San Francisco Chronicle

City marks anniversar­y of Great Molasses Flood

- By William J. Kole William J. Kole is an Associated Press writer.

BOSTON — Slow as molasses? This treacle didn’t trickle. It was a sticky, deadly tsunami that flattened an entire Boston neighborho­od within seconds.

On Tuesday, the city marked the 100th anniversar­y of its most peculiar disaster — the Great Molasses Flood.

It struck without warning at midday on Jan. 15, 1919, when a giant storage tank containing more than 2.3 million gallons of molasses suddenly ruptured, sending a giant wave of goop crashing through the cobbleston­e streets of the bustling North End.

The initial wave rose at least 25 feet high — nearly as tall as an NFL goalpost — and it obliterate­d everything in its path, killing 21 people and injuring 150 others. Rivets popped like machinegun fire. Elevated railway tracks buckled. Warehouses and firehouses were pushed around like game pieces on a Monopoly board. Tenements were reduced to kindling.

Outrunning the molasses was out of the question. The first of it raced through the harborside neighborho­od at 35 mph. Not even Usain Bolt, who clocked just under 28 mph at his world-record fastest, could have sprinted to safety.

And yet a century later, the catastroph­e remains mired in relative obscurity.

“When you first hear of it, the molasses gives the entire event this unusual whimsical quality.

The substance itself kind of begs some incredulit­y,” said historian Stephen Puleo, author of “Dark Tide,” a book about the disaster.

“People’s first reaction is, ‘Are you serious? Did that really happen?’ ” he said.

The tragedy struck as World War I troops were returning from Europe and Boston was still basking in a World Series victory by Babe Ruth’s Red Sox.

The tank was owned by the Purity Distilling Co., and its syrupy contents were used mostly to make alcohol for wartime munitions but also to produce rum before Prohibitio­n kicked in. In a stroke of irony, on the day after the disaster, Nebraska became the decisive 36th state to ratify the 18th Amendment outlawing the production, sale and transport of alcoholic beverages in the U.S.

It ruptured in the city’s oldest neighborho­od, a district popular with tourists and locals alike for its warren of ancient streets lined with Italian restaurant­s and for its historical sites, including Paul Revere’s house and the Old North Church. Those treasured landmarks were spared because they were uphill.

“A dull, muffled roar gave but an instant’s warning before the top of the tank was blown into the air,” The Associated Press reported that day. Rescuers were “greatly hampered by the oozing flood of molasses which covered the street and the surroundin­g district to a depth of several inches and slowly drained down into the harbor . ... If a worker stood still for a minute he found himself glued to the ground.”

Most of the dead were municipal workers killed while eating lunch at a city building.

 ?? Associated Press 1919 ?? The ruins of molasses tanks are seen after erupting in Boston’s North End neighborho­od in 1919.
Associated Press 1919 The ruins of molasses tanks are seen after erupting in Boston’s North End neighborho­od in 1919.

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