I Survived True Stories: Five Epic Disasters

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by Lauren Tarshis


  New weapons, like the machine gun, tanks, and

  poisonous gas, made the battles more horrific than

  any before. At the war’s height, tens of thousands

  of soldiers were dying every week. By the time the

  war finally ended, nearly nine million soldiers had

  lost their lives.

  In the war’s final months, another horror hit

  the world: the influenza epidemic of 1918. The

  flu first appeared in Europe. It spread quickly

  through the dirty hospitals packed with wounded

  soldiers. Within the year it had circled the globe,

  killing fifty million people, including more than

  650,000 Americans.

  But finally, after years of terror and death, the

  war and the flu epidemic were over. Anthony

  might have even sensed a mood of hopefulness

  on that pleasing January day. The residents of

  Boston’s North End had every reason to believe

  that better times were just ahead.

  The molasses tank loomed up

  over Boston’s North End.

  They were wrong.

  A shocking disaster was about to strike

  Anthony’s neighborhood. In fact, a deadly threat

  had been looming over the North End for years.

  It was not a German bomb or a killer disease.

  It was a giant steel tank filled with molasses.

  FROM PIES TO BOMBS

  Molasses is a thick brown syrup that was once the

  most popular sweetener in America. Like white

  sugar, molasses comes from the sugarcane plant,

  which grows in the Caribbean and other hot and

  humid regions. Until the late 1800s, white sugar

  was so expensive that only rich people could

  afford it. Molasses was cheap. So despite its bitter

  taste, it was molasses that sweetened colonial

  America’s tasty treats, like pumpkin pie,

  gingersnaps, and Indian pudding.

  By the 1900s, sugar prices had dropped, and most

  Americans no longer needed to sweeten their foods

  with cheap molasses. The sticky brown syrup was

  being put to a new and

  perhaps surprising use: as

  an ingredient in bombs.

  Heated up in a process

  known as distillation,

  molasses can be turned into a liquid called

  industrial alcohol. In this form molasses became a

  key ingredient in the explosives used in the war

  against Germany.

  All during World War I, ships loaded with

  millions of gallons of molasses arrived at Boston’s

  ports. Trains would transport the gooey cargo to

  distilleries, where the molasses was turned into

  industrial alcohol. From there it went to factories,

  where the alcohol was used to make bombs,

  mines, grenades, and other weapons.

  In 1914, the leaders of one molasses company,

  United States Industrial Alcohol (USIA), decided

  to build an enormous molasses storage tank near

  Boston Harbor. The tank was constructed very

  quickly, and it was massive — bigger than any

  tank ever built in Boston. The company now had

  a place to store molasses between its arrival by

  ship and its journey by train. When full, the tank

  could hold 2.7 million gallons of molasses. As if

  the North End wasn’t already grim enough, now

  a three-story steel tank towered over the neigh-

  borhood, blotting out the sun and blocking the

  view of the harbor.

  But it wasn’t only the tank’s ugliness that upset

  the residents of the North End.

  Just hours after it was first filled with molasses,

  brown syrup had started leaking from the seams

  of the tank, oozing like blood from a wounded

  body. When the tank was filled, it rumbled and

  groaned, as though the steel walls were crying out

  in pain. USIA’s own workers reported the leaks and

  shared their fears that the tank was not safe. Their

  bosses refused to try to fix the leaks. Instead, they

  hired painters to coat the tank with brown paint.

  This way it was harder to see the brown molasses

  dripping down the sides.

  Many people living near the tank worried it was

  unsafe. But what could they do about it? USIA

  was a big company, and the people in the North

  End were poor and powerless. Many did not speak

  English. Even a person bold enough to complain

  about the dangerous conditions would have had a

  hard time finding anyone willing to listen and help.

  And so the years passed. The tank leaked so

  badly that neighborhood children would gather

  there when they wanted a sweet treat. They’d

  bring sticks to use as spoons and scoop up molasses

  from the puddles that surrounded the tank. The

  groaning of the steel grew louder and louder —

  until the moment on that January day in 1919,

  when Anthony di Stasio was heading home.

  VIOLENT SWIRL

  The first sign of disaster was a strange sound:

  Rat, tat, tat, tat. Rat, tat, tat, tat. Rat, tat, tat, tat.

  Many believed it was machine-gun fire and

  dove for cover. In fact, it was the sound of the

  thousands of steel rivets that held the molasses

  tank together popping out of place. After years of

  strain, the tank was breaking apart.

  People froze in their tracks. Horses reared up

  in panic. And then came a thundering explosion.

  Kaboom!

  “Run!” a man screamed. “It’s the tank!”

  Anthony looked up just as the molasses tank

  seemed to crack apart like a massive egg, unleashing

  Some of the wreckage

  after the molasses

  flood, with part of

  the collapsed tank

  in the background

  its 2.7 million gallons of thick, sticky molasses.

  The molasses formed a gigantic brown wave —

  25 feet high and 160 feet wide. It moved at a

  staggering 35 miles per hour, faster even than

  the modern cars that sped along the streets. The

  sticky syrup was far heavier and more destructive

  than a wave of ocean water. And unlike a wave

  unleashed from the sea, the molasses crashed out

  in all directions.

  Within seconds, the wave crushed wooden

  houses and flattened a three-story fire station. It

  destroyed train tracks, swept away motorcars,

  crushed cars and wagons, and snapped electrical

  poles in half. Giant pieces of the tank’s metal

  turned into missiles. The thousands of steel rivets

  shot through the sky like bullets. Anthony and

  dozens of others were caught in the raging swirl.

  The wave pulled Anthony under. Molasses

  gushed into his mouth. He was carried for several

  blocks until he crashed into a metal lamppost.

  The blow knocked him out. A firefighter saw

  Anthony pinned against the lamppost. Rushing

  through waist-deep molasses, the man grabbed

  Anthony just before he was swept away.

  The firefighter held Anthony’s limp body and

  looked at his molasses-coated face. The poor boy,

  the firefighter believed, had not survived.

 
; By the time the wave lost its power, a half mile

  of the North End was flooded with molasses.

  Firemen waded

  through knee-deep

  molasses.

  Hundreds of firefighters, police officers, nurses,

  and sailors from docked ships rushed to the scene.

  They waded through the river of molasses to get

  to the trapped and injured. Many victims were

  caught under collapsed buildings and tangled in

  molasses-soaked debris. Rescuers worked through

  the night, bringing hundreds of people to a

  makeshift hospital set up in a nearby warehouse.

  In the end, 21 people were killed, and 150 were

  injured. Tens of millions of dollars in property

  was destroyed.

  The clean-up lasted for months. Plain water

  did little to wash the thick, syrupy molasses

  away. Instead, firefighters used salt water to scour

  the hardening goo from the streets. Volunteers

  got on their hands and knees to try to scrub

  molasses from the streets and sidewalks. People in

  ground-floor apartments had to throw away their

  furniture and rugs. So much molasses had flowed

  into Boston Harbor that the water was stained

  caramel-brown for weeks.

  THE TANK WAS BOMBED?

  Within hours of the spill, leaders of USIA had

  announced that the disaster was not their fault.

  They concocted a story: A bomb had destroyed

  the tank. It was a lie, of course. But the story

  wasn’t completely far-fetched. At the time, crimi-

  nals known as anarchists were terrorizing people

  An ambulance drives

  along the ruined

  streets.

  in Boston and other cities. These people hated the

  government and big companies. Just weeks before

  the molasses flood, an anarchist’s bomb had

  destroyed a North End police station.

  At first, USIA had no trouble blaming

  anarchists for the tank disaster. But as the police

  began their investigation, another story emerged.

  Experts sifting through the wreckage found no

  signs of bomb damage. As police spoke to

  residents, they heard about the years of leaks and

  strange noises that echoed from the tank. Slowly

  the truth came out: The tank had been hastily

  built, and USIA’s own workers had repeatedly

  warned their bosses that the tank was a disaster

  waiting to happen.

  It didn’t take long for investigators to pin the

  blame on USIA. But still the company refused to

  take responsibility. At that point, there were no

  laws that made it illegal to build a shoddy tank in

  the middle of a crowded neighborhood. USIA, it

  seemed, would get away with murder.

  But people in Boston were outraged. And it

  would turn out that the poor immigrants of the

  North End weren’t so powerless after all. Families

  who had lost relatives and homes hired lawyers

  and demanded justice. There was a trial that

  dragged on for years. In the end USIA was forced

  to pay one million dollars (equal to about seven

  million dollars today). For the residents of the

  North End, it was a big victory. And their case

  helped bring about new laws. Massachusetts was

  A section of the collapsed molasses

  tank after the explosion

  the first state to require people to get permits

  before constructing a tank or any structure.

  Building plans had to be approved before

  construction could begin. Similar laws were soon

  passed throughout the United States.

  The molasses flood

  was front-page

  news in Boston—

  and around the

  country.

  THE STRANGEST DISASTER

  It took years for the North End to rebuild after

  the flood. The millions of gallons of molasses had

  filled basements and seeped into cracks in the

  street. Even now, on hot days, some claim that

  A historical marker in Boston’s North End

  is the only reminder of the flood.

  the sweet scent of molasses rises up from the

  sidewalks of the North End, like a ghost.

  But somehow this disaster has been largely

  forgotten. There are no museums and no

  monuments to those who died. The only remnant

  of the flood is a small metal plaque in Boston’s

  North End. Indeed, few have ever heard of the

  Molasses Flood of 1919 and the incredible stories

  from that day — like the story of Anthony di

  Stasio. Anthony’s limp, molasses-soaked body was

  taken to a large building that was being used to

  store the bodies of those who had died. He was

  covered with a sheet.

  But Anthony wasn’t dead, only unconscious.

  Hours later, he woke up to the sound of his

  mother’s voice calling him. Anthony tried to

  answer. But his mouth was filled with molasses.

  Suddenly he sat up. And soon he was surrounded

  by his family, a lucky survivor of one of the strangest

  disasters in American history.

  THE

  BOSTON

  MOLASSES

  FLOOD FILES

  I first heard about the Boston molasses

  flood from an I Survived reader, who

  e-mailed, “Mrs. Tarshis, you have to write

  about this!” I was intrigued and started

  researching. Like pretty much everyone who

  first reads about this disaster, I was shocked

  and amazed. How did something like this

  happen? Why don’t we all know about it?

  Read on for more about what life was like

  in 1919.

  New

  technology!

  This brilliant

  invention

  changed the

  world.

  Kids in 1919 played

  baseball just like you!

  IF YOU LIVED DURING

  THE BOSTON MOLASSES

  FLOOD . . .

  The year 1919 in America was a time of excitement and

  change. Over the next decade, a mood of hope brightened the

  country. Here’s what your life might have been like if you had

  been living back then.

  For the first time in history, the majority of

  American kids were going to school. But

  teachers were strict! Misbehaving

  kids could get spanked!

  By day . . .

  Left: Students hard at

  work

  Below: Children playing

  baseball in Tenement

  Alley, Boston

  Turn it up! Radios like this

  played news, music, comedies,

  and serious “radio plays.”

  At night, you

  and your family

  would gather around your radio

  to listen to music, news, and

  radio plays.

  Hop into your family’s

  car — a Ford Model T. This was

  the world’s first truly affordable

  car, and soon America’s streets

  were crowded with them. But

  be careful. Roads were terrible,

  and cars, horses, and buggies

  shared them. Accidents were

  common, and seat belts were still

&
nbsp; decades away.

  By night . . .

  $350:

  The cost of a

  Ford Model T

  in 1919.

  A Ford

  Model T

  A jazz band

  gets ready

  to play.

  Exotic sounds filled the air — a new

  kind of music called jazz.

  Few inventions in history

  have changed the world

  as quickly as Thomas Edison’s lightbulb — no

  more candles and smelly oil lamps.

  New music . . .

  New inventions . . .

  T

  he Washburn A Mill in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was the

  largest flour mill in the world when a spark ignited flour

  dust that filled the air. Eighteen people were killed in the fire

  and collapse of the building. The disaster made news around

  the world, and led to changes in the way large mills were run.

  The mill was quickly rebuilt and was soon back to grinding

  two million pounds of flour per day.

  ANOTHER STRANGE AND

  DEADLY DISASTER:

  THE GREAT MILL DISASTER, 1878

  The

  Washburn

  A

  Mill,

  in Minneapolis,

  Minnesota, after

  the great explosion

  of 1878

  WORLD WAR I :

  FOUR BLOODY YEARS

  T

  he molasses flood happened just months after the end of

  one of the great tragedies of the twentieth century —

  World War I. The war was fought mostly in Europe, with

  Germany leading one side and the Allied Forces of England,

  France, and Russia leading the other. By the time the war was

  finally over, in November of 1918, roughly one hundred

  countries felt the impact of this terrible “world war,” the

  bloodiest the world had ever known.

  At first, Americans managed to stay out of the fighting. But

  by April 1917 the United States could no longer stay on the

  sidelines. In the end, more than two million American troops

  headed to Europe and helped the Allied troops defeat Germany.

  After the war ended, it became known as “the war to end

 

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