Monday, March 2, 2015

A Forgotten Disaster: The Sultana


Destroyed in an explosion on 27 April, 1865, the steamboat Sultana was a Mississippi River paddle-wheeler. 

It was the greatest maritime disaster in United States history. An estimated 1,800 of the 2,400 passengers were killed when one of the ship’s four boilers exploded, and the Sultana sank not far from Memphis, Tennessee. 

The reason that this disaster was mostly forgotten by history is because it took place soon after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, and during the closing weeks of the Civil War. Most of the new passengers were Union soldiers, chiefly from Ohio and just released from Confederate prison camps such as Cahawba and Andersonville. 

The US government had contracted with the Sultana to transport these former prisoners of war back to their homes. The cause of the explosion was a leaky and poorly repaired steam boiler. The boiler (or “boilers”) gave way when the steamer was just north of Memphis at 2:00 A.M. in a terrific explosion that sent some of the passengers on deck into the water and destroyed a good portion of the ship. Hot coals scattered by the explosion soon turned the remaining superstructure into an inferno, the glare of which could be seen in Memphis, about 7 to 9 miles away.



Today's Reflection:
You're so ugly that your parents take you everywhere with them just so they don't have to kiss you goodbye.

Live Long and Prosper...

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