DROWNING IN MOLASSES — SHOW NOTES Overview On January 15, 1919, Boston's North End was shattered by one of the strangest and most devastating industrial disasters in American history: the Great Molasses Flood. A massive steel tank—poorly built, poorly maintained, and filled to the brim with fermenting molasses—exploded without warning. A tidal wave of sticky, suffocating syrup tore through the neighborhood at nearly 35 miles per hour, killing 21 people, injuring more than 150, and leaving a path of destruction that took years to fully repair. Key Themes • Corporate negligence — The tank's owners ignored repeated warnings, complaints, and visible leaks. • Human cost — Ordinary residents, laborers, and children were caught in a disaster no one imagined possible. • Chaos and heroism — First responders fought to save lives in a landscape transformed into a suffocating swamp. • Legal aftermath — The resulting lawsuit became one of the first major class‑action cases in U.S. history. • Legacy — The disaster reshaped building regulations and industrial safety standards nationwide. Historical Background • The tank belonged to the United States Industrial Alcohol Company, which rushed its construction during WWI to meet demand for industrial alcohol. • Residents complained for years that the tank leaked so badly children collected molasses in cups. • The company painted the tank brown to hide the leaks rather than fix them. • On the morning of the explosion, temperatures rose rapidly, fermenting the molasses and increasing internal pressure. The Explosion • At 12:40 p.m., the tank ruptured with a sound witnesses compared to machine‑gun fire or a collapsing building. • A 25‑foot‑high wave of molasses surged outward, destroying buildings, buckling elevated train tracks, and sweeping people and horses into the harbor. • The nearby firehouse was crushed, trapping firefighters in a rising pool of syrup. • Survivors described the molasses as "quicksand"—thick, heavy, and impossible to escape. Casualties and Damage • 21 dead, including workers, children, and first responders. • 150+ injured, many permanently. • Entire blocks were coated in molasses up to three feet deep. • Cleanup took months, and the smell lingered in the North End for decades. Investigation and Lawsuit • The company blamed anarchists and sabotage. • Investigators found: • Thin steel plates • Poor riveting • No engineering oversight • Ignored warning signs • After a lengthy trial, the company was found liable and paid $628,000 in damages (about $10 million today). • The case helped establish modern building inspection and safety standards.