight clerk named Walter Marathieu was working under a covered platform on the commercial street wharf.
Walter heard a loud rumbling as he was communicating with a fellow laborer, a deaf man who couldn't speak.
And he was fine.
What do you mean he was fine?
He was nervous at all.
He was because just as a shadow fell on the deaf man's face.
I would say the deaf man.
The deaf man's just happily working?
No idea.
No, he was not happily working.
They were having a conversation.
The deaf man was the one who saw the wave coming.
That's hard, because how do you mean it's so hard to spell out molasses quickly?
Well, actually, he couldn't.
All he did was he was able, he pointed and he just screamed.
I mean, he couldn't really, it was just sort of a, they said that this painful screech of fear came from him.
And Walter almost instantly found himself in the middle of the black muck.
And he squeezed his eyes as he prepared to die.
The molasses, however, had carried Walter and pimped.
pinned him against the wall of the freight shed.
He used three inches above the floor, and around him was a wall of debris, a freight car, a
fucking automobile.
It had even, a horse, a whole horse had been swept into the freight car with him, was freaking
out and struggling into the molasses.
This is all in the trailer.
Yeah, this is in the trailer.
Better than half a horse, by the way.
Well, yeah.
Because that's disgusting.
Somebody's going to ruin all this molasses.
But as the molasses kept flowing,
more debris crushed Walter against the wall, and he continuously wiped the quickly hardening
molasses from his eyes. The debris began to move. Walter ended up being one of the lucky ones
because the co-worker who'd seen the way first, he was able to remove enough debris to save
Walter's life. Now, the great molasses flood was not just a danger to the people who lived
and worked in the north end. The Boston elevated train actually ran right through the north end.
January 15th, this train was filled with midday shoppers and workers.
Now, the molasses tank had been built right next to the elevated track, and the tank burst
as the train was passing by going around 20 miles an hour.
So the train's brakeman was able to see the black mass of molasses pushing towards the
track as the sound of tearing steel filled his ears. The sound the brakeman heard was
the overhead train trestle buckling, and the train began tipping off of the track as a result.
Whoa, it's like a king-con ride!
But the train rounded the bend seconds before the weight of the molasses and the missile-like tank wreckage fully destroyed the elevated trestles.
The train therefore stopped just three car lengths beyond the damaged track, but had the train arrived seconds later, it would have likely...
plunged directly into
the sea of molasses below
possibly killing everyone
on board. I mean the death
count would have tripled. Wow.
This is like a scene from a Spider-Man
comic book. No, very much so, yeah.
Like the idea of like, there's nobody there
to help him. Nope. There was a Spider-Man.
Well, actually, this guy's like a little bit
of a Spider-Man. Ooh. He like, check
that this is amazing. Because when it came to
the elevated train tracks, the danger didn't
pass just because that particular
train had escaped the molasses.
trains run on a schedule
oh yeah and there's another one coming
right behind
the train's brakeman he took a second to survey the damage
that the molasses had caused in just
a few short moments he saw
there's essentially nothing left
of the waterfront the buildings are all
flattened or swept away every
square inch was covered in molasses
and that's when the brakeman realized
holy fuck there's another train
coming up right behind me
Herk, her, her, her, her.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, yeah, definitely.
They can all see a company.
He's like, no, no, come downtown.
Downtown's all breakfast.
They can't come downtown.
It's nothing but sweet and savory.
You know if the next train came without being warned,
it's just going to plunge right down into the molasses.
And everyone on board, it's either going to die from the impact
or they're going to drown in the molasses.
So a section of the elevated track is just gone.
Gone.
completely gone.
I'm surprised the other one
was able to stay up there.
It did.
I mean, they were three
car links ahead.
So I guess they just
let's get the fuck out of here.
But the brakeman
knew that the next train was coming.
So he jumped out of his train
and crawled along
the twisted trestle
about two stories high
through the track
that the molasses had destroyed.
And once he got to the other side,
he sprinted down the track
to meet the next train.
And after the next train was in sight,
he stopped.
stood in the center of the track, flailing his arms,
yelling for the train to stop,
even though three full cars were bearing down upon him.
But thankfully, the train slowed to a stop,
and the first thing the brakeman said to the engineer was,
and this is a direct quote,
The goddamn molasses tank burst.
Fuck!
Exactly.
The goddamn...
The goddamn molasses tank burst.
That goddamn gel's a cheap piece of shit.
I knew this was going to fucking...
happened? Do you mean to tell me I'm off shift?
But that tells you
something else. That tells you something that these
these guys, these engineers,
the breakmen, the guys that went by that tank
every day. They talked about
it. Like, where's going to be a day
that that thing's going to fucking explode?
Yeah. And it finally fucking did.
Now as the... God, it must
be nice to be right, though. You know, I mean,
of course, all the bad... On a certain level.
I told you so, is so strong
and so powerful that that can really
carry you for weeks. I think the
I told you so, fuel the
brakeman to go up and climb
two stories up, because that's the only thing
that really motivates you.
Yeah. Oh, mumbling the hole in the hallways.
God damn, got to feel it.
It's fucking ass-lasses.
Fuck, hanged.
He must kill the goddamn whole neighborhood.
Leaking covered in shit.
Everybody's getting the free molasses
watching these Italian kids covered in soap.
Now, as the
brakeman sat on the tracks,
he looked down to see that fire trucks
and horse-drawn medical vehicles
were already approaching the North End.
Police, firefighters, doctors, and nurses
quickly arrived from the nearby Haymarket Relief Station
to render what help they could,
but what they found was a nasty scene.
As one reporter put it, quote,
Here and there struggled a form,
whether it was animal or human being,
it was impossible to tell.
Only an upheaval, a thrashing about
and the sticky mass showed where any life was.
Horses died like so many flies on stage,
sticky fly paper. The more they
struggled, the deeper in the mess they were
ensnared. Human beings, men
and women, suffered likewise.
Your Dan Carlin's
getting real good. Thanks.
Unfortunately, there wasn't anything that anyone
could do for the horses.
Nay.
At that point, you just
unfortunately got to spray him with bullets.
And at that point, you should
just take the joy in that because you really never
get to shoot a bunch of horses at once with
machine guns.
Man, imagine how sticky it would be to make the horses into glue and molasses.
Whoa.
Horses' insides are stickier than the outside.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think at this point in time, horses did get hurt in urban environment so often that I
think policemen had to be prepared and trained.
You're going to have to shoot a horse in the head like once a week.
Oh, yeah.
And imagine at that point, they're super used to it.
Yeah, they're used to it.
Those cobblestones, they're far apart sometimes.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And then one horse runs in the next horse.
the horse breaks a leg, you've got to shoot the horse in the head.
And in those first moments,
survivors still trapped in the molasses
reported that they heard scattered gunshots,
which they later learned
were the sounds of police putting trapped animals
out of their misery.
God, that's just fucking...
You hear a horse freaking out and then boom!
Boom! God. It's either the worst day
of work, but if you're a psychopath, like,
finally. It's just nice I can finally
bring my hobby to the job.
Just one guy's like,
This is just like a dream I had.
Wandering through molasses, shooting horses in the hand.
I better go get more bullets.
Finally.
You know, would it be okay if I smothered some?
Yes.
Yes, anything new, Brian.
Anything you like.
Well, rescuers got to work as soon as possible,
trying to save as many people as they could
in the hours, days, and even weeks
following the great molasses flood of 1919.
Now, one of the people who came to the rescue of the survivors was Dr. George McGrath, who arrived almost an hour after the tank burst.
Dr. McGrath had been performing an autopsy at a nearby mortuary, but when he got word of the flood, he pulled on his hip-high rubber fishing boots and drove to the scene with his assistant.
So up this corpse.
It's time for us to go and check out more corpses.
Yay, yay!
Let's get in the corpsemobile.
Let me ask you something.
You ever want a sleeping bag that looked just like a horse?
I got one for you.
Let me ask you some else.
Have you ever wanted to be with a corpse that smelled and tasted like taffy?
Come on down to Boston.
Excellent.
Well, like everyone else, Dr. McGrath found that the entire waterfront
had been completely leveled and swamped by the thick molasses.
God damn, I knew.
I knew it would be molasses.
Incredibly, the molasses was still knee-deep when Dr. McGrath arrived an hour after the disaster.
Because this happened, like, this was all pretty much on the waterfront.
So it's not like the molasses didn't have anywhere to go.
There was just so much molasses.
Yeah, is it 42 million?
Is it 42 million gallons or 48 million gallons?
No, 2.3 million gallons, I think like 38 feet.
Yeah, 48 feet.
And I think like 20 millions of pounds.
But, yeah, 2.3 million gallons of molasses.
And what?
It just ended up in the river?
The sea, actually.
Yeah, well, it settled first.
A lot of ended up in the sea.
Actually, a lot of people...
Believe it's still out there to this day.
Don't go in the water.
Don't go in the water.
The molasses still seeks its vengeance.
Well, how a lot of people ended up getting hurt and almost dying, and some of them actually
did end up dying this way, is the molasses swept some people into the sea.
And they fell into the water.
It's January in Boston pneumonia.
And, yeah, a couple people did die from that.
And a couple of people that took them, like, weeks to recover from it.
How trippy as fuck!
That must have been for a fish.
Yeah.
Don't even know what molasses is.
Has no form of contest.
What the fuck?
It's molasses.
You're like, they just learned it.
They were like, what the fun?
Another, like, you know, or a guy, a frog has to come and be like, that's called molasses.
These fuckers put it on their food
And now it's killing all of us
It's like, my God
Someone get me a cigarette
Yeah
I've always wanted to smoke
Hello my baby
Well Dr. McGrath said that he saw
Several people pulled from the molasses
He later remembered that their bodies
looked as if they were covered
In heavy oil skins
Their eyes, ears, mouths, and noses
were filled with molasses
And people could only be identified
after their bodies were washed with sodium bicarbonate and hot water.
Like seagulls!
Yes!
Eventually, Dr. McGrath was dispatched to the house of the aforementioned boxing referee, Martin Clowarty,
where Dr. McGrath discovered what had happened to Martin's mother.
The 65-year-old woman was found dead once the molasses subsided,
and her autopsy revealed that the weight of the molasses itself had crushed both her ribcage and her chest.
I'm going to go ahead and say the autopsy probably wasn't necessary.
Because you could just kind of push on it.
Honestly, the reason why, the only reason why I wanted to do it,
I wanted to see how thin it got her.
That was just interesting.
Even though it was quite obvious that the tank had simply failed because of poor construction,
both the government and representatives from the USAA were very quick to place the blame elsewhere,
almost as if it had been their plan all along if something were to go wrong with the molasses.
They had an entire year to plan.
Yeah.
And that's what this all was about.
Well, Dr. McGregor, not just an entire year.
I mean, all this anarchist shit, all this Italian shit, like, they had just, they had this in their back pocket.
This is a sweetener-based Pearl Harbor.
This was allowed to happen for other reasons.
And I think it was-FDR didn't allow Pearl Harbor to happen.
You keep perpetuating this myth.
It's not true.
FDR stood up, looked out that window, saw the planes coming in, and he sat back down.
Shut the blinds.
silently.
You're going off a Dan
Aykroyd's portrayal of FDR
in the terrible movie Pearl Harbor.
He stood up, did a triple on me,
saw the planes coming,
ordered some sushi because it just
got invented. A couple jumping jacks.
That's it.
Sap-a. Practice the jitterbug
that he was going to do later on with J. Edgar Hoover's
father. And then
allowed a tap.
All because his wife was
gay. Yep.
this is all about maple syrup
this is all about destroying the molasses
well this press
conference this happened
while dr mcgrath
and all the rest were still trying to find
survivors fucking us iA and the boston city
they got on the business of explaining this shit away
quickly boston's mayor was holding a press conference
alongside u s ia's attorney
the mayor did use the word accident when talking about
the collapse of the tank but he also
made sure to use the word explosion.
Building off that, USIA's attorney blamed so-called outside influences for the tank's collapse,
explicitly stating that it was most likely North End anarchists who planted the bomb to advance
their quote-unquote radical agenda.
As it happens to this day, the attorney straight up lied and said that USIA knew beyond
question that the tank was not weak.
Exact opposite of what you think.
It's the exact opposite of that for certain, Mr. Man.
Yeah.
He said an examination was made of the structure.
Not only was it made, but I made it a few minutes before the collapse.
Which means you're bad at your job.
If you fucking looked at it minutes before it collapsed.
It would have been fine if the anarchist hadn't put dynamite in there.
That doesn't make any sense.
It does make sense because if the anarchist, you can't protect against dynamite,
and he's saying, we inspected a few minutes before it collapsed,
and everything was totally fine, so it had to be dynamite that collapsed it.
He was leaking at a total normal rate, and that's what allowed it to release some of the pressure that made it completely safe.
And speaking of that, he also said, there's no fermentation of the molasses.
That doesn't fucking, that doesn't happen.
That's an old Native American lie.
They say that to make us scared.
Scared of the molasses.
There's nothing to me scared of molasses.
This can't hurt us.
Look at it.
It's a condiment.
And he finally said that there was absolutely no evidence of structural weakness at all.
Every point, of course, was utter horse shit.
And USIA knew it because people have been telling them for years,
something's wrong with the molasses tank.
I remember not two weeks earlier from this day that you all were complaining about how much shit the horses were leaving in the streets.
so we did a fantastic job
in our 1919 great molasses horse culling
nothing of that
does it smell like horse shit anymore no
what does it smell like sweet sweet
black strap molasses
something delicious
isn't that nice
but while USIA was trying to pin
their massive greed induced fuck up
on a scapegoat with the help of the local
government again those anarchists do make
some good points the people of the
North End were scrambling to save the victims.
Survivors pulled from the molasses were taken to a relief station half a mile away
where nurses removed the sticky substance from the patient's breathing passages
and cut off their molasses soaked clothing.
The molasses so thoroughly soaked these people that nurses couldn't even identify gender
until they saw a patient's genitals.
Hell yeah. That makes you laugh.
I just want to know particularly why that's funny.
There's just something about, like, the idea of, like, how you figure it out or, like, I don't even know what the funny part about it is.
It's more just, like, the idea of, like, stick it, like, you know, you know where the genitals and the general area are going to be, right?
And then you just stick your finger in it and then push, do you feel the tip?
Yeah, it's like your push till it goes inside of someone.
Yeah, you're, like, dig it in there, like a little weasel till you find a penis or a pussy.
Yeah, and then what do you deal with all the, who knows what they identify us?
I think they sprayed him off and then said like, it's a man.
And they put him out, they sprayed him.
It's a woman.
You know, and then...
Ignorant.
Man, I've always wanted to spray someone down.
You can.
Thank you.
Have you ever been sprayed down?
No, I haven't been sprayed down.
I've been searched, though.
Come to the backyard, I'll do it.
Well, I don't want to be.
Actually, I have been sprayed down.
Yeah.
I fell in a pile of ants and my dad made me get naked in the front yard and you sprayed me down in front of the whole neighborhood.
Yeah, yeah.
I used to get sprayed down constantly.
Just because I was a mud kid.
I love mud.
so I was constantly covered in mud and I get sprayed down.
Out of all of us, you're the most like a golden retriever.
Yeah.
I used to get sprayed down by the local pedophile because I had the tits of a large woman.
The Toneitaine of Queens.
But as a result of all this, the whole hospital soon reeked of molasses.
The floor was covered in this stuff.
It soaked the walls and the nurses were soon covered in that rarest of combinations.
molasses and blood.
It's only rare if you haven't met black strap molasses.
And we're mixing molasses and blood every fortnight.
Live from your blade.
Now within just an hour, the hallways of the hospital were covered with so much congealing molasses that the stretchers became immovable.
And the nurses had to continuously mop the entrances and the hallways with hot water to keep the molasses from taking over completely.
But if it tells you anything about how much molasses there was and how much destruction it caused,
officials knew of only nine fatalities by the end of the first day because the other 12 bodies
were still buried somewhere in the path of the molasses' rampage.
Now, in an incredible coincidence, Nebraska became the 36th state to ratify prohibition
the day after the molasses flood, which made prohibition the law of the land.
This, of course, was little comfort to USAA, who, in the race for profit, had killed 21 people and injured 150.
Excuse me, Mr. Narrator. Unfortunately, no, that is not the case. We did not. We here at USAA killed no one. It's the molasses that killed. I want to say that because people don't kill people. Yeah, molasses kills people.
But surprisingly, even though Prohibition was made law on January 17th, and President Woodrow Wilson was in
negotiating the end of World War I in Versailles the next day,
the headlines and newspapers across America were mostly focused on the Great
Molasses Flood.
Nationwide News.
Dude, they knew a good story.
Yeah.
Now, within 24 hours of the flood, the molasses had hardened enough where rescue workers
had to use chisels, saws, and shovels to break it free.
But ultimately, they used millions of gallons of seawater to loosen up the remaining
substance. What do you do that not only has 9-11 vaguely happened to you, but it's also
turned the entire area of 9-11 into a Werther's original. Yeah. Yeah. It really is.
It's January. In my mind, I'm like, ah, you just fucking deal with it in April. Yeah. Yeah,
you're like, wait, you know what, North End right now? That's when last this country.
All right, you go, if you want to go to North End, that's fine, but be a biscuit.
Okay, because there ain't nothing else going on there.
Once loosened, the fire department had to use hydraulic ponds to siphon thousands of gallons of molasses from the cellars of stores and tenements.
But while Boston City workers tirelessly endeavored to clear up the debris and the molasses, USIA supplied absolutely no assistance with the cleanup until the public shamed them into helping.
Pricks!
I think it was that they saw it as like, well, if we help with the cleanup, that's a tacit admission of guilt.
Yeah, like, because in some way they're like, no, we can't.
up the molasses. That's the evidence
of the anarchist movements. We've got to
follow the footprints in the molasses
to their anarchist
syndicate hidey holes.
They have hidey holes. It's your molasses.
Go get it. It's your...
Now, this molasses
belongs to the people. I donated
it. I cannot believe.
I spent so many days trying to
get the molasses out of the tank.
Now, molasses is everywhere.
It's a lack of my work
It ain't no good
But even with just the city workers
participating in the cleanup
Molasses was spread across all of Boston
As these workers tracked the molasses home
The goo covered subway platforms
It was on subway seats
You picked up a pay phone
And the pay phone was covered in molasses
Because anywhere the people of Boston went
So went the leavings
Of the great molasses flood
That's so fucking annoying.
Yeah, everything's sticky.
Yeah.
The whole city is sticky.
That's fun.
Do you remember that one summer when New York just stunk bad?
And it was just like we're like, even the mayor was trying to figure out what happened.
And then he's like, it's Jersey.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
He blamed it on Jersey.
No, workers said that the small mercy here was that the tragedy did not occur during the summer.
In warmer weather, 30 to 40 children would have been playing in the North End Park.
And all of them would have.
have been drowned in molasses.
Additionally, the number of summertime rats that would have been attracted by the sweet
molasses would have been almost as horrible as the flood itself, and the amount of insects
and flies that would have covered the stuff would have been nearly unimaginable.
But how fun for the Boston rat?
Oh, my God, the rat orgies.
They didn't happen.
They're just like, yes.
By the way, rats get one.
So excited
And the rat kings
That would have been created by the stickiness
All the flies
The flies would have died very easily
Though they would have went in there
And they would have died
And they would have come out
It would just would have been like
But I just don't know if like piles
Of piles of dead flies
Are also like super healthy
I think every
I think every single inch of the molasses
Would have been covered in a fly
Or an insect of some kind
Yeah
And then dead
Because that's the thing is that they would die
And then more flies would go on top of that
And then the birds are coming
to get the bugs and the birds
that get stuck and then the cats
are coming for the birds
and the cats are getting stuck
and then the dogs
you do
have an interesting slippery slope that I agree
with. Yeah.
Total pandemonium!
I thought it would be an innocent day.
Now interestingly, when a judge
released an inquest report
for the Superior Criminal Court
assigning blame for the disaster, he did not
assign sole responsibility to
to the USIA, but he didn't say it was
anarchist either. Rather, the
judge said that the flood could ultimately be
blamed on the people of Boston themselves.
Fucking asshole.
The judge
lambasted the public for its failure
to adequately fund city inspection
departments and for its failure
to staff said departments with
qualified people. This is on you.
I want every member
of the city of Boston in my chamber
now. Literally, it's just like
yeah, big yeah, big you.
Happy, happy, I'm looking at you, you lazy, broke fucks.
That's exactly what he said.
He said, you can't provide yourself with just 50% of what you need and then complain when shit goes wrong.
Wow, that is just like, you know, you can just be like, you know, I don't need this right now.
You know.
I mean, I get it.
What do you fucking expect?
Capitalists are going to capitalize.
And if you don't watch them like a fucking hawk, they will cut corners and people will die.
And even if you're worried about higher taxes, the inevitable accidents are.
tragedies that come from not keeping an eye on things always ends up costing far more than
the tax that would have prevented it is what the judge said you see that's that's technically like
again in theory so sure i guess it's just like right now no this is the time to make this decision
right now no i fucking get it it's like when uh like we just had these floods in uh texas that
could have been more if they hadn't cut so much from the fucking weather if they wouldn't
cut so much from like weather reporting and then
the warning systems would have been in
place but when you bring that up they're like
don't politicize the tragedy I'm fucking
with this guy 100%
the judge is fucking right
he's 100% fucking right and you gotta fucking say it
when the levee's broken New Orleans
man it's the same shit yeah
all I know is that I think they're consistent
with these they're happy though
they wanted it this way the Texas people
they were really excited for this for the
death of all the children yeah no
they weren't no but I'm saying they voted for it
though, so they were super excited for it.
It is what they voted for.
You know, they always, Texans always just 100, they really do have this great, it's not
like they have cognitive distance all when it comes to the bad things that happen to them
and the way they vote.
They just, man, they put it together every time.
They really do.
I'd say 40% of them are cool.
We'll see.
We'll see.
But in the end, the judge did ultimately place the blame mostly on USIA, saying that the
only assignable crime was manslaughter through negligence.
because the tank was wholly insufficient in structural strength to handle its load,
and it met neither its legal nor engineering requirements.
Now, if you just look at my little molasses tank, I have my own backyard,
you're saying, hey, I've got three feet on the other side.
Because even though this is a smaller tank, I don't want it to explode, ruin my roses.
Well, the Boston DA took this report and presented it to a grand jury,
but in an infuriating move, the jury disagreed on criminal negligence
and ruled that there was insufficient evidence,
for a manslaughter indictment.
Therefore, no criminal charges were brought against anyone for the molasses flood.
Now, the USAIA became emboldened by the grand jury's failure to issue indictments,
so in a brief statement, they put the onus back on the anarchist by saying that, quote,
evilly disposed persons had used dynamite to blow up the tank.
Ironically, though, USAA's refusal to take any responsibility for the tank disaster may have led to three incidents,
that very well could have actually been committed by vengeful anarchists who were out to prove a point.
It's like you say that you create your villain and then the villain shows up.
Exactly.
Eight months after the molasses disaster, two of USAA's molasses steamers vanished without a trace
while traveling from the Caribbean to the northeast.
Not only do they vanish without a trace, there was no radio contact that said,
Mayday, Mayday.
They were just gone.
These disappearances were both bizarre and unprecedented, and it is possible.
possible that a sudden explosion could have obliterated any evidence of both ships.
Well, a month after that, USIA's other molasses processing facility, the one in Brooklyn,
it was destroyed by a fire.
Although, again, ironically, the only thing that was undamaged, the tanks that were holding the molasses.
Yeah, because they were built properly.
Brooklyn Union men.
Yep.
But even so, the Brooklyn plant was closed down.
And in a classic case of failing upward, USAIA found it in their hearts, even amidst all this turmoil,
to promote Arthur P.GEL to assistant treasurer and vice president of the company
just a little under a year after the molasses flood.
They deserve every fucking thing that happens to.
I have got an idea here, guys.
I've got a new idea for my next big tank.
Instead of worrying about using molasses to make weapons,
I have an idea of about making a giant Maraca filled with weapons.
We just get their guns.
And keep them in a big giant, shake of them rock.
And that way, it's fun.
It makes a fun noise.
It's very Spanish.
Yeah.
As far as the molasses is concerned, we learned the hard way.
Last time, we put the big bucket on top of a hill.
This time, top of a mountain.
That's it.
You've got to make the hill bigger so that the molasses has more fun on its way to the city.
The only question I have is, can we build it around a community of,
brown people that it may kill one day.
How about white people that we make
brown? Exactly.
With radiation. We'll give them
spots. But
that is not quite the end of
the story. So the people of Boston
are nothing, if not tenacious.
And when the grand jury refused
to hold anyone responsible for so
much death and destruction, the survivors
consolidated 119
separate legal claims against
USAA for a full civil
trial before a jury.
Now, USIA, of course, stuck with the anarchist line in their defense,
which was led by a lawyer with the appropriately terrible name of Charles Chote.
Call me Charlie.
Now, some people thought I want to make a legal business.
I go to the nature of my voice.
But I hope so bad.
I do you work out.
Charlie Chote does sound like a man who used to be a fish.
I was.
Now I'm a lawyer.
Tanks perfect
Beautiful living
Sexual to behole
I'd marry her if I could
Gays close
A not a guilty
Chote did argue in his opening
statements he said the take was perfect
Tanks beautiful
And it only failed because an anarchist dropped a bomb inside
They don't last to the breakfast
All right
Chote's getting close to Bill
You know, so you got to think
We're worrying about the fact
Not Theo
His dad
And it makes me sad
Every impression Henry does
If he does it long enough
He comes Bill Cosby
Every time
It's in his bones
You can get it out
Tank kills the spary
Spectral
You got I say
You got the problem
With the tank I put you in this world
I take you out
Chote
Where'd you get that horrible sweater
I made it
I had the venue make it
Now, science was very much on the side of the plaintiffs, but I, my God, the opening statement made on behalf of the plaintiffs by attorney Damon Everett Hall is one of the best I have ever heard.
This is a small excerpt from the picture that Damon Everett Hall painted in court.
Now, I had no doubt that you're on, I had occasion to see many of the devastated areas of France.
If you take a little section
On one of those devastated areas
And you put in it
Dead men and dead horses
And then you cover it in molasses
You get some idea
Of what this scene
Look like a few minutes
After this occurrence on January 15th, 1919
Direct quote
The direct fucking quote
You'd put some dead men in it
You'd take some dead horses
You cover it molasses
That's what it was
If you take a little section, take a man.
You cover a molasses.
That's it.
Boom, done.
The USAA spent the modern equivalent of $750,000 on expert testimony.
They even went so far as to have a scientist from MIT build a 30-foot-tall model tank, fill it with molasses, and drop dynamite inside.
I have to say, thank you so much for this money.
This is the best afternoon I've ever had.
I mean, honestly, imagine getting that call and telling them that's what you have to do today.
On it!
Doing it right now.
Fuck!
Yes!
Absolutely!
Dropping everything!
Going by how the plates were similarly damaged in both the test and the actual tank, USAA was confident in their argument.
In the end, though, the facts won out.
Amongst the most damning testimony came from the people who actually made the steel plates,
who admitted that the thickness of the plates they delivered
was less than what was called for in the plans.
They just sort of did like a, nah, my bad.
We made them super thin, so they took them.
They didn't say nothing, so?
That was exactly what they said.
Like, they didn't say nothing, so we thought, eh.
They must like it.
Yeah.
But in the end, it was the plaintiff's own explosives experts
who sunk USAA.
Attorney Damon Everett Hall brought in five sailors
who'd been stationed on ships in Boston Harbor that day,
and all five of them had been ordinance machines,
genus and detonation workers during World War I.
The most haunted men in the world that had to watch dessert destroy half a city.
They testified that they'd heard rumbling sounds like thunder when the tank collapsed, but all of
them were adamant that what they heard was nothing like the thunder they heard a thousand
times over during the war. Therefore, that thunder was not dynamite.
Pretty good witness.
Very good witness.
Five, no less.
Now, Arthur P.GEL was indeed brought to the stand, and he predictably did not do very well.
He fell over.
I shouldn't have my training wheels.
He admitted that he did not have anyone examine the steel upon its delivery.
Nor did he ask for any tests on the steel before the tank's construction.
I trust my workers.
I trust steel.
I said, Jill, no.
absolutely not
this is what he said
he said he relied on the steel company's
reputation as all the proof
he needed that the tank would hold
going off a gel's testimony
the plaintiffs brought in their own MIT
scientist that scientist found
that the tension in those particular
plates should not have exceeded more than
18,000 pounds per square inch
the scientist then testified
that on the day of the flood the molasses
was exerting pressure of
31,000 pounds per square inch, nearly double what it could actually take.
I will maybe explain it in a way that the jury can understand.
You know how you enter into a restaurant, and you are one size.
When you go and consume, one, two, three cheeseburgers, one, two, plates of French fries,
one appetizer of mozzarella sticks.
You will find the pressure side of.
I call the fupa.
This area is a new scientific term called the fupa.
Exerts extreme pressure upon the pants.
And the only way to alleviate such pressure, as you can see,
is to unbuckle the pants and remove the front of the pants.
And that's what the tank did.
Good audio on the bell buckle there.
Thank you.
I've been doing a lot of folly.
Well, that's all to say that U.S.IA had built a 50-foot-tall,
2.3 million-gallon tank over one of America's most congested neighborhoods with no
knowledge whatsoever of the tank's strength nor any knowledge of the tank's capability to
withstand the pressure that would be exerted by the molasses within. In other words,
USIA looked at the tank, looked at the neighborhood, and said, fuck them. Now, attorney Damon
Everett Hall took his sweet time with his side of the case. He spent two years calling a
parade of witnesses, wives
who lost their husbands, mothers
who watched their sons die,
breadwinners who'd lost their ability to work.
I didn't tell y'all, this trial
would be hilarious.
That's what's sad-ass parade.
That's the saddest. In response,
you could still smell the molasses
on a shirt. You can
still see the brown stains
on her trembling clavage.
You can still
see the markings of
the tankard when that
when the spike shot out of it on her sweet delectable housewife romp.
Well, in response to all this, all Charles Choate could save for the defense was that at least those who lost loved ones, at least they died quickly.
Yeah, it's the best part.
The best part quickly smashed.
Immediately crushed.
That's my favorite.
And seemingly unable to suppress his inner villain, Chote also argued that the two children who died, he argued that they were trespassing at the time of their deaths.
so their families should not be entitled to damages regardless.
Hey, these little Italians were stealing molasses.
Yeah.
They should have stole more.
Yep.
On company property.
See.
But finally, after 341 days of testimony.
Jesus fucking Christ.
And that's on defense and, like, that's both sides.
Yeah, 341 days.
What does the jury do?
Sit there.
Yeah.
That must have been so annoying.
How do they work?
What do they do during that time period?
I don't know.
I guess they get a stipend.
I feel bad enough this is two episodes, much less 341 days.
Yes.
And that's 341 working days.
The hearings finally ended four and a half years after the flood.
USAIA was found fully liable and eventually paid the modern equivalent of $10 million to the victims, the city, and the businesses that were destroyed.
That is not enough.
That is not that much.
Well, that's the thing is that it was actually the court, their first ruling was,
the modern equivalent of $4 million.
And then that's when Damon Everett Hall
went to Charles Choate and said like,
that's fucking nothing.
He's like, if you don't,
if we don't go and get this figured out right now,
we're taking damages to a jury trial.
And we're starting this fucking thing all over again.
Because you mean to tell me you're going to watch your father and his horse
drowned a death of molasses and then you're going to go what,
like a stick of gum?
Yeah.
That's what that is.
Yeah.
And that's,
that was actually the second.
That was Charles Choate.
and uh ever and damon everett hall like hashing it out it took him about two hours and then finally like okay yeah
10 million dollars but that's the modern equivalent of 10 million dollars yeah yeah and that was between so many
different people i mean we got 150 people hurt 21 dead all the horses all the houses all the businesses
that ain't shit no it ain't now concerning the long history of the molasses trade in boston the flood
ended that 300 year tradition in a matter of minutes that's probably good yeah soon soon
after molasses prices dropped even further as sugar replaced it as a sweetener, and companies found
cheaper and easier ways to produce industrial alcohol without molasses. But interestingly,
the flood also had long-term impacts on construction standards in America. Boston began requiring
that all calculations from engineers and architects be filed with their plans. That practice soon
became standard across the country, although I suppose we'll all find out soon enough if there's still
people in government actually checking these calculations after the recent so-called government
efficiency measures. See, if the molasses flood tells us anything, it's that without safeguards
and regulations, corporations will risk the lives of human beings or even sacrifice entire
populations if it means that the company's stock price will go up even a little. For a current
example, one of Elon Musk's AI data centers is at this very moment choking the life out of an
entire neighborhood in Memphis. Musk's GROC facility is producing so much air pollution that residents
can't breathe in their own homes. And this is also his AI, his stupid fucking GROC AI, is powerful
enough to get government contracts, which it will undoubtedly fuck up just as badly as it's fucked up
everything else it's done. Again, the anarchists have points. Hey, GROC might be really, really good
at writing half bad
essays for your freshman year
college. Yeah, I mean, GROC, I mean, that's the things
that GROC is technically very good at threatening to rate people on Twitter.
And, I mean, to be honest, I think people got that on lock.
I don't think we need it. Yeah, we're really good at that. Yeah, I feel like that's
like, we got that cover. Yeah. Maybe it should blow up another spaceship.
Oh, wow. Yeah. That's what GROC should do.
But, as I said before, capitalists are going to capitalize
no matter how fucking stupid or useless their product is.
It's all about profit.
And just as they've been doing throughout history,
corporations will kill, exploit,
or even enslave people without conscience
in the pursuit of profit
unless they are forced to do otherwise.
But concerning the Great Melassascus Flood of 1919,
perhaps the strangest epilogue in this story
is the ghost of the molasses itself.
Oh, I'm so full, I'm so big.
Reportedly, Boston's entire North End smelled like molasses for decades afterwards.
It was said that well into the 1960s, remember this happened in 1990, well into the 1960s,
the basements of the buildings along Commercial Street, still smelled like the sweet substance
that had killed 21 people and injured 150 almost a half century before.
and all of it had occurred because one corporate lackey's desire for a promotion collided with the tide of history.
Wow.
It's time to go get some molasses.
Yeah.
Let me try it now.
I'm surprised I have not bought any since we started this.
If there was a substance that you would die in, but you'd be sort of vaguely happy to die in, what would that substance be?
Gasoline.
Wow.
Two distinctly different answers.
Wow. That's amazing.
Mictors Bourbon.
That's mine.
But I'm going to do that the old-fashioned way.
A couple of glasses a day at a time.
Go down to patreon.com slash last podcast on the left and watch us do this.
This is a great episode, Marcus.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Really great, great.
And again, thank you, of course, to the researchers.
as always, did a fantastic job on this one.
Yeah, and next week, I believe we're coming back to true crime.
We are.
Big, massive true crime story, true crime, let's say it's a post-9-11 true crime.
Yeah, some new stuff, which I'm actually very excited for.
Hot shit.
Yeah, super hot shit.
And if you want to follow us on all the socials, you can find us on TikTok and Instagram
at LP on the left.
You can also check out all of our new YouTube channels someplace underneath.
LPN Romanty, Who's the B, the Foreign Report, no dogs in space,
and LPN TV. And don't forget to come see us on tour. Go to last podcast on the left.com
to see where we're coming. And the rest of this year, we're going all over this fucking country.
Yeah, we are doggy-dow. That's right. In August 8th, we're going to be in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Come out to these shows. August 9th, Durham, North Carolina, September 20th, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 11th, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, October 25th, Oakland, California, November 29th, Cleveland, Ohio, and December 12th. We're going to be a big old.
stinky, dinky Portland.
Yeah, I can't wait, man.
I cannot wait.
You know what's funny about Columbus,
the most that we've been asked
by people to open for us?
I think that's a city
that I've never had a city
so many people being like,
can I open?
Yeah.
Well, we're doing Columbus for side stories.
That's what I mean.
Yeah.
Well, that's Travis Irvine's territory.
Yeah, that's just,
that's because it's Travis's town.
He's got his gang there.
Yeah.
I remember he's got Cumboy.
Cumboy's there.
There's another guy there.
Tomato Joe.
Oh, yeah.
Stooky Don.
That's right.
You're joking.
but tomato to tomato and
Cumboy are real. Those are
Travis's henchmen. Yeah, Cumboy
and Tomato Joe are people.
Oh, they're real, huh? Yeah. Yeah.
God, I probably know them. That's the worst part. Oh, you might.
Yeah. You might. Oh, well, I take it back,
Tomato Joe.
Anything that Tomato Joe or Cumboy may
have done or said over the years
as nothing in common with LPN.
No. We merely know their existence.
Just understand that right now, I mean, it's fine. They don't have
electricity. I just can't wait to Cumboy
finally becomes Cumb man.
Yeah. Hey.
It just takes one bullet.
Speaking of Cumboy's,
happy birthday, Rob.
Yeah.
Happy birthday.
Our main Cumboy, Rob.
We wouldn't be half the show we are without you, Rob.
Thank you for all your work.
I wouldn't call you.
I wouldn't say you're a tomato Joe.
You're more of a Ruta Bega Rob.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I'll take it as a win.
Yep.
Well, wish our Cumboy happy birthday on social media.
How old saying.
Hug you.
Hell Aussie.
Yeah.
Yeah.