sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2019-01-15 02:55 pm

One hundred years from now on this very spot there'll be a quiet park where the children can play

I don't get up at aaagh o'clock for everybody, just partisan songs, Yiddish theater, and the dead.

There were twenty-one dead of the molasses flood, wrecked by the shrapnel of the tank's burst brittle steel or the debris cresting its sticky, stiffening wave or suffocated outright in what Stephen Puleo in his definitive account called the dark tide; it splintered buildings, tossed cars, flattened streetlights, crumpled the tracks and trestles of the Atlantic Avenue Elevated. Photographs of the time show an almost absurd devastation of matchsticked houses and warehouses, sheared-off roofs decorated with buckled girders and dismembered wheels, livelihoods and lives all wiped across the smeary plain of what's now Langone Park. Everything glistens balefully. A hundred and fifty injured were recorded in addition to the dead. I assume the numbers come from the landmark class-action suit successfully brought against the United States Industrial Alcohol Company, parent company of Purity Distilling which had built the tank in 1915 and maintained it so poorly from the start that local families were accustomed to collect their own molasses from the constant leak. It is not true that on hot days in the North End you can still smell molasses, although it is apparently true that for weeks after the disaster Boston itself was generally sticky.

Seven years ago, [personal profile] spatch and I joked about baking molasses cookies for the centenary and eating them on Copp's Hill. Instead we joined a memorial organized by the City of Boston Archaeology Program and the Boston Parks Department. January 15, 1919 was unseasonably warm; it was one of the contributing factors to the perfect sugarstorm that was the Great Boston Molasses Flood. January 15, 2019 was bright and biting, the sky and the harbor the same pale streaked floe-blue and my fingers numb by the time we'd walked up Commercial Street from North Station. With the rest of the small crowd which included [personal profile] a_reasonable_man, we stood in a ninety-foot circle following the remains of the molasses tank, whose location and perimeter had been recently mapped by UMass Boston's Fiske Center. Boston Archaeologist Joe Bagley spoke briefly about the occasion before yielding home plate to Boston Parks Commissioner Chris Cook, who read the names of the dead and held a moment of silence. Together with Representative Aaron Michlewitz they laid a wreath of white roses at the center of the tank. And then everything broke up very quickly, because everyone was very cold. Probably due to our position against the third-base fence, we do not really show up in any of the coverage I've seen, but there were cameras everywhere, so if you see one person in a black hoodie and a green canvas coat and another in a leather jacket and a sort of fur-lined-looking hat, hello.

Afterward we wandered up the granite steps and switchbacks of Copp's Hill Terrace and then down into the North End, where we did not eat at Antico Forno because they opened half an hour later than we could stand to wait around in the cold; we walked to the Boston Public Market, where we had respectively shakalatkes, a bagel, and ramen, and collectively a nice conversation with the vacationing couple from Maine sitting across the table from us. Then it took me and Rob forever to get home because the new schedule of the 89 is awful; it has stripped out easily half the buses; they no longer run on the twenty-minute or even half-hour schedule that allowed us to get to Sullivan or Davis on a reasonable timetable rather than much too early or slightly too late or just not at all. That, too, is Boston. I guess.

I'm very tired, but I am glad we got up for this ceremony. It was the kind of magic that needed a critical mass to work: enough participants to form the circle, to map the space that failed and killed and to remember why we need regulations as well as heroes. I liked the commissioner's promise that the park would always stay open and safe for children, the best way he could think of to redeem it from tragedy. It was a good thing to be part of.

Someone had left a jar of molasses on the wall.
thisbluespirit: (Default)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2019-01-15 09:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I liked the commissioner's promise that the park would always stay open and safe for children, the best way he could think of to redeem it from tragedy. It was a good thing to be part of.

Someone had left a jar of molasses on the wall.


It does sound like a good thing. I'm glad you could go.
isis: (Default)

[personal profile] isis 2019-01-15 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Okay, what are shakalatkas? It's an awesome name!
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2019-01-15 11:23 pm (UTC)(link)
and maintained it so poorly from the start that local families were accustomed to collect their own molasses from the constant leak. --I've heard of people collecting water this way. But molasses!

The jar of molasses is excellent.

--And the occupations of the dead: "laborer, teamster, homemaker, child..."

Thanks for going, and thanks for sharing about it!
dhampyresa: (Default)

[personal profile] dhampyresa 2019-01-15 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I had never heard of this before. I'm glad you got to go.
lauradi7dw: (Default)

[personal profile] lauradi7dw 2019-01-16 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the report. I was kicking myself this morning that I hadn't heard of it in time, because I read the archeology report *yesterday.* There is a free indoor talk + trolley ride + walk on Saturday,
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-great-molasses-flood-free-talk-walking-tour-tickets-54320026662
but I'd have to leave quite early in order to get to Old North in time for practice. My current plan is to buy a small bunch of flowers and leave them by the plaque.
The (elderly even in the 1980s) late former sexton at Old North, Al Mostone, remembered the event.
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)

[personal profile] julian 2019-01-16 02:07 am (UTC)(link)
I am extremely glad you went. Thank you.

(I couldn't, due to conflicts.)
child_of_the_air: Photo of a walkway with a concrete railing, with a small river bordered by leafless trees in the background. (Default)

[personal profile] child_of_the_air 2019-01-16 02:22 am (UTC)(link)
Wow...that ceremony sounds wonderful, and I'm glad that it happened and that you were able to go. Thank you for telling us about it.
a_reasonable_man: (Default)

[personal profile] a_reasonable_man 2019-01-16 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
And Nicole Sharp, whom I've talked with about the Molasses Flood, today released this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5sYoUnp5A0
alexxkay: (Default)

[personal profile] alexxkay 2019-01-16 06:02 am (UTC)(link)
According to Alan Moore's _Providence_, the ghouls who lived beneath Boston (the ones who Modeled for Pickman) were *very* happy about the Molasses Flood.
tree_and_leaf: Watercolour of barn owl perched on post. (Default)

[personal profile] tree_and_leaf 2019-01-16 01:27 pm (UTC)(link)
That sounds like a good thing to have been a part of.