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This day in history - the Great Molasses Flood
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On Jan. 15, 1919, at around 12:30 p.m., Boston Police patrolman Frank McManus was at a call box reporting back to headquarters when he heard a loud scraping and grinding noise. Pausing to figure out the source, he suddenly found himself overcome with shock.


McManus managed to make out to the dispatcher: “Send all available rescue vehicles and personnel immediately — there’s a wave of molasses coming down Commercial Street," according to Stephen Puleo, historian and author of “Dark Tide: The Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919.â€


The wave was 2.3 million gallons, moving at 35 miles per hour, 25 feet high and 160 feet wide at its outset, rushing through the city's crowded and densely populated North End.


A massive, 50-foot-high steel tank holding the molasses had ruptured. People in its direct path were immediately swallowed, drowned and asphyxiated by the notoriously viscous substance.


Within seconds, two city blocks were flooded. Puleo told NBC News that the tide of molasses ripped the Engine 31 Firehouse from its foundation, almost sweeping the building into the Boston Harbor. The brown wave busted windows, overturned railcars and flooded homes. By sunset, 21 people were dead, 150 were injured and the North End looked like it had been bombed.


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/great-boston-molasses-flood-1919-killed-21-after-2-million-n958326


Can you imagine cleaning up 26 million pounds of molasses in the winter? Guess there is a reason we have building codes.


I'm beginning to think that we are much more fucked than I thought.
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Re: This day in history - the Great Molasses Flood [j p o] [ In reply to ]
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This is the epitome of fake news. Everyone knows that molasses is slow.

"As slow as molasses".

Sad.

How does Danny Hart sit down with balls that big?
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Re: This day in history - the Great Molasses Flood [j p o] [ In reply to ]
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j p o wrote:
Can you imagine cleaning up 26 million pounds of molasses in the winter? Guess there is a reason we have building codes.


Literally ;) . And I mean literally literally. The great molasses flood was the cause of building codes. After this, Boston required a licensed professional to stamp drawings, and the rest of the country followed suit.

The tanks were behind this fence:
https://www.instagram.com/...rce=ig_web_copy_link

Pictures from BPL:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/boston_public_library/sets/72157624622085789/


My favourite is this one:
[url=https://flic.kr/p/8wWPun][/url][url=https://flic.kr/p/8wWPun]Boston elevated twisted into new shapes, after Molasses Disaster[/url] by [url=https://www.flickr.com/...ston_public_library/]Boston Public Library[/url], on Flickr


The molasses was so strong, it bent the elevated rail trusses!
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Re: This day in history - the Great Molasses Flood [BLeP] [ In reply to ]
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BLeP wrote:
This is the epitome of fake news. Everyone knows that molasses is slow.

"As slow as molasses".

Sad.

Not to mention that it was January, in Boston (I'm sitting at Logan right now and it's about 34°).
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