Morbid - Episode 657: Boston’s Great Molasses Flood of 1919
Episode Date: March 24, 2025January 15, 1919 was an unusually warm day in Boston, a welcome change from the typically cold temperatures Bostonians had experienced in the previous days. A little after 12:30 pm, the resid...ents of the city’s North End neighborhood were going about their usual routines when all of the sudden they felt the ground shake, followed by a loud rumbling roar, as though the train had gone off the tracks. Then, without warning, a wave of molasses—reportedly fifty feet high—flooded the neighborhood with more than 2.5 million gallons of syrup, destroying buildings, toppling the nearby elevated train line, and killing twenty-one people.One of the lesser told and remembered stories in Boston’s history, the great molasses flood of 1919 caused untold damage to one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods and injured more than 150 people, in addition to the twenty-one dead. Yet for an event so remarkable and strange, it is still unknown precisely what caused the Purity Distilling Company’s molasses storage tank to burst and dump its contents across the North End, making it one of Boston’s most bizarre pieces of folklore.Thank you to the Incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research and Writing support!ReferencesBoston Daily Globe. 1919. "Death toll from tank disaster 13." Boston Daily Globe, January 18: 1.—. 1919. "Martin Clougherty awoke in a sea of sticky molasses." Boston Daily Globe, January 16: 7.—. 1919. "Molasses tank explosion injures 50 and kills 11." Boston Daily Globe, January 16: 1.—. 1919. "No Bill returned in tank disaster." Boston Daily Globe, February 13: 3.—. 1919. "Official police report of North End disaster." Boston Daily Globe, January 16: 7.—. 1919. "Scenes of anguish at relief station." Boston Daily Globe, January 16: 7.Buell, Spencer. 2019. "Anarchists, horses, heroes: 12 things you didn't know about the Great Boston Molasses Flood." Boston Magazine, Janaury 12.Daily Boston Globe. 1919. "Explosion theory favored by expert." Daily Boston Globe, January 16: 1.—. 1919. "Mayor appalled, promises probe." Daily Boston Globe, January 16: 1.Dwyer, Dialynn. 2019. "What people saw and felt in the first moments of Boston's dead Great Molasses Flood." Boston Globe, January 13.Jabr, Ferris. 2013. "The science of the Great Molasses Flood." Scientific American, August 1.Park, Edwards. 1983. "Without warning, molasses surged over Boston 100 years ago." Smithsonian Magazine, November 1.Puleo, Stephen. 2004. Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, weirdos, I'm Ash.
And I'm Alaina.
And this right here, this little thing you're listening to,
Morbid.
["Morbid"]
This is Morbid. I was trying to sound like Victoria from White Lotus, thank you.
There you go.
I think that's her name, Parker Posey's character.
I have no idea, I haven't watched that yet.
Ugh.
I know.
I don't, you know what?
I'm trying, it takes me a long time for...
I don't know if it's your bag.
I don't, every time someone mentions it I'm like, maybe.
Yeah.
I don't know why it doesn't lose me but. I love it.
And it's like a great show.
I would recommend, I would Romeca Nend it to most people.
You absolutely would.
I was gonna say.
I don't know if you would love it.
You don't know if I like it?
No.
I mean maybe I'll give it a shot and see.
I mean go for it.
You like do it.
You're your own person, you're a lot.
Live your best life bitch.
But I love, I'm liking this season
and I was just playing Alina a clip
of Parker Posey's interview where she does all her weird voices her southern accent tsunami tsunami
well that was a good one that was really good thank you I liked that thank you so much uh no
Ash has just gotten me into yellow jackets so I'm almost done with the first season and I dig it
she's not yeah she's not current so don't give her any spoilers because I will come for you yeah
don't give me spoilers I'm trying to. I'm current. Yeah.
Guys we're in the fucking trenches. In the thick of it. I'm trying to get there. It takes us a
long time to get through a show John and I so. They're coming up on episode seven.
Of the first season. So there's so many things I want to say. I was gonna. It's
really good though. I was gonna signify something to the listeners I want to say. I was going to... It's really good though. I was going to signify something to the listeners, but I can't.
I love Christina Ricci.
I would lay down...
Fire of a thousand suns.
I would lay down my life for you.
Yeah, I love her so much. That's all I can say about it. But also, I'm sure we're weeks out
at this point, but...
Probably.
Pretty cool that Tobias Forge was on the show.
Do you guys understand how hard it was for both of us to keep that from you?
So hard.
Right now, you're glowing.
I'm glowing.
It was so fun.
It was.
It was so fun.
He's always a fun guest.
He's delightful.
He's a very, very nice man.
He is delightful.
And we got to have Doug Bradley on.
I love Doug.
Doug congratulated me because he congratulated Tobias on his success. He congratulated Alina on her book and he
said I didn't congratulate you on anything Ash. I said that's fine I just
exist and he congratulated me on being wonderful. Just being wonderful. He said thank you
so much. Doug Bradley forever. I'll remember that for the rest of my life.
Doug and his wife Steph are two of my favorite people. They're very cool. They're just delightful people. Yeah. But yeah, that was a fun little like
surprise we had because Tobias and Doug are our broids there. So because he called
them Toby through the whole thing. Toby. It was amazing. Doug Bradley's voice is the
most calming voice I've ever heard in my life. Very soothing. If I, I need to be like,
can I call him when I'm having a panic attack?
You should just be like, Doug, why not?
Just be like, calm me down.
He reads books on YouTube.
Oh yeah.
So if you ever want to hear Doug Bradley read a book, you know, that's what I'll do next time I have a panic attack.
He can just read you a story.
But it was a lot of fun.
We got to talk about the new album, which has finally been announced, Skeletah.
Very cool.
And I got to hear it.
Alina, don't you hear it? A little bit of a flex. Real early. That's a big flex. I'm excited about it. You guys
are gonna love it. And I can't wait to see everybody at the shows this year so we can all
freak out together. It's got a different vibe. It does, but it's so fucking good. It's cool. I think it's a really cool vibe.
It is so fucking good. You guys have heard Satanized. So fun. The music video for that is awesome. We got to see Papa,
Papa Perpetua. And we got some inside scoop on that music video. Yeah. So if you haven't listened
to that episode, you gotta go listen. Yeah, you gotta listen. There's a cool, fun fact in there.
There is. Toby confirmed. Toby confirmed, if I may. It was really cool though and you guys have been so
sweet. The comments on that video so far you guys are just really sweet because you know how excited
I am about it and everybody's just been really kind and I appreciate that. As they should be.
This is a win for all of us. It is. And you're all gonna fucking love the new album and I can't
wait to see you and hang out with you at the ghost shows because I love running into people who listen to the show at those.
As Adore Delano says, party.
Party.
Let's go.
So that's really fun.
We hope you dug it.
2025 has been pretty sweet outside of the entire world's crumbling.
Well, you just, I think it makes you-
In my own little bubble, it's been-
It makes you cling harder to the things that are-
The wins.
That are good.
Yeah.
That's the thing.
It's like the wins, you gotta celebrate the wins right now because like-
Because they're few and motherfucking far between.
Outside of those, it's rough.
So celebrate your wins.
Yes.
And also-
Be excited about the things you wanna be excited about.
Exactly. I saw Elise Myers who like, again, who doesn't love Elise Myers? I saw her say something
about how she almost got embarrassed because she got very excited about something and someone told
her to like calm it down. And she was like, I almost got embarrassed and then I said, fuck that.
Like I am very lucky to be excited about things so I'm going to continue to. And why the fuck are
you on the planet?
Like what does all of this even mean?
Yeah.
If you're not excited about things.
Not all the time obviously.
Be excited about things.
If something excites you and gets you going
and makes you excited, be as excited as you want to be
and don't feel embarrassed about it.
And don't make, because if, especially if other adults
are trying to be like, oh, you're so weird,
you're so cringy, that means that they've never had something to be that excited about and what we
should feel is pity for them and so make sure that you are excited about the things you should be
because you have earned your excitement okay everybody's just looking for something to be
excited about what are we on this planet for if you can't get excited about shit i thought you know
like get excited and get excited about whatever the I thought, you know, like get excited.
And get excited about whatever the fuck you want to. I'm excited. And I hope you all have
shit to be excited for. Yes. And I hope you do. Big, small, medium, in between, doesn't matter.
I'm manifesting that for all of y'all. I got a new couch and I am fucking stoked about it.
Get excited about it. Go crazy. I just start jumping on the couch like Tom Cruise.
Celebrate that. You just slide through the living room in your underwear.
I just might. I just might. I love it. What is that? Risky business. Yeah, risky business.
All the Tom Cruise. You know what's so funny? I'm of the age that that just makes me think of
Rob's character in Never Been Kissed. Oh my God. Yeah. That's also a great one. A great movie, that that just makes me think of That's so cool!" And then I watched it as an adult for the first time like a few years ago and I was like, oh no.
This movie's dark as fuck.
It is, it's dark. It's a horror movie.
At its core, it's a horror movie.
That scene at the prom when they're dancing to the...
It's a race and rewind. I have been obsessed with that song since I was like six years
old because of that movie.
That's a diabolical scene.
That's a diabolical.
That's the thing.
That's the thing.
It's rough. It's different.
But you know what? I'm going to talk about something pretty terrible right now.
Well, it is more good.
So coming off of a really sneakily horrifying movie,
we're gonna go into something
that is equally sneakily as horrifying.
Oh, is it?
Molasses.
What?
Yep.
Like gingerbread cookie molasses?
Like straight up molasses.
We're gonna talk about Boston's great molasses flood of 1919.
If you've ever been on a duck tour,
you know they mention it.
Come on to Boston, we'll tell you all about it. We will, oh my God,, do a duck tour. It's so fun. Do a duck tour if you come to Boston. It's a lot of fun. It is. And you get a lot of nifty little history facts. You learn a lot. You do. Also do some of the walk. I'm not trying. We're not being paid by like the city of Boston to do this. I'm just like, if you're those walking tours too. Oh my gosh, I love those. A lot of them are fun.
They dress up like they're from the period.
Yeah, like Minutemen.
Yeah, the revolution, all the fun stuff.
Do it, it's fun.
Studying the revolution.
This was not great at all.
And it's like one of, it's remembered and it's mentioned,
but I feel like it's lesser remembered and mentioned as we go
on. I didn't learn about this in school. Yeah, which is pretty terrible. Actually, the first time
I ever learned about this was on a duck tour. Yeah, see, and that's crazy. The fact that we
don't talk about this, like it's a wild story and it had a high death toll. This was a tragic,
tragic event that happened in Boston. I don't know a lot about it.
Yeah, it was, it caused an unbelievable damage to one of the city's oldest
neighborhoods and it injured more than 150 people and 21 people died.
Yeah, that I didn't know.
Including children. There were children that died in the, I mean, not, you know,
like in one life over the other, but like, it's awful.
Yeah.
And again, for, for an event that was so like
remarkable and very strange, like it's a strange event. It is. A molasses flood, like that's weird.
It's still kind of unknown exactly what caused it to happen. It happened at the Purity Distilling
Company. Their molasses storage tank was the one that burst and dumped its contents across
the North End. And it really is one of Boston's most bizarre pieces of history and folklore
to this day. It's so tragic and so bizarre.
Boston has a lot of bizarre history.
We're pretty bizarre. We're bizarre. We'reazaar kids. So by the final months of 1918, Boston, like many other cities around the United States,
had been through it.
Been through it.
That summer, the influenza pandemic hit the city really hard and there were more than
200 deaths by the end of the season.
Thousands more were going to be lost before things were even under control.
It was really bad
the pandemic had forced a lot of the theaters nightclubs and restaurants to close down we've
seen that before we've seen that repeat and the city cemeteries had been forced to erect like
circus tents essentially on the grounds in order to hide the backlog of unburied coffins from public
view yeah that's brutal yeah it. It was as though there was
nowhere in the city that somebody could go to just avoid reminders of tragedy, loss and hardship. It
was not a good time. Now, in addition to the calamity caused by the flu, the end of World War
I presented a lot of challenges to those whose businesses had been forced to kind of like
presented a lot of challenges to those whose businesses had been forced to kind of like pivot and reorient themselves to accommodate increased manufacturing needs of the military.
The United States Industrial Alcohol Company, the USIA is what I'll call them.
For example, they had been one of the nation's largest producers of industrial alcohol for
the military during the war years.
But with the demand for munitions kind of dropping in the final months of the
war,
the USIA kind of found themselves in a position of having to again,
pivot the other way and develop new products and strategies just to remain in
business. Now, before the war,
a certain percentage of USIA's output was grain alcohol,
and many on the company's board felt that the shift back to producing grain alcohol
was precisely the type of quick pivot necessary to keep this company going, at least for a
short term.
Yeah.
The problem though, was that retooling the Cambridge plant to produce grain alcohol was
going to take a lot of time.
And the production of the liquor itself took time, and time was not something that a lot of people had.
It was not of the essence.
Yeah, it was in short supply at that time. The constitutional amendment banning the manufacturer
and sales of alcohol in the US had passed both houses the previous December and was set to go
into effect in January 1920. Oh no!
Ba da bow! That meant USIA would have just a little more than a year of production before ceasing operations
completely.
So they needed to get out all they could.
Yeah, they got to get out.
But the company determined that if they could distill a sufficient amount of alcohol in
the first quarter, they would have enough time to get it bottled and shipped out before
prohibition went into effect, thereby saving
the company.
That November, USIA's company secretary, Arthur Jell, placed a large order for molasses
from Cuba.
This was going to be scheduled to be delivered in mid-January 1919.
That gave Jell and the company enough time to retrofit the Cambridge plant, you know,
like get it ready to
do this kind of production to caulk the massive storage tank on Commercial Street, which was on
Boston's wharf and develop a schedule for round the clock production once the MoS has actually
arrived. Now, gel had been integral to the operations and really all the strategic planning
of the company and had also been instrumental in guiding them
through what was really like uncertainty in the war years.
Like he helped them kind of stay the course.
So if anyone could pull off the temporary orientation
of this plant, it was gonna be Joe.
Maybe.
Now to those who'd lost their jobs
to the pandemic closures or you know.
So weird to hear that.
It really is like history really does repeat itself. It surely does. And so they either lost it to the pandemic closures or, you know, so we're there, though. It really is like history really does repeat itself.
Surely does.
And so they either lost it to the pandemic closures or they lost it for, you know, in
the downturn of demand for manufacturing.
The USIA's new production strategy, even if it was temporary, was a welcome piece of
news to them because they were like, I'll take anything at this point.
The retrofit of the distillery
and the resealing of the tank meant dozens, if not hundreds of new job opportunities were now
arising. Which is great. And these were job opportunities for metal workers, machine operators,
and plant hands, all of whom were going to be working like round the clock over time to get
everything done on this like really tight turnaround timeline.
Still, filling these positions wouldn't be as easy as it would be under normal circumstances,
because again, the outbreak of the pandemic had kind of knocked out countless ordinary able-bodied
workers, so it's not like everybody was ready to jump back to work. So Jelle was going to have to
take what he could if he was going to have everything ready on time. He just had to work with it. So already we're seeing like, uh-oh.
Yeah, not great to start out like that. And I'm sure this isn't shocking, but unfortunately
significant problems presented themselves almost immediately. Oh goody. The North End tank, which
was to hold the molasses when it arrived, had been pretty hastily built in 1915 to meet the unexpected demands of war. I feel like you don't want to
hastily build a giant tank. Yeah, you don't want to do that. And any kind of tank really. No.
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Because of this, when the metalworkers from Walter Fields and Sons began caulking the
seams of the steel tank, the flaws were pretty apparent immediately.
According to author Stephen Puleo, I believe it's Puleo, I hope I'm saying his good name
correctly.
It sounded like you said his good name.
His good name.
I don't want to ruin his good name.
Stephen, I hope I'm saying your good name correctly.
So according to Stephen, he said quote,
molasses leaked from several different seams,
squeezing through the rivets
and sliding down the steel walls like lazy brown rivers,
plopping onto the pavement below
and spreading slowly into thick pools.
Fun.
Whenever the men would hose off the tank's exterior,
beads of dark molasses would just reappear
almost immediately at the seams.
Oh no, we should probably empty that tank, y'all.
Yeah.
The job was frustrating and pretty arduous as well,
but finally, just one day before Christmas,
the tank was finished and it was deemed ready
for the molasses shipment.
It's a Christmas miracle.
It's a Christmas miracle. It's a Christmas miracle.
We can fill it with molasses.
On January 12, 1919, the ship, which was called the Maliro,
arrived in Boston Harbor from Cuba carrying 1.3 million gallons,
600,000 gallons of which was going
to be pumped into the USIA's tank in the North End of
molasses.
Blink, blink, blink, blink.
1.3 million gallons came over on that ship.
Damn.
600,000 gallons was going into that tank.
I don't think there's any way for me to actually appropriately picture that in my mind.
I just can't, my brain won't conceive of it.
No.
It's a lot of molasses.
Oh, on one boat that came over?
One ship, it was like a big cargo ship.
I mean, yeah, of course, but damn.
I know, it's crazy.
So despite the freezing temperatures
and even colder wind chill,
cause remember we're in Boston in January.
Honey, it's cold.
The molasses, which had been warmed in advance,
moved smoothly through the pump into the
tank and by the following morning the shipment was completed. Probably smelled so good in there. Oh
so good. Like gingerbread cookies. Yeah exactly. With their job done the ship left the docks headed
for Brooklyn where they were going to deliver the remainder of the molasses. Now not long after the
ship had left the haba, the haba, residents and workers in the area of the wharf
began to hear some sounds.
They heard some loud cracking and pinging sounds.
That's never a sound you really want to hear.
So this was a sound the warm molasses was mixing with the cold thick molasses that was
already in the tank.
Now this was not entirely foreign to hear these kinds of sounds because since being
built several years earlier, locals had grown accustomed to like some metallic groans emanating
from the tank as like different liquids settled.
Yeah.
Because it is a cold tank.
It's like, you know, you're going to hear some sounds.
Yeah.
And especially mixing the warm with the cold.
Exactly.
What the locals didn't know though at this time was that the mix of old and new molasses
increased the temperature inside the tank, which set off the fermentation process and produced gases
in that process. Oh, shit. With the tank now holding a whopping 2.3 million gallons of molasses,
3 million gallons of molasses. It was nearly at nearly at full capacity, leaving very little room for expansion. And it couldn't, it was just trapping the gases in this small amount
of head space remaining in the tank, which is not good. That's not good. Sometimes that
happens with my sourdough starter. And it sounds like there's a gas leak in my house. There
you go. Drew and I were literally sitting on the couch one night and it was like, sssssssssssssss's hungry and I can't do it, man. So the first few weeks of January
in Boston, like normal, had been frigidly cold. Temperatures were as low as two degrees. But on
the morning of the 15th, as often happens- We got a heat wave.
They awoke to find an unseasonably warm day. It's just suddenly like, oh, we're in spring now.
And unseasonably warm for Boston in that time is like 48 degrees.
Yeah, exactly.
We're like, shit.
We're like, we got flip flops, babe.
Holy shit.
Oh, and it eventually reached into the 40s.
I called it.
We were there.
A true Bostonian.
That's it.
Oh, when it hits the 40s, you're like, you don't have to wear a jacket.
We're fine. No, I literally stop wearing my jacket.
Throw that sweatshirt on.
We're just gonna wear here for a light sweater day.
I don't know how warm it is today,
but I've been rolling without a jacket.
Oh, it's gorgeous today.
It's gorgeous, let's see.
I was just gonna say we have to see.
It's 43 degrees.
It's 43 degrees.
And I'm like, it's gorgeous.
I'm like, oh my God, it's also so fucking windy out today.
It is, it's literally got like 90 degree, 90 miles per hour winds.
We're like, it's beautiful out.
Yeah, the wind gusts right now are 23 miles an hour.
Feels great.
Sorry, 45.
But we saw the sun, so there's that.
Yeah, we always look for that.
So yeah, it's been freezing in Boston, but on this day, the 15th of January,
it was unseasonably warm in the 40s.
Everybody wanted to go out.
Everyone's outside because it's gorgeous.
You got to get some air.
On the wharf, the workers from USIA, the workers there began preparing for the days to come.
When the giant molasses tank would be emptied onto railroad cars and taken to Cambridge,
where it was going to be fermented and processed.
This was going to be a big job, so they were getting ready for it.
All right.
A little past 1230 PM, everyone on the wharf
was going about the usual business, loading, unloading
cargo, milling about on lunch breaks, normal thing.
After such a long period of freezing temperatures,
the warm weather, like we always say, it's the 40s,
it's early spring here.
So let's go.
And many of the residents and workers
like we were saying didn't want to miss a chance to be outside on such a lovely spring day because
you get so fucking cooped up and everything's dry and you feel like you just gotta get some air
you get cabin fever that's what everyone's outside yeah like you like we were saying it's everybody's
outside it's a beautiful day then they heard the the sounds. Oh God. I can't imagine.
The sounds would freak me the fuck out.
These are loud, scary sounds.
It's like apocalyptic sounds.
Oh, it's awful.
And it was unlike anything they'd ever heard
coming from the direction of the giant molasses tank.
Later, Boston police officer, Frank McManus,
would describe. Of course.
That is, I couldn't let that go.
I know, I couldn't.
Frank. Oh, Frank McManus. Frankie McManus. That's like, yeah, that's,
you know. Frankie McMan, ah, that's my god, that's my gold boy. You know Frankie McManus. Obsessed.
You know? He would describe it as, quote, a machine gun like rat tat tat sound and an unearthly
grinding and scraping, a bleeding that sounded like the whale of a wounded beast.
He should probably write something.
Frankie McManus, if you don't write a book.
Frankie McManus is a goddamn poet.
Like, damn.
That's fucking terrifying, though.
Cause you're probably sitting there like,
what the fuck is that?
Did the side of the earth just get cracked?
I just scared the apocalypse.
Like the four horsemen were on their way. I'd be like, what's going on?
You hear the trumpets? Yeah. Oh, I'm still waiting.
That idea scares the shit out of me. That like happens sometimes though.
The trumpeting. Yeah. Like people hear that shit.
I think it's all fake personally, but I,
but I appreciate it because it scares the shit out of me no matter what.
Fake because otherwise the end of the world would have happened.
Like it's definitely fake, but like the videos, whenever they used to show those where it was like we're
hearing trumpeting in the sky sometimes people hear other things though that sound like it yeah
and it's still scary as fuck yeah no matter what i want to hear how terrifying and i want to hear
shit like that no i don't want that i don't keep that away from me uh royal albert leman a brakeman
for the boston elevated, was driving the train when
quote, his ears filled with the scream of tearing steel.
Oh God.
Northend resident Martin Clowarty heard a deep rumble that woke him from his sleep.
Joseph Hiller was on his way back to work on the docks when he heard it and he felt the
rumble.
When he looked in the direction of the harbor, he quote, saw the big tank open up and fall apart.
Holy shit. While the wall of molasses 50 feet high in
the front rolled out over the ground with a seething hissing sound.
50 feet high. And if you've ever baked with molasses, just
a jar of molasses. it is so viscous.
Think of that. And now think of like what that can do. And it's like the blob. It's literally like a horror movie.
When I assume like, I mean, it's rushing at you first. Oh, yeah, it's going to asphyxiate you.
So in a second, you can't move. And like you're it's like quicksand. Oh, yeah. You're stuck in it.
Think of how sticky that is. Thick. Oh my god. How
did they even clean that up? I know. So later that day, the Boston Globe reported once the
low rumbling sound was heard, no one had a chance to escape. Oh, that's horrifying.
And the scene on the docks, which was very calm, very serene a few minutes earlier, had
been thrown into total chaos and panic. From his train car on
the elevated tracks, Lehman, who we talked about before, looked out the window and saw, quote,
a black mass bearing down on him darkening the sky. Jesus Christ. Just before he felt the tracks
buckle and the train begin to tip. Oh God. In his bedroom on the third floor, Martin Clowarty came
Oh God. In his bedroom on the third floor, Martin Clowardy came to several feet of molasses, and he said, it didn't dawn on me that it was molasses I was in, but it was already all around
me. Martin told- And he's in his apartment, so it broke through his hocking. Oh my God.
Martin told a reporter from the Globe, I thought I was overboard. A pile of wreckage was holding
me down, and a little way from me I saw my sister. Oh my god. Now the Clowardy's house had been hit by the giant wave of molasses
and knocked from its foundation. Oh. Take that in. It had been knocked. A house was
knocked from its foundation. So he like he came to where? Like he was he was the whole house was sent into the elevated train line.
Oh my god.
Yeah.
Martin said it seemed as if the house had split in two when it hit the elevated structure
and I was in one side and my people in the other.
What the fuck?
The Clowardys house was just one of the many structures in the neighborhood that was completely
demolished
by the wave of molasses. According to the Globe, the buildings seemed to cringe up as
though they were made of pasteboard. As Mary Musko looked out her window and across the
street to the Clowardys house, she said she saw the entire building, quote, fly into the
air.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
You can't even conceive of that.
You can't conceive of it. No. Like it's so,
it's so gnarly what happened here. Moving as fast as 35 miles per hour, the wave of molasses that
flooded the north end devastated everything in its path. Of course it did. Six buildings in the
immediate vicinity of the tank were completely gone, just totally demolished, flattened.
Within seconds.
And one of the steel beams supporting the elevated train line was knocked down.
A steel beam.
The public works horses who were kept in the stalls near the wharf were either smothered
in the flood or, quote, so severely injured as their stables collapsed that they were
shot by policemen to end their suffering.
Oh, that breaks my heart. Yeah. Oh, I hate that. severely injured as their stables collapsed that they were shot by policemen to end their suffering.
Oh, that breaks my heart.
Yeah.
Oh, I hate that.
On Commercial Street, a man walking underneath the elevated train line was thrown from his
feet and sent several feet into the air before landing hard on his face and hands.
Oh, God.
Nearby, Charles Whitby was driving his wagon down Commercial Street when he was struck
by the wave.
He was thrown from the cart as he had flipped,
and it sent him into the brake wall and killed his horse.
Oh my god.
A few yards from him, two train cars
had been knocked from the tracks and thrown
into nearby lampposts, knocking them free from the ground.
So the lampposts are flying.
This is literally catastrophic.
A disaster.
Apocalyptic, just things, houses,
trains, cars flying everywhere. And it's probably not occurring to anyone in the moment that it's
molasses. What the fuck is happening? So they're probably just like what the fuck is this? Seriously.
Like how would you even? It would never occur to you that that's molasses. No. What the fuck is this?
Right. At the diner on commercial street across from the wharf, Robert Burnett was eating lunch with his family when the tank burst.
He said there was a rumble, no roar or explosion. That's what he told the Boston Post.
And he said, I thought it was an elevated train until I heard a swish as if a wind was rushing.
Then it became dark. I looked out the window and saw this great black wave coming.
It didn't rush. It just rolled slowly. It
seemed like the side of a mountain falling into space.
Oh, God. Of course it came quickly, but we all had a chance to jump and run before the
windows began to crack. Then it poured molasses. Holy shit. Like what? How do you even like
look at that? And what do you even how do you even do anything?
I'd be like what is happening right now?
I'd be frozen with fear.
Yeah.
He grabbed his family and they fled the restaurant.
But by the time they'd reached the front door, the molasses had reached the top of the 14
step flight of stairs blocking the only exit.
Instead, the Burnettes rushed up to the roof where they watched in absolute horror as the
entire neighborhood was overtaken by this flood.
Just watched from a roof.
Now naturally those closest to the tank suffered the worst of the damage.
A freight agent at the Boston and Worcester Street Railway Company, H.M.
Doralee, was working in one of the sheds about 15 feet from the tank when he heard the giant
loud massive crack and the ground shook. He told-
So weird as you're saying that the wind is going crazy and shaking the house.
It did. Doralee told the Post, the broken parts of the tank missed our shed only by a matter of
inches. If they had stuck it, well, I wouldn't be talking with you. Parts of the tank struck other houses and they
crumpled like eggs. How we escaped, I am at a loss to explain. Little short of a miracle.
To say a house cracked like an egg, crumpled like an egg. Oh my god.
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Hey, weirdos.
I'm Lindsey Graham
from the podcast American History Tellers.
And if you're still reeling from Ash and Elena's episode on the Boston molasses disaster and you want to dive even deeper, you're
in luck. My show doesn't usually venture too far into the spooky or creepy, but we've
dedicated two full episodes to uncovering fascinating details about this bizarre molasses
catastrophe. From the company's negligence to the victims' harrowing stories, we explore
how this strange event reshaped industrial safety laws and left an indelible mark on Boston's history.
And the Boston Molasses Disaster is just one of many fascinating stories waiting for you on American History Tellers.
We take you to the events, the times, and the people that shaped our nation and show you how our history affected them, their families, and affects you today.
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history tellers on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Wondery Plus subscribers
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Be Kingsley, who was a worker at the Bay State Railway, was equally as close to the
tank when it broke. He said, where the tank stood, there was no tank. Instead was a mighty
wall of some kind, a giant wave of molasses, and it was sweeping rapidly down upon the
office, gaining momentum every second. I turned and ran into the outer office, calling a warning
into the clerks there. So he and his coworkers ran for the exit, but it was too late, because a 15-foot wave
of molasses hit the building and sent everyone and everything inside, flying as the building
collapsed around them.
It wasn't just those working under the tank or near the tank that suffered, though.
As more than two million gallons of molasses was
tearing through the very narrow streets, it swept up everything. People, animals, everything,
hurling them several feet into the air, just sucking them down. Those not in the direct path
of the flood still risked being hit by heavy timbers and other debris that was flying out of
this flood. When the Clowardys house was toppled by the wave, Martin's mother, 65-year-old Bridget
Clowardy, was picked up by the wave and thrown across the street.
Oh my god. Bridget landed hard on the ground and then a large piece of the
home's roof fell on top of her and crushed her to death. Oh my god. It's
unthinkable. You have 64 years and that's how you go out. Yeah. Jesus. The other.
Yeah. Oh it's awful. It's brutal. That's the thing. It's violent. And what's crazy is this
is sometimes looked at especially from like people outside of like Massachusetts or Boston
as like oh the cream molasses smell like silly. It used to smell like molasses in Boston afterwards
on hot days and it's like. That's horrible because it's just like, you don't, but nobody teaches anybody about it. So it's like,
of course it sounds, it sounds hilarious. Sounds hyperbolic. The name, the great molasses flood
sounds hilarious. It sounds like it would be whimsical and smell like gingerbread. It sounds
like, it sounds like something that would happen on fucking Phineas and firm. It just sounds silly.
Yeah. It wasn't. It was very, very, very brutal. It really was.
People lost people that they loved.
In horrible ways. The other members of the Clowardy family made it out of their house,
but it would be several hours before they learned the fate of their mother. The wave
of molasses struck the area hard, but an equally serious problem was getting into the area
to help those that were affected by
all of this. People are just trapped because it's also just like, it doesn't it harden after a while
too? Yeah it gets like crusty and shit. Office, our guy, Frankie McManus, he was working his usual
beat. You know Frankie's beat. Of course I know. His beats in the north end. Yeah. And he was working
there when the tank collapsed and he was the first to report the disaster.
He made the report from an emergency call box 1234. McManus reported an explosion on the wharf
and requested fire crews to be sent to the scene immediately. Roughly 15 minutes later,
McManus placed a second call, this time from a different call box, clarifying that the explosion
had destroyed the molasses tank and released the entire contents into the street.
There were apparently 35 people injured taken to the relief hospital and the
ambulances of the police department. And McManus reported at the time that a
one-man 67 year old John Seberlich was killed at the time. It would turn out
that this was just the beginning of a very much larger death toll. In a matter of just five minutes, the entire five minutes, the entire
north end waterfront had been destroyed. So much properly demolished and so much lives lost. Like
it's so tragic. Now that evening, after everything had kind of settled a relief
station for those directly affected by the disaster was set up in Haymarket
Square. Rather than waste time taking the injured across town to those
ambulances, ambulances and other vehicles were brought brought the injured to Hay
Market where you know they could just try to set up like some kind of field
hospital essentially. Basically and how they described it was struggling men to Haymarket where, you know, they could just try to set up like some kind of field hospital,
essentially. Basically, and how they described it was struggling men covered from head to foot,
eyes and ears and mouth with black molasses. They received treatment there for various injuries.
In at least three cases, the victims were so heavily coated in molasses that it took some
time and cleaning before emergency providers
realized they were already dead. Oh God. Because they were just so heavily coated.
Now, further complicating matters was the large crowd that had gathered at the relief station
in the hours after the tank collapse. As soon as the news of the disaster started making its way
around the city, concerned residents, many with friends and loved ones who worked on the wharf,
showed up at Haymarket looking for confirmation that they were safe. One report said some of
these remained throughout the afternoon waiting for definite news and long into the night these
relatives continued to come into the station for information. That's so sad to think that people
went that long without knowing what happened. Yeah. Now this is really sad, this next one. Among those who were seeking horrific answers
was the family of Maria and Antonio d'Estasio, two Northend kids who had been out on the wharf
on their school lunch break to collect firewood for their father. Just before the tank collapsed,
Antonio was crouched behind the tank, watching as his sister was reprimanded by two railroad workers for playing near the docks.
The last thing Antonio remembered was seeing the horrified looks on the men's faces as
from behind Maria d'Estacio, they watched the support beams under the molasses tank
buckle.
Oh God.
Antonio recalled seeing something large moving out of the corner of his eye and then everything
went black.
Now the children's parents learned that Antonio had been at the relief station, but had since
been taken to City Hospital for treatment.
No one at the relief station had seen or heard from Maria.
Later they would learn the horrific fate of their daughter.
When the tank broke open, Maria had been standing directly in the path of the giant wave
and was engulfed immediately.
She was 10 years old.
Oh my god.
10 years old and she was immediately asphyxiated by the molasses.
The only thing that you can say there is at least it was immediate.
Thank goodness, but my goodness.
Like you hope that she didn't suffer at all.
I just can't even.
10 years old. And what's even sadder, a few hours later a firefighter spotted Maria's quote, tangled hair swirling in a sea of dark molasses. And he pulled her from the liquid. It was immediately apparent that they could not save her. Antonio on the other hand was the least bit more fortunate. His injuries
were severe. He had a fractured skull and a concussion. But a firefighter managed to
grab him and pull him out of the molasses before he was completely consumed by it. So
like, thank goodness for those firefighters.
Seriously straight up heroes.
Police and fire officials arrived to the scene quickly following the call from officer McManus and having heard reports of an
explosion were immediately confused by like a lack of fire. Right. But they
immediately began combing the neighborhood looking for survivors
pulling people from you know the molasses from ruins of houses businesses
warehouses anywhere they were just trying to find anyone that survived this.
Meanwhile the fire department began blasting the streets with water hoping ruins of houses, businesses, warehouses, anywhere. They were just trying to find anyone that survived this.
Meanwhile, the fire department began blasting the streets
with water, hoping to wash the molasses into the drains.
But the sheer quantity of this sugary, thick syrup.
Yeah, you're not just gonna wash it away.
Yeah, it just wasn't working.
They got a little bit, but it's like, it's gonna be tedious
and it's gonna take a lot of time.
While emergency responders worked to pull people to safety and removed
all the dangerous debris from the streets,
medical workers soon arrived at the scene
to provide emergency treatment.
Parker Hill Hospital, for example,
sent a full surgical staff and more than 80 medical privates
and 10 ambulances to provide first aid.
Wow.
In another place near the north end,
the nurses from the Metropolitan Chapter of the Red Cross wasted no time waiting into knee-deep molasses to reach injured survivors.
They just fucking... That's incredible. Yeah. And they would carry them out on stretchers to the
relief center or nearby hospitals for treatment. Led by Mrs. Carlisle Emery, within a half hour
of the collapse, Emery's team of
Red Cross volunteers had mobilized more than a dozen ambulances. And those who weren't involved
in the transport or treatment of injured people still stayed at the scene to provide information
and just comfort victims. Or to serve coffee and meals to firefighters and police officials.
Just community.
Community came together in a big way.
and police officials. Just community.
Community came together in a big way.
Hell yeah.
Those working in the areas nearest to the tank were obviously likely the most in danger,
both during and after the collapse.
And after the initial wave of the molasses had moved inward from the docks, the men working
in the freight houses of the Bay State Street Railway Company, they had been hit really
hard.
The flood had hit the buildings even harder. They
had knocked down the walls. They buried several workers under the debris. I mean, it was like,
the closer you got in, the worse this became. Those who weren't pinned down by debris were
stranded. They just couldn't get out. I mean, there's like a whole river of molasses. You can't
go swimming in it. And they could really do little to help their more seriously hurt
coworkers. So they were just kind of stranded and helpless. Right. According
to HP Palmer, who was an accountant with Bay State, tides of molasses were
rushing in all directions and people who heard the cries of the injured and
dying were prevented from going to their aid by the molasses. Ultimately, Axemen would spend hours cutting away debris to reach the injured.
Just to think that there was tides, tides of molasses going everywhere.
And they're hearing screams of people dying and injured and like they can't help anybody.
They're just all stra- you're like being stranded in like the middle of the sea surrounded by sharks.
Yeah. You just can't do anything.
Although the wave of molasses had subsided at this point and rescuers had come to the
scene, many people were still in danger of being discovered too late by rescue workers.
The firemen of engine 31, for example, were trapped inside the station when the wave hit.
It knocked the building in on itself and trapped the firemen inside.
While several were able to pull themselves out of the rubble, several others remained
pinned down by debris, with the tide of molasses slowly rising around them.
Oh my god, that's fucking…
Yeah, that's horrific.
You can't…
Oh my god that's fucking yeah that's horrific you can't show oh my god the
building had collapsed in such a way and at such an angle that the molasses was
able to just flow in you couldn't even write that no movie it's crazy it's so
the molasses can flow into this building that's collapsed on itself but the only
means of it flowing out was a small hole in the side of the building. And as a result, the men inside faced the very real possibility of just drowning in
molasses, being smothered, which is what would happen. As one of the few who had
freed himself, firefighter Bill Connor worked tirelessly to keep the others
calm as the sticky molasses is just crawling over every inch of their bodies and threatening to kill them.
And he's staying there trying to calm his coworkers and trying to help.
At the relief center, Suffolk County medical examiner Dr. George McGrath worked slowly
and methodically to provide whatever support he could.
Later he would describe the injured bodies saying, quote, they looked as though they
were covered in heavy oil skins, their face, of course,
their faces, of course, were covered with molasses, eyes and ears, mouths and nose
filled with it. Like, oh, that's so awful. When they say smother, they mean you
smother. Yeah. McGrath and the other medical providers spent much of their
time just washing the injured with sodium bicarbonate and hot water, eventually revealing their identity and the extent of
their injuries.
Because people would come in and they wouldn't even know what they were injured with because
they couldn't see it.
Because they're coated.
Yeah.
The extent of the damage caused by the collapse of the molasses vat was far reaching and honestly
difficult to articulate at this point.
The collapse of many buildings and
the destabilization of the wharf was a very real danger to everyone on the scene. Everything was
destabilized. You didn't know if you were standing on something that was going to collapse. But
that was really only one piece of the whole devastation. Larger pieces of infrastructure
like the girders of the elevated train line had also collapsed,
serving as an impediment to the cleanup efforts.
In the days that followed, huge teams of men worked slowly carrying debris away or pulling
the larger pieces away with trucks, but it was slow going.
Once the debris had been moved, a second team came in behind the first to just look for
more injured survivors.
In some cases cases rescuers
arrived just in time to prevent somebody from being overtaken by the molasses. Like literally
their head and face barely in the surface and they would just get to them in time.
And this would be like days of somebody sitting in molasses. Oh my waiting to be either smothered
to death or rescued. And just sitting there and being cognizant of that the entire time that this could be it. Oh, in the days after
the flood, the men working to clear the area would continue to find bodies among the refuge
wreckage as well. By the 18th, the death toll had risen to 13 as those who were the most
injured in the flood succumbed to their injuries as well. A day later, two more bodies were discovered among the wreckage, and they said they were so
battered and glazed over by the molasses that identification was difficult.
Oh, that's awful.
Among the last to be discovered was 17-year-old Eric Laird, who was a
teamster from Charlestown who was working on the docks when the tank
collapsed. Laird had been working in one of the freight houses when the flood hit,
and his body was wedged so tightly under the
front axle of a car that workers had to quote jack up the
truck and saw pieces of the wreckage before they could retrieve the body.
Jesus Christ, 17 years old. It's really sad. Now ultimately it would
take nearly a week, a full week to clear away most of the large debris
with men working around the clock spraying down the neighborhood with jets of water from fire trucks
and nearly every hydrant in the north end was being used. I mean it was just like the molasses
had covered several blocks of the city in depths of two to three feet so once the syrup had been
washed away large teams of men would follow behind,
scrubbing every surface with stiff bristle brushes
to try to get it all,
because it's just sticky shit now.
Yeah.
["The Little Mermaid"]
Hey, weirdos, I'm Mike Corey,
and like you, I'm drawn to true crime, creepy history, and
all things spooky.
If you particularly enjoyed Ash and Elena's coverage of the USS Indianapolis, where 900
sailors battled rough seas, sharks, dehydration, and madness in the open ocean, you need to
check out my podcast, Against the Odds.
We dive deep into this survival story across four full
episodes, revealing details you haven't heard yet. Each week on Against the Odds, we put you in the
shoes of real survivors, from the Thai cave rescue to Somali pirate hostages to the Donner Party.
These aren't just headlines, they're incredible stories of human endurance.
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By the time everything had been cleared away, the flood was determined to have caused millions
of dollars in property and infrastructure damage, injured more than 150 people and killed
the following 21 people.
Patrick Breen, William Brogan, Bridget Clowardy, Stephen Clowarty, John Callahan, Maria Di Stazio, William Duffy,
Peter Francis, Flaminio Gallerani, Pasquale Lentosca,
Michael Sinnott, James Kennedy, Eric Laird,
George Leahy, James Lennon, Ralph Martin, James McMullen,
Cesar Nicolo, Thomas Noonan, Peter Shaughnessy, and John
Seberlich. That's so sad. We have, I mean from, we have people in their 60s, we have a
10 year old, we have a 17 year old, we have some 20 year olds, we have, or we
have two 10 year olds, Pasquale Lentosca is also a 10 year old, Peter Shaughnessy
is 18 years old, Peter Sennett is 78 years old.
Oh my god. Yeah, it's just it's devastating. It is. It's tragic. Now once the initial shock
and trauma of the event had subsided and this you know they could survey the damage. What everyone
wanted to know was what the fuck happened. How the fuck did this happen? What happened? Like.
It was it sounds like it was just built too quickly.
And they didn't know that. So everybody's like, what the fuck happened? Did an explosion happen?
Just looking back now. Yeah. When he visited the disaster zone in the North End the day the tank
collapsed, Mayor Andrew Peters told the press, quote, Boston is appalled at the terrible accident
that occurred today in the North End. On behalf of her citizens, I extend to the families of those who were injured and of those who lost their lives our most heartfelt sympathy.
An occurrence of this kind must not and cannot pass without a rigid investigation to determine
the cause of the explosion, not only to prevent a reoccurrence of such a frightful accident,
but to place the responsibility where it belongs." Now, Peter's statement was exactly what one would
have expected from a politician in the wake of a tragedy. Absolutely. But it turned
out that determining the cause of the collapse and identifying a responsible
party was going to be a little more challenging than anyone had anticipated.
Yeah. By the following day the Massachusetts District Police's
explosive expert Walter Wedger stated he was quote strongly inclined to the
belief that there was an explosion rather than just a collapse. Okay.
According to Wedger quote if there was only a collapse fright fragments of the
tank would not have been hurled against the elevated structure and caused such
wreckage there nor would the vehicle on commercial Street have been blown to
Adams. I guess that makes sense. Well the Boston
police conducted their investigation. The USIA announced they would be
conducting their own investigation under the direction of Arthur Jell and led by
professors Arthur Arthur Gill and Arthur Miller. So many Arthurs. I love that it's
just a committee of our authors. And they were professors of Harvard and
MIT respectively. I mean, I believe them.
Yeah. So a representative from USIA told the press, we feel sure there was no explosion,
and if there was, it was caused by some outside force and not from within the tank.
Well, it could have been within the tank because the tank is so pressurized.
Exactly. That's the thing. I don't think there has to be an outside explosion.
No. In the weeks after that, the USIA's investigation focused on their theory
that, quote, an anarchist climbed a ladder and dropped a pipe bomb into the
fermentation vent. And that's what caused the tank to explode.
That's quite the leap.
Just an anarchist.
Like what kind of anarchist gets that?
I don't think, I don't think most people would say, you know what I'm going to do
today? I think I'm going to do today?
I think I'm going to explode the molasses tank down the street. I don't know how that would
occur to you. It's a strange message. It is. What exactly are you trying to say? Now the
thing is, we can be like, that's silly business, but it wasn't totally out of the realm of
possibility because in the early decades of the 20th century, anarchists around the United
States did use bombings or the threat of bombings to take a stand against anti-immigration politicians
and corporations they believed were exploiting workers. So like, it's silly to like think about
like somebody climbing a molasses tank and throwing a pipe bomb, but you can see why they at least
threw the theory out there. Because also they just don't understand how this is all working. Well,
you got to start somewhere. Exactly. So USIA attorney Henry Dolan said, we know beyond question
that the tank was not weak. And you have to remember they're saving their own ass. Yeah.
Because that's a whole ass lie. They can't say maybe it just broke and burst. They have to blame it on something like an anarchist, Clarke. He said, we know that an examination was made of the
outside of the base of the structure a few minutes before its collapse. And he insisted that whatever
happened, it was not the company's fault. Despite USIA's certainty that they were not to blame,
District Attorney Joseph Pelletier took the case to the grand jury seeking an indictment
against USIA for 19 counts of manslaughter, clearly believing they were to blame for the
disaster.
I kind of get it.
On February 13th, the grand jury reviewed the case and found that while the tank did
not completely comply with the law fixing a minimum factor of safety, there was insufficient evidence to justify the indictment.
Um, yeah. Okay.
Simply put, the court and the state's investigators rejected USIA's bomb theory and believed that shoddy craftsmanship was at least partially to blame for the tank collapse, but that there wasn't enough evidence to prove it.
So they said, no, we don't think somebody threw a bomb into the thing.
We do think there was some structural issues,
but we don't think there was enough to prove that.
I would feel, I feel like the entire molasses flood
should be enough evidence to prove that some of those-
I think that's pretty good evidence.
Some of those faults and bits there had a,
like that's all you really need.
Well, and in the months, then years that followed,
the courts would rule against the company in civil cases,
ordering them to pay millions in damages.
Yeah, so they basically said, yeah.
The biggest problem investigators had
when it came to identifying the party
or parties responsible for the collapse
was that it was impossible to say with certainty
what had caused the tank to explode.
In fact, to this day, it's still pretty unclear what precisely happened to unleash that giant
of an explosion, though there were several plausible theories.
The most prominent and most likely scenario, and the one that investigators had considered
in their early investigation, is that the dramatic increase in warm weather triggered
the fermentation process, causing a buildup of carbon dioxide inside the small headspace of the tank.
And if the tank had been properly constructed and held to high standards of safety, it likely
could have withstood that buildup of gases.
But in Jell's race to beat prohibition, he had allowed the tank to build pretty quickly
and kind of poorly.
And under the circumstances, the tank walls were unable to withstand that pressure build.
And when it became too much, the entire structure just exploded.
I mean, that's what pressure does.
That makes the most sense.
And again, there's 2 million, right?
2.3 million, I think.
2.3 million gallons of fucking molasses in there. So it's not like it just exploded and
like some molasses oozed out. No, it makes sense that that much chaos, exactly that that
much like tragedy fell. Because molasses is also a thick, viscous liquid. If it's exploding,
it's taken out everything. It's thick. It's got some mass behind it. It's not like this
is just something with nothing behind it. It's not like this is just something with nothing behind it.
It's not like a water tank.
Yeah, like even that would cause damage. And you look at how thick molasses is in comparison to water.
Yeah.
Of course.
And heavy.
Exactly. And just think of a pressure cooker.
Yeah, exactly.
How much damage those can do. I mean, it's crazy.
That's the best way to think of it.
That's essentially what it was. It was a pressure cooker.
I was just gonna say. Now, when considering the entire scenario, author Stephen Palao wrote his good name,
author Stephen with his good name. I don't want to mess up his good name. No, he wrote,
the substance itself gives the entire event an unusual whimsical quality, allowing for it to
easily fall into the category of folklore that's, you know, like half told, half seriously year to year.
In fact, one of the more lighthearted facts of the story is that for decades after the flood,
the North End still smelled of molasses on warm days.
But people will say even now they'll be like, oh, even now on warm days,
you can just smell molasses. And it's like, uh-huh.
Also, you can't.
But imagine how triggering that was for people who had lost a loved one or themselves been injured. Yeah, yeah. And that's the thing.
And it's like, so that was always like the thing. That was like a funny thing. Like, oh, on warm
days you can still smell the elastis so much it leaked into the landscape. But like the reality
of the flood was anything but humorous or whimsical.
It just wasn't. Because of its chemical makeup, molasses, like we said, is real thick, real goopy.
And given the right amount of stress and pressure, it can pick up momentum very quickly and move at
insane speeds. 35 miles an hour? Like you drive in your car at that fucking speed. Ferris Jaber wrote in Scientific American,
because of this physical property,
a wave of molasses is even more devastating
than a typical tsunami.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yep, like we said, moving at speeds,
35, like nearly 35 miles per hour,
the flood grabbed everything in its path
because it was also sticky.
Could grab onto things.
Yep.
And it would toss it into the air or crush it under the immense weight of the liquid
itself.
And once it's settled, the liquid would return to a more gelatinous state, which would trap
people, animals, and property in like an iron vice grip.
Even more terrifying is the fact that because of its viscosity, it's almost impossible to move,
much less swim in molasses. So if you found yourself dragged under the wave, you would have
died a terrible death because you couldn't move. You were just being eaten by it, essentially.
It is only due to the incline of Copse Hill that the flood slowed down at all. Like, thank goodness
there was an incline.
Because if the landscape had been a downhill slope,
the death toll would have been considerably higher.
It would have taken out hundreds of people.
Despite the horror of this whole thing,
there was some good that came out of it.
At the time of the flood, Americans were pretty accustomed
to courts ruling in favor of corporate interests
over those of the people.
And as such, most people likely assumed
no one would be held accountable for the disaster,
even though the evidence was strongly suggesting
lax safety protocols and sloppy work.
But to everyone's great surprise,
Bostonians soon learned that sometimes the courts
will do the right thing.
All right.
In the years-long civil suits that followed,
Judge High Ogden repeatedly ruled in favor
of victims over the USIA.
Hell yeah.
Frequently awarding more to those victims whose suffering had been substantial too.
Ogden basically awarded $6,000 or nearly $600,000 today to people who were killed immediately,
like 10-year-old Maria de Sazio, because she was killed instantly. So he would award that to her family.
They deserved that. And according to my good man, Steven.
Good man, good name. He said then he gave $7,500 to people who suffered before they died.
Like George Leahy, he was trapped in the basement of a firehouse in this little 18 inch crawl space and tried to keep
his head above molasses for four hours before he was asphyxiated. Oh my god what a horrific way to
die. Horrific. Horrific. You can't put like a price on that. Oh no you can't. But the disaster
also had a significant influence on the realm of public safety, both in Massachusetts and around the country.
Following the flood, new regulations were put in place that, you know, it did a lot, but it would also require architects and engineers to show their work and get their plans signed off on by building inspectors and safety regulators.
That's crazy that that wasn't already a thing that was happening.
My good man, Stephen, said the great Boston molasses flood did for building construction
standards what the coconut grow fire did for fire standards.
It's so wild because the entire time we've been talking about the molasses flood, I've
been thinking about the coconut growth.
Yeah.
Because that was also a devastating event that changed the history of Boston.
Of course.
Yeah. Now all those who experienced the molasses flood firsthand have since died.
And these days, the story kind of rarely comes up in discussion of Boston's history.
It really doesn't.
But thanks to my good man, Stephen Pileo, and local journalists, those who lost their
lives in the great molasses flood of 1919 remain remembered today thankfully because they won't let them forget
no that's an important story to tell and it's um steven
poello i think it is well hello i believe it i think that's what you had said yeah
i think i said it around i apologize if i said it wrong my good
man steven wow we're linking all his sources in the
show notes so you can definitely go go take a look at what he has to say go
support my good man ste, with his good name.
Wow, that is a tragic fucking tale.
It's a very tragic tale and it really is.
Interesting though.
Wild that they don't, there should be,
in Massachusetts at the very least,
it should be a whole section in history.
I mean think of how much time, which again we should,
we spend on the Salem witch trials because we're in the area and I never ever learned about this.
Teach people about this because it's also, it's a good lesson in how doing things quickly
and cutting corners can lead to absolute catastrophe.
Yeah, disastrous events.
Yeah.
Wow.
So that is the tale of the Great Molasses Flood in Boston.
Well thank you so much for that. As tragic as it was, it was definitely a fascinating tale.
Yeah, you can read up more about it.
Yeah, a little deviation from like murder, which is always nice.
Yeah, it's just a different kind of tragedy.
One that is interesting and needs to be talked about more.
Yeah, because those people need to be remembered.
Yeah, for sure.
But as always, we hope you continue, no, what?
We hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird.
You know how we have to keep it.
Yeah, just don't cut corners.
No.
Whole ass everything.
Don't half ass things.
Yeah. I'm going to be a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a little bit of a I'm sorry. If you like Morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus
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