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On This Day in History (Jan 15, 1919) Somewhat of a Sticky Situation.

Posted on 1/15/23 at 10:29 am
Posted by blueridgeTiger
Granbury, TX
Member since Jun 2004
22365 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 10:29 am


quote:

At around 12:40 p.m., the mid-afternoon calm was broken by the sound of a metallic roar. Before residents had time to register what was happening, the recently refilled molasses tank ripped wide open and unleashed 2.3 million gallons of dark-brown sludge. “A rumble, a hiss—some say a boom and a swish—and the wave of molasses swept out,” the Boston Post later wrote. A fifteen-foot wall of syrup cascaded over Commercial Street at 35 miles per hour, obliterating all the people, horses, buildings and electrical poles in its path. Even the solid steel supports of the elevated train platform were snapped.

The Boston Globe would later write that the force of the molasses wave caused buildings to “cringe up as though they were made of pasteboard.” The Engine 31 firehouse was knocked clean off its foundation, causing its second story to collapse into its first. The nearby Clougherty house, meanwhile, was swept away and dashed against the elevated train platform. Martin Clougherty, having just woken up, watched his home crumble around him before being thrown into the current. “I was in bed on the third floor of my house when I heard a deep rumble,” he remembered. “When I awoke, it was in several feet of molasses.” Clougherty nearly drowned in the gooey whirlpool before climbing atop his own bed frame, which he discovered floating nearby. The barman used the makeshift boat to rescue his sister, Teresa, but his mother and younger brother were among those killed in the disaster.




Great Molasses Flood of 1919

Posted by MugMan
Member since Dec 2022
442 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 10:32 am to
Colder than mole's asses in January.
Posted by Spankum
The Sip
Member since Jan 2007
62903 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 10:33 am to
That’s crazy…I have never heard of that event!

Somebody make a pan of biscuits….
Posted by LSUtigerME
Walker, LA
Member since Oct 2012
3960 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 10:38 am to
It’s unfathomable to me what that would have looked like. A tidal wave of molasses that destroyed a town.

I used to hear about this event at least once a year. It’s one of the events that lead to the creation and adoption of the various ASME codes and standards that we use today (tank, boiler, piping, and pressure vessel design).
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
134920 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 10:39 am to
So much for that saying about being slower than molasses going uphill in winter
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
75735 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 11:14 am to
I've listened to a couple good podcasts on this. I think The Dollop did one.
Posted by BondJamesBond
Too Far from Tiger Stadium
Member since Oct 2011
419 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 11:59 am to
We need more waffles.
Posted by deuceiswild
South La
Member since Nov 2007
5200 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:13 pm to
I think it would have looked very impressive, tho not as impressive as the accounts would lead you believe.

I’ve worked near several 2 million gallon tanks. Yes, they’re big. But not THAT big. The molasses would have spread in all directions most likely and not all headed down a single street in tidal wave fashion. Certainly not a 15’ today wave, unless you were standing within 30’ of the tank.
Posted by HeLeakin
Member since May 2014
3671 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:16 pm to


iykyk
Posted by Heyes
Baton. Rouge
Member since Jul 2013
833 posts
Posted on 1/15/23 at 12:28 pm to
That has to be a sticky situation
This post was edited on 1/15/23 at 12:29 pm
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
134920 posts
Posted on 1/16/23 at 9:25 am to
quote:

The molasses would have spread in all directions most likely and not all headed down a single street in tidal wave fashion. Certainly not a 15’ today wave, unless you were standing within 30’ of the tank.


I disagree. Due to it likely splitting at a seam, and the high viscosity of molasses, as well as the cold temperatures, I think it highly likely that the buildings on the street, combined with the above factors, make a wave likely
Posted by blueridgeTiger
Granbury, TX
Member since Jun 2004
22365 posts
Posted on 1/15/24 at 10:48 am to
One year anniversary of the OP.
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