THE GREAT MOLASSES FLOOD OF BOSTON 1919
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast
Jon Hagadorn
4.5 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 11 March 2026
⏱️ 8 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
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.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi everyone. I'm John Haggardorne. And welcome to Found in the Footnotes. |
| 0:14.0 | Amazing history in 5 to 10 minute sound bites. Now ready to be discovered every Wednesday at 4 p.m. Easter time, right here at 1001 Heroes. |
| 0:22.8 | Another gem rises to the surface, and our story begins. |
| 0:28.1 | On January 15, 1919, the north end of Boston woke up to an unusually warm day. |
| 0:35.6 | For January, it was almost pleasant. The kind of day that tricks you |
| 0:39.4 | into thinking winter is done with you. No one knew this warmth was about to make history. |
| 0:45.5 | Sticky, slow, incredibly sweet history. Because at 12.40 p.m., a wall of molasses exploded into the city. |
| 0:55.0 | Yes, molasses. |
| 0:57.0 | Let's set the scene. |
| 1:03.0 | Picture Boston in 1919. |
| 1:07.0 | The first World War has just ended. |
| 1:10.0 | The city is busy, industrial, loud. Horses still pull. The First World War has just ended. |
| 1:13.3 | The city is busy, industrial, loud. |
| 1:15.6 | Horses still pull wagons. |
| 1:17.2 | Kids play in the streets. |
| 1:21.5 | The air smells like salt, coal smoke, and optimism. |
| 1:30.6 | Towering over the North End is a steel tank, 50 feet tall, 90 feet wide, owned by the United States Industrial Alcohol Company. Inside it, 2.3 million gallons of molasses. Why molasses, you ask? |
| 1:41.9 | Because molasses could be fermented into industrial alcohol, which was used for explosives. You know, wartime vibes. The tank had been leaking for years. Locals joke that you could scoop molasses out the sidewalk. Kids dipped sticks into it. This was not, in hindsight, a great sign. |
| 2:07.6 | At 12.40 p.m., the tank failed. Not slowly, not politely. It ruptured. |
| 2:15.6 | Witnesses described as sound like a machine gun, followed by thunder. |
| 2:20.3 | A 25-foot high wave of molasses surged through the streets at an estimated 35 miles per hour. |
| 2:29.3 | Let me say that again. |
... |
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