Fascinating History: U.S. Transcontinental Railroad Completed (10 May 1869)

[This has been rewritten from 2025  and new sources have been added]

East and West Shaking hands at the laying of last rail Union Pacific Railroad
10 May 1869
Andrew J. Russell (1829–1902), Restored by Adam Cuerden
Yale University Libraries (via Wikimedia Commons)

 

The transcontinental railway that connected both coasts in May 1869 meant you could travel between both coasts increasing both cargo and people movement on a scale never seen before.

It is hard to think of a time without cars and airplanes to travel long distances, but for a long time you were limited to just foot, horse, and sail making long distance travel long and even dangerous. The development of the steam engine changed that forever. Trains that could haul people and cargo over distances became practical; steam engines replaced sails with steamships. Rail lines connecting cities appeared allowing for quicker movement of cargo in Europe and the United States. The dream of connecting both coasts was born to avoid sailing through Cape Horn or walking across the Isthmus of Panama and was fulfilled on May 10, 1865.

In 1853, the U.S. Congress approved money for surveys for possible railroad routes. Delays due to where it should begin and of course the looming tensions between North and South delayed it. In 1862–with the Civil War underway–the Pacific Railroad Act was passed which provided loans and public land grants to build the railroad. A second one in 1864 was passed to increase the land grant sizes and allowed the railroads to sell bonds to raise capital. The Union Pacific began westward construction from Omaha, Nebraska and the Central Pacific began constructing eastward from Sacramento, California. Construction was arduous, difficult due to extremes of heat and cold, and often lived in miserable conditions. Chinese laborers who worked for the Central Pacific worked long hours for less pay than their counterparts at Union Pacific.

Construction of rails and tunnels in the Sierra Nevada mountains was difficult, and avalanches would take whole work crews. Dynamite had not been invented yet, so for blasting rock black powder or nitroglycerin was used. Nitroglycerin was not widely known, having been made into a blasting agent by Alfred Nobel in the early 1860’s. Used in its liquid form before dynamite was invented (also by Nobel), was extremely dangerous to handle, sometimes exploding due to mishandling or temperature changes.

In April 1866 70 crates of nitroglycerin exploded aboard a steamship bound for California, killing fifty people. Not long after that a nitroglycerin explosion occurred in San Francisco at the Wells Fargo office killing fifteen people. Railroad workers in the Sierra Nevada were killed transporting nitroglycerin. This resulted in a California law banning liquid nitroglycerin from being transported in the state and Central Pacific using black powder from that point on.

Crates of Nitroglycerin exploded at the Wells Fargo office in San Francisco in 1866. After this explosion, Wells Fargo refused to handle any further shipments of the volatile liquid. The photo above was part of photographic evidence entered into a legal proceeding.
Image: Carleton Watkins (American, 1829 – 1916), photographer
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, 98.XC.167.65

Despite the obstacles and even initially building lines that did not connect, the transcontinental railroad was finished, under budget, and ahead of schedule in 1869. By June 1869 it was entirely possible to travel by rail from Jersey City, New Jersey to the Alameda Wharf in Oakland, CA. There you would catch a railroad owned ferry to San Francisco. Why not go directly to San Francisco? You would have to head down to San Jose and then take a second train, the San Francisco & San Jose Railroad, which came into San Francisco adding additional hours to your trip. Freight cars were unloaded in Alameda, loaded onto special ferries to be transported across the bay to San Francisco. They then would be unloaded onto specially built railroad piers and hauled away by the local railroad that serviced the wharves.

Advertisements carried in The Salt Lake Daily Telegraph showing both Central Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads ability to know travel between both the East and West coasts of the United States. Appeared the week that the two rail lines were joined in Utah on 10 May 1869.
Source: The Cooper Collection of US Railroad History
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

The establishment of the transcontinental railroad made possible quick delivery of passengers, freight, and mail across the country. What used to take weeks or months of travel was now just a week at most. Timetables from that time showed a how long a journey would take:

New Jersey to Omaha: 2-3 days.
Omaha to Sacramento: 2-3 days.
Sacramento to Alameda: 1 day.

No longer the uncomfortable ride on a stagecoach or a long sea voyage. Now it was just at most a week between coasts resulting in a significant boost to the economy. New communities would form where the trains stopped. Immigrants from Europe would now easily move into the interior building homes resulting in new communities filling up the country. The transcontinental railroad united the country, spurred economic growth, and the settling of the country. The railroad remained an important component of travel until replaced by the auto and airplane.

Sources

“Building the Transcontinental Railroad.” Smithsonian Learning Lab. Accessed May 13, 2026. https://learninglab.si.edu/collections/building-the-transcontinental-railroad/n3uf1KkD3VuPYmdq.

Dwyer, Kassandre. “Get to Know the Architects & Builders of the Transcontinental Railroad | TheCollector.” TheCollector. Accessed May 13, 2026. https://www.thecollector.com/get-know-architects-builders-transcontinental-railroad/.

Graves, G. J. “Nitroglycerine!” Central Pacific Railroad Photographic History Museum. Accessed May 13, 2026. https://cprr.org/Museum/Newspapers/Nitroglycerine.html. Newspaper accounts of nitroglycerine explosions.

“Transcontinental Railroad Completed | May 10, 1869  | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified May 28, 2025. Accessed May 13, 2026. https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/may-10/transcontinental-railroad-completed.

“01. Black Powder & Nitroglycerin  – Linda Hall Library.” The Linda Hall Library. Last modified April 8, 2024. Accessed May 13, 2026. https://www.lindahall.org/experience/digital-exhibitions/the-transcontinental-railroad/01-black-powder-nitroglycerin/.

Shedd, Thomas Clark. “The Transcontinental Railroad.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Last modified May 4, 2026. Accessed May 13, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/technology/railroad/The-transcontinental-railroad.

 

Tragic History: The Devastating Eruption of Mount Pelée on 8 May 1902

[Important note: This has been revised and written for 2026 and includes new sources.]

One of the most devastating volcanic eruptions in modern times occurred on 8 May 1902 on the Caribbean island of Martinique. 30,000 people died from the eruption making it the deadliest eruption in modern times.

Martinique
Image: Alexandrin (2012)
Via Wikimedia Commons

Mount Pelée had been active for several weeks prior to its eruption. In April, explosions began at its summit, followed by numerous quakes, ash showers, boiling mud, and thick sulfurous gas clouds affecting the region. This drove ground insects and snakes into Saint-Pierre, causing serious problems for residents and livestock. Fifty people, mostly children, died from snakebites. As volcanic activity persisted, ash contaminated water sources, killing livestock. Outdoor activities near the mountain were canceled, and by May, many were worried.

On 5 May, a crater collapsed sending scalding water and pyroclastic debris in a river which buried both the owner and workers at a sugar works. The lahar traveled at 62 mph (100 kph) until it hit the sea resulting in a small tsunami that flooded lower areas of Saint Pierre. Conditions were worse by May 7 with more ash clouds and ominously a reddish-orange glow could be seen.

 The local government had initially taken little notice despite the occurrences happening near the mountain. A scientific commission headed up by a local science teacher concluded it was no threat despite continued warnings of its activity. People near the mountain were either leaving or being evacuated. Some were also leaving Saint Pierre as well and that was a problem for Governor Louis Mouttet. Saint Pierre was not called the Paris of the Antilles for nothing. It was a major economic hub for the island and while not its capitol, it was the cultural one. With 16 rum distilleries, sugar works, and other production activity, the city generated enormous wealth from its exports. If people became frightened and decided to leave, the economic activity of the city would diminish causing problems for Martinique. So the governor put pressure on the local paper to print reassuring articles that everything would be okay.

Mount Pelée had last erupted in 1851 and despite the ominous roaring from it, was said not to be a threat since lava would not be able to get there owing to the topography of the land. Residents were assured that despite the ash and other issues it raised that they would be safe. Anyone who raised concerns challenging this view were criticized. Those who did choose to leave were lucky as those who remained would die but not from lava but something few knew or truly understood yet: superheated gas coupled with hot ash.

Around 8 am on May 8, 1902, Mount Pelée erupted sending a massive pyroclastic flow to Saint Pierre. Traveling at an estimated speed of 100 mph (160 km) and while cooled by the time it reached the city, was 752 F (400 C).  The superheated gas melted glass, warped metal, and nearly all the 2,000 buildings reduced to rubble or skeleton framework. Only a few walls facing the coastline were left intact; statues had been hurled into the air by the force of the flow. Barrels of rum exploded sending flaming liquid into the streets. Everyone in their homes, places of work or worship, were killed instantly from the superheated gas and ash that was with it. Out in the harbor, 20 ships were destroyed and set ablaze by the heat. One ship–SS Roddam­ from England–managed to escape and make it to St. Lucia to report what happened. However, the hot ash had fallen on the ship, and many passengers were terribly burned and some parts of the ship had fires burning that were put out.

A large black cloud composed of superheated gas, ash and rock rolled headlong down the south flank of Mt. Pelée at more than 100 miles per hour, its path directed by the V-shaped notch at the summit. In less than one minute it struck St. Pierre with hurricane force. The blast was powerful enough to carry a three-ton statue sixteen meters from its mount. One-meter-thick masonary walls were blown into rubble and support girders were mangled into twisted strands of metal. The searing heat of the cloud ignited huge bonfires. Thousands of barrels of rum stored in the city’s warehouses exploded, sending rivers of the flaming liquid through the streets and into the sea. The cloud continued to advance over the harbor where it destroyed at least twenty ships anchored offshore. The hurricane force of the blast capsized the steamship Grappler, and its scorching heat set ablaze the American sailing ship Roraima, killing most of her passengers and crew. The Roraima had the misfortune of arriving only a few hours before the eruption. Those on board could only watch in horror as the cloud descended on them after annihilating the city of St. Pierre. Of the 28,000 people in St. Pierre, there were only two known survivors.

(How Volcanoes Work: MT. PELÉE ERUPTION (1902),Geology Department,University of San Diego)

Remains of St. Pierre by Angelo Heilprin (United States, 1853-1907), 1902.
Public Domain

It was a scene of utter devastation: The French cruiser Suchet was the first on the scene around 12:30 and saw the still burning town. Other ships would soon arrive and were astonished at what they saw. The once prosperous city was gone and unrecognizable. Smoldering fires and flames burned for days keeping rescue parties at a distance. Additionally, the toxic gasses lingering from the pyroclastic flow made the entire area too dangerous to walk around in. There are fifty known survivors; two from Saint Pierre itself. One was a prisoner in the city’s jail. Louis-Auguste Cyparis was in a solitary cell that was thick walled that shielded him from the full force of the pyroclastic flow. He was left with burns on his arms and legs. Pardoned, he became the “Man Who Lived Through Doomsday” with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. A shoemaker survived as he was on a hilltop outside of the city core, so the heat wave only singed and burned him. A young girl was out rowing when it happened and headed to a cave and was not directly hurt from the superheated gas. She did suffer burns later from falling ash and burning debris.

This is not a photo of the eruption on 8 May 1902 but a subsequent one on 27 May 1902
Photo: Angelo Heilprin, American geologist (1853-1907)
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

An eruption on 20 May would cause more devastation killing rescuers, engineers, and those bringing aid to the island. The second eruption also sent a pyroclastic flow that decimated what remained of Saint Pierre. Another eruption August would be its final one and has not erupted since then. It would take weeks to recover all the bodies from under the ash and the death toll was staggering in the end: 28,000-30,000 had perished in the cataclysm. The Paris of the Antilles was gone and never to return. The destruction left Martinique without its primary export hub, which was switched to Fort-de-France, and it was unable to replace it fully due to logistical issues. The sugar cane and banana growers had their crops destroyed by ash and would take until 1906 before it started to come back. The rum distillers were all destroyed causing further economic damage to the island. Other manufacturing in the city had also been destroyed as well. Aid from France and other countries helped those displaced by the eruption and to help rebuild the island. Saint Pierre would never be wholly rebuilt; small villages would take over some of the area it once had. Today it is a small town that people visit to see the ruins and the museum.

Mount Pelée , Saint-Pierre, Martinique
22 May 2019
Image: Rehcral
Via Wikimedia Commons

 

A new science, Vulcanology, was born from this disaster that would scientifically study volcanoes. The Mount Pelée eruption also provided scientific documentation for a phenomenon called nuée ardente, a dangerous pyroclastic flow with an incandescent cloud containing hot gas, ash, bits of the volcano itself. This changed the understanding of volcanic hazards of certain volcanoes and how truly lethal they could be. Today Mount Pelée, like Vesuvius, is closely monitored. According to the Volcanic explosivity index established later, the eruption is measured at 4 making it Cataclysmic.

Sources

Mount Pelee Volcanic Eruption – May 8, 1902 – Devastating Disasters.” Accessed May 11, 2026. https://devastatingdisasters.com/natural/89416459/2016/03/mount-pelee-volcanic-eruption-may-8-1902/.

“Mount Pelée Begins to Erupt, Burying Caribbean City | May 8, 1902 | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified May 27, 2025. Accessed May 11, 2026. https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/May-8/volcanic-eruption-buries-caribbean-city.

“The Catastrophe.” Memorial De Catastrophe 1902. Accessed May 11, 2026. https://www.memorial1902.org/the-catastrophe/.

Evans, Frank. The Tragedy of Pelee. U.S.Naval Institute. Proceedings, September 1938. Accessed May 11, 2026. https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/1938/september/tragedy-pelee.

“How Volcanoes Work – the Eruption of Mt. Pelee, Martinique.” Accessed May 11, 2026. https://volcanoes.sdsu.edu/Pelee.html.

“Discover Saint-Pierre.” La Martinique. Accessed May 11, 2026. https://www.martinique.org/en/towns/saint-pierre.

Remembering History: Sinking of Lusitania (7 May 1915)

RMS Lusitania Coming Into Port (circa 1907-1913)
George Grantham Bain Collection, US Library of Congress, Digital Id cph.3g13287.
Public Domain

On 7 May 1915, the Cunard liner RMS Lusitania sailing from New York to Liverpool was torpedoed off Ireland and sank within 18 minutes. Of the 1,959 passengers and crew aboard, only 761 would survive. 128 of the passengers were American.

World War II had begun in 1914 between Britain, France, and Russia (including Belgium, Italy, Portugal, and Serbia) and Germany, Austria Hungary, and Turkey (then called Ottoman Empire). The United States, under President Woodrow Wilson, declared neutrality. Since the U.S. was a major trading partner with Britain, problems arose when Germany tried to quarantine the British Isles using mines.  Several American ships ended up being damaged or sunk as a result. In February 1915, Germany declared unrestricted submarine warfare around British waters. This meant any ship entering these waters were subject to being attacked and sunk by German forces.

To make this very clear, the German embassy in Washington had advertisements run in New York newspapers in early May 1915 that Americans traveling on British or Allied ships in war zones did so at their own risk. In one case, the announcement was on the same page as advertisement of the Lusitania sailing from New York to Liverpool.

Warning issued by Imperial German Embassy in Washington about travelling on RMS Lusitania.
Author Unknown
Public Domain/Wikimedia Commons

The British Admiralty issued warnings, due to merchant ships being sunk off the south coast of Ireland, to ships to avoid the area or take evasive action (zigzagging was advised). The British objected by pointing out that threatening to torpedo all ships was wrong, whether announced in advance or not. During her construction, subsidized by the British government, it was done with the proviso she could be converted to an armed merchant cruiser.

A compartment was also installed to for the purposes of carrying arms and ammunition if it were needed. Gun mounts were installed for deck cannons, but they were not installed. At the time of her sinking, she was not operating in any official capacity as an armed merchant cruiser. The Germans suspected the ship was being used to transport munitions and her repainting to a grey color was an attempt to disguise her (it was, but to make it harder to spot from a periscope).

The Lusitania was one of the fastest liners on the Atlantic capable of 25 knots (29 mph) with many refinements. With lifts, the wireless telegraph, electric lights, and more passenger space (and more sumptuous accomodations), traveling on the Lusitania or her sister ships Aquitania and Maurentania was considered a good experience by seasoned travelers. The fact that she traveled so fast makes it likely it was simply being in the right place and the right time for the German U-boat. She could not possibly have caught the speedy vessel otherwise (there are arguments about what speed Lusitania was doing at this time off Ireland).

Engraving of Lusitania Sinking by Norman Wilkinson, The Illustrated London News, May 15, 1915
Public Domain(Wikimedia)

Captain William Turner did not use zigzagging while in the area (many argue that it does not really work). The commanding officer of the U-boat,  Walther Schwieger, ordered one torpedo fired around 14:10 (2:10 pm). It struck the Lusitania on the starboard bow. A second explosion within the ship occurred and the ship began to founder starboard quickly. While the crew tried to launch the lifeboats, the severe list made it difficult and impossible in many cases. Only six of the forty-eight lifeboats would be launched. The ship sank in 18 minutes taking with her 1, 198 souls. Of the 764 that did survive (and that is a heroic tale of itself), three would die later from wounds sustained from the sinking. Though close to the coast, it would be some time before assistance arrived. Local fishing ships were the first to provide assistance, and later the naval patrol boat Heron. Other small ships provided assistance as well.

Aftermath

The sinking provoked international fury at Germany. Germany defended its actions saying the ship had been carrying contraband and was an armed auxiliary military cruiser. The reaction within Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey was criticism of the sinking. The German government tried to defend the sinking, even though she was not armed, by saying she was carrying contraband and they had warned this would happen. The official statements did not go over well in the United States or in Britain. Editorials in newspapers denounced what Germany had done calling for more to bring them to heel. It was hotly debated within the Wilson administration what to do. Wilson condemned what Germany had done but internally but William Jennings Bryan, the Secretary of State, argued for trying to convince both Britain and Germany to ratchet down some of the actions that had led to Lusitania sinking. Bryan was antiwar and like many did not want the U.S. getting involved in the European war.

Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson

President Wilson would send three notes to Germany that made his position clear on the issue. First he said that Americans had the right to travel on merchant ships and for Germany to abandon submarine warfare on such vessels. Second, he rejected German arguments about Lusitania. This note caused Bryan to resign and was replaced by Robert Lansing. The third note was a warning that any subsequent sinkings would be “deliberately unfriendly.” That last one made it clear America’s position on the matter. While many wanted to stay out of the war, if the Germans did do it again they likely would find themselves at war with them.

The British government and press were not happy with Wilson over these notes. He was widely castigated and sneered. The reality was that American public opinion was not in favor of war. Wilson knew this and hoped Germany would stop attacking merchant vessels. There was some attempt within the German government to forbid action against neutral ships, which did curtail unrestricted submarine warfare for a while. British merchant ships were targeted, neutral ships treated differently (boarded and searched for war materials), and passenger ships left alone. But in 1917, Germany announced it would resume unrestricted submarine warfare. Wilson was furious and began preparations for war with Germany.

Shop For Lusitania books on Amazon

Sources

“German Submarine Sinks Lusitania | May 7, 1915 | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified February 18, 2025. Accessed May 7, 2026. https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/May-7/german-submarine-sinks-lusitania.

“Lusitania: History, Sinking, Facts.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Last modified March 28, 2026. Accessed May 7, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Lusitania-British-ship.

The Lusitania Resource. “The Lusitania Resource: Passengers & Crew, Facts & History.” The Lusitania Resource. Last modified May 3, 2025. https://www.rmslusitania.info/.

Library of Congress. 2015. “The Lusitania Disaster  | Articles & Essays  | Newspaper Pictorials: World War I Rotogravures, 1914-1919  | Digital Collections  | Library of Congress.” The Library of Congress. The Library of Congress. 2015. https://www.loc.gov/collections/world-war-i-rotogravures/articles-and-essays/the-lusitania-disaster/.

“Torpedoes and Tragedy: The Sinking of RMS Lusitania.” 2023. National WWI Museum and Memorial. 2023. https://www.theworldwar.org/learn/about-wwi/torpedoes-and-tragedy-sinking-rms-lusitania.

 

Remembering History: The Hindenburg Disaster (6 May 1937)

[Note this has been rewritten from 2025 for conciseness and additional source information]

On 6 May 1937, the German airship Hindenburg caught fire and was destroyed while docking at Naval Air Station Lakehurst, New Jersey. Of the 97 passengers and crew, 35 died, and one ground worker was killed.

Airship Hindenburg crash in Lakehurst, New Jersey on May 6, 1937
Photo originally taken by Murray Becker, AP
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

The Silver Giant was the nickname of the German airship Hindenburg. At 804 feet long she was just 80 feet shorter than Titanic and was the largest aircraft ever built. She traveled at 80 miles an hour making a journey from Germany to the United States in 2 ½ days, faster than passenger liners of the day. It was a marvel of aviation to see these German airships move through the skies offering unparalleled views that modern day passenger jets rarely offer. Airships were essentially giant balloons, a technology that had been around since the 18th century and it was the German Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin that developed them. His first creations were only a modest success but World War I saw them used for aerial bombings. Now called Zeppelins, they would drop bombs on unsuspecting people below in London or Paris causing panic. The damage they did was minimal and the British had a hard time shooting them down requiring newer ammunition be developed.

German engineers after the war designed airships as long range passenger ships to cross the Atlantic. While a test flight in 1919 showed it could be done, it would take until 1928 when the age of airship travel began. The Graf Zeppelin, launched in 1928, carried passengers in style that rivaled that of passenger lines. Commercial service between Germany, the United States, and South America commenced. Launched in 1936, Hindenburg made roundtrips to the United States and Brazil. It ?had 25 two person cabins, a bar, restaurant, and smoking lounge. Meals were served three times a day on fine china, with a grand piano as well. It was luxuriously decorated evoking a style only the most upscale hotels or passenger liners would do. One way cost $400 and most considered the experience worth the cost. All the German airships were originally designed to use helium, but the United States banned its export to Germany, so they used hydrogen instead.

Hydrogen being flammable required additional safety measures to ensure it would not contact anything that might ignite it. The smoking lounge was pressurized to keep the gas out. Smoking was forbidden outside of that area. The engines–4 Daimler Benz 16-cylinder engines that gave it were far away from the gas as well. A crew of forty was aboard the airship that day when it arrived in the United States. Despite this, many considered it safe and a better flying experience than taking an airplane. Its only rival was the Pan Am Clipper, which offered service to Asia, and many said was just as good. The future looked bright for airships, but what happened on May 6, 1937, would change that forever.

Scheduled to dock at the Lakehurst Naval Air Station in New Jersey, it first flew over Manhattan to give passengers a spectacular view of the city. The landing was delayed though due to winds of up to 25 knots. Being lighter than air, this would make landings difficult. Heading south until a storm had passed, then turned back at 6 pm and was scheduled to dock at 7 pm. As they approached, they dropped some ballast water splashing onlookers at the landing area. Hindenburg passengers could be seen looking out the windows by people on the ground around 7:21 pm. All looked normal to flight officers and crew were ready on the ground for the mooring line to drop from the tail and rear landing wheel.

Witnesses say they saw a mushroom size flame rise from the top of the tail section, just in front of the tail fin around 7:25 pm.  Crew in the tail heard a detonation that reminded them of a burner on a gas stove. Fire spread rapidly engulfing the midsection in flames before the tail hit the ground. Soon the entire airship was being consumed in flames in just 34 seconds leaving both passengers and crew little time to react. Many jumped when the ship was still high, perishing when they hit the ground. Many were trapped by both furniture and dead passengers. Some managed to walk out when it hit the ground or were rescued from its burning remains. An infirmary was used for survivors, and the press room was converted into a temporary morgue. Only 13 of the 35 passengers survived.

Due to the large number of reporters present, photographs and filming of the arrival was done. Reporters quickly called in their stories and photographs of the burning Hindenburg were quickly developed and published. Live reporting was rare, so most recorded their broadcast for later as was done by WLS (Chicago) reporter Herbert Morrison. His reporting of seeing the Hindenburg being destroyed was played the next day and went down in journalist history and forever associated him with the event. His by the minute account related to everyone who listened to the horror he saw and his interviews with people who saw or survived it as well. One interesting fact though was it was recorded at a higher speed making his voice sound higher than it was. You can listen to the full broadcast by going here.

The extensive investigation that followed resulted in neither German nor American inquiries finding sabotage was the cause. The American report found:

The cause of the accident was the ignition of a mixture of free hydrogen and air. Based upon the evidence, a leak at or in the vicinity of cell 4 and 5 caused a combustible mixture of hydrogen and air to form in the upper stern part of the ship in considerable quantity; the first appearance of an open flame was on the top of the ship and a relatively short distance forward of the upper vertical fin. The theory that a brush discharge ignited such mixture appears most probable.

It was then a tragic accident. A hydrogen leak had occurred and was ignited causing the terrible disaster. In the aftermath of this tragedy, the Zeppelins would continue to fly but their popularity began to wane. The Pan Am Clipper, originally designed to cross the Atlantic but banned by the British wanting to develop their own, showed long range planes were a viable service. In the United States, airship development had met mostly with disaster and was shelved. World War II saw the end of airships, and they never returned to passenger service. After the war, airplanes became dominant replacing passenger liners and trains for medium to long distance travel. While the modern-day versions are just used now for tours and taking live video shots of major events. However, there are some who believe, due to rising fuel costs and other issues, that perhaps airships may yet be viable again.

Over the years countless theories have been put forward to explain what happened to the Hindenburg: lightning, static spark, engine failure, incendiary paint, hydrogen leak, or a fuel leak. Some have argued sabotage was indeed the cause, though proof has been difficult to determine with a high degree of certainty. The tv show MythBusters looked at the incendiary paint theory and determined it was not probable. Occam’s Razor is perhaps the best guide here. The simplest explanation–a hydrogen leak ignited by its contact with air-is probably the truth.

Sources

“The Hindenburg, Before and After Disaster.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed May 6, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/story/the-hindenburg-before-and-after-disaster.

“The Hindenburg Disaster | May 6, 1937 | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified April 24, 2026. Accessed May 6, 2026. https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/may-6/the-hindenburg-disaster.

“All About the Hindenburg — Adam Cap.” Adam Cap. Last modified January 22, 2019. Accessed May 6, 2026. https://adamcap.com/schoolwork/2698/.

“Oh The Humanity! Herbert Morrison and the Hindenburg.” Airships.Net. Last modified February 15, 2017. Accessed May 6, 2026. https://www.airships.net/hindenburg/disaster/oh-the-humanity-herbert-morrison-and-the-hindenburg/.

Disasters. “Seconds From Disaster the Hindenburg | Full Episode | National Geographic Documentary.” Video. YouTube, May 6, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KowvaxobrQg.

Videos & Documentaries

British Pathé. “Hindenburg Disaster – Real Footage (1937) | British Pathé.” Video. YouTube, March 24, 2016. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fURATK5Yt30.

NOVA PBS Official. “Newly Analyzed Footage Helps Solve Hindenburg Mystery.” Video. YouTube, May 17, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFCgipjR2ow.

The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered. “Hindenburg Reconsidered.” Video. YouTube, May 6, 2026. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KxbATAhBiU.

Tasting History with Max Miller, “The Hindenburg Disaster – Dining on the Zeppelin,” Video, YouTube, November 28, 2023, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8BqxWbX_r8.

Disasters. “Seconds From Disaster the Hindenburg | Full Episode | National Geographic Documentary.” Video. YouTube, May 6, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KowvaxobrQg.

Fascinating History: U.S. Starts Building Panama Canal (4 May 1905)

[This has been rewritten for 2026 with updated sources and information.]

View from a unidentified sailing ship during a storm at Cape Horn
Circa 1854-1954 (no exact date exists)
Source: National Library of Australia
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

The dream of sailors for centuries was a simpler way to sail between Europe and Asia. The trek was dangerous no matter which route you took going around Africa or sailing to the bottom of South America through Cape Horn where the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans meet. To access the west coast of North and South America or sailing to China or Japan, the Cape Horn route was preferred. However, the area is treacherous due to both oceans meeting there causing many shipwrecks. Explorers often found their fleets thinned out in this area. The land route through the Isthmus of Panama allowed people to cross from one side to the other allowing people to catch ships on the other end avoiding the Cape Horn route. The road was 49 miles (80 km) and a simple path through the jungle. Built by the Spanish for military rather than commercial use, the walk was not easy, often very hot, with dangers such as malaria and dangerous animals resulting in many injuries and deaths. It was not a journey for the faint of heart. Eventually a railroad would be built to connect both sides, but its limitations meant ships still had to carry large amounts of cargo and people around Cape Horn. The dream of a canal was born but connecting it would prove a far greater challenge than was thought.

Bienvenu! The French Effort to Build the Canal

Ferdinand de Lesseps (1805-1894) photographed by Nadar
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

The Congress for Study of an Interoceanic Canal, headed up by Lesseps, started in 1879 with delegates from all over the world to examine ways to do it. Except only a small number of these delegates were actual engineers. More a fundraising event and to legitimize the idea Lesseps had of sea level canal (itself based on plans by Lucien Bonaparte-Wyse and Armand Réclus). Of the engineers that were present, only one had been to Central America. It was original projected cost was $214 million but Lesseps, for unknown reasons, lowered it to $120 million and six years of construction to build. When construction began in January 1881 at Culebra, the goal was to create a sea-level canal but required extensive removal of rock to do this. Hiring the workers proved easy at first along with engineers. Most of the workers came from African-Caribbean workers from the West Indies. However, deaths from malaria and other causes took their toll and soon replacing workers and engineers became difficult. The death toll from 1881-1889 is estimated to be over 22.000 but considered low by many.

The problems with building the canal became apparent soon. To make the canal feasible and at sea level required not only massive rock excavation but diversion of rivers to prevent currents in the canal. They found at the lowest level it was still 360 feet or 109 meters too high. And they finally realized in 1885 there was no way to resolve this except via a lock canal. Lesseps (and others) resisted this, but engineering studies showed this to be true. The plan was changed in 1887 resulting in a major scandal over this issue. No one had bothered to properly survey before construction began, angering investors and bringing criticism on the project. And news from the construction itself was not encouraging either. High mortality rate, flooding, mudslides slowed construction. Work ended on May 15, 1889, and the company went bankrupt. $244 million had been spent and only two-fifths of the canal was done.

Adieu, France. Hello, United States.

A problem immediately emerged with the Colombia concession resulting in a new treaty to resolve the issue. The Hay-Herran Treaty of 1903 gave the U.S. the rights to build the canal in Panama. However, the Colombia senate did not ratify it leaving the U.S. with company and land but no rights to build in Panama. The peoples who lived in Panama had in the past sought independence that Columbia had refused. President Theodore Roosevelt made it known that if they sought it again, the U.S. would support it.  This happened on November 2, 1903, when people in Panama were moving to declare independence from Colombia and the USS Nashville was in Colón Harbor at the time.

Photograph of the USS Nashville (PG-7) at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Virginia, 8 January 1898
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Colombian troops had also arrived with the intent on boarding the Panama Railroad to stop the insurrection in Panama City. The train was blocked by Nashville crew under the authority of an 1846 treaty that transit across the Isthmus remain neutral. A detachment of both sailors and Marines took control of the rail yard. With Nashville’s guns pointed right at the Colombian camp, things were tense and Colombian forces under Colonel Eliseo Torres threatened attack. The Nashville aimed her broadside guns directly on the Colombian positions and they backed down. Independence for Panama was declared on November 3, and the new government gave the U.S. the Panama Canal Zone. Additionally, the U.S. gave $10 million, got the rights to administer and canal defense, and to split the fees for canal use. This was formalized on May 4, 1905 (called Acquisition Day) and construction would commence.

Construction began in 1905 and was completed by 1914 with a 52-mile canal connecting both the Atlantic and Pacific. This now allowed the commercial traffic to avoid using the Cape Horn route making travel times much quicker. The 10-mile Panama Canal Zone would grow in status and importance. All but the supersize ships can use the canal; they still must take the long trek down to Cape Horn.

Panama Canal (1923)
Original Source: Historical Atlas” by William R. Shepherd, New York, Henry Holt and Company, 1923
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Updates

2025: Since 1999, the Panama Canal Authority has contracted with foreign companies that operated and controlled ports in the canal zone. Panama also contracted with a Chinese company to oversee administration and operation of the canal that came under sharp criticism by President Trump concerned that it gave the Chinese too much power over the Panama Canal. Panama ended its contract and currently seeking bids from other companies to administer and operate the canal.

2026: Panama has developed a 10-year modernization plan that will upgrade the canal, build new terminals on both side, installation of a gas line to allow gas to move from one side to the other without the need of ships to pass through, and improving crossing times for ships. Also Panama will regain control of ports formerly contracted with foreign companies thus increasing its control over the canal.

Sources

“Panama Canal: History, Impact & Canal Zone.” History.com. Last modified April 30, 2026. Accessed May 4, 2026. https://www.history.com/articles/panama-canal.

“Panama Canal Treaty 1977.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed May 4, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Panama-Canal-Treaty.

Worthington, William E. “Panama Canal.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Last modified April 29, 2026. Accessed May 4, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Panama-Canal.

“Ships off Panama 1903.” Navy League Panama Foundation. Accessed May 4, 2026. https://www.navyleaguepanama.org/ships-off-panama-1903/.

Brigham, Lawson W. “Reinventing the Panama Canal.” Proceedings (U.S. Naval Institute) Vol. 152, no. 1 (January 2026). Accessed May 4, 2026.https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2026/january/reinventing-panama-canal.

Videos & Documentaries

HISTORY. “Modern Marvels: The Construction of the Panama Canal (S1, E3) | Full Episode | History.” Video. YouTube, August 15, 2020. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6LNuRW9t4JA.

Steve Noble. “Panama Canal – Full Transit- Time Lapse.” Video. YouTube, March 11, 2016. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8TkcWhmByg.

Tips For Travellers. “The Dos and Don’ts of PANAMA CANAL CRUISES!” Video. YouTube, March 19, 2022. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uk75Umge8mw.

Welcome to May!

Welcome to May!

May, from the Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry (1412-1416)
Limbourg brothers (fl. 1402–1416)
Public Domain (Wikimedia Commons)

May is the fifth month on both the Gregorian and Julian calendars and has 31 days. The name May (Maius in Latin) is named for the Greek goddess Maia who represents nurturing and renewal. She was co-identified with the Roman goddess Bona Dea who was associated with fertility, healing, and the protection of women. Her festival took place in May, so both were intertwined. May is the last full month of spring in the Northern Hemisphere (and autumn in the Southern Hemisphere).

The first full moon in May is called the Flower Moon as it coincides with blooming flowers.  There is an adage for May: “A warm January, cold May,” As the transitional month between spring and summer, you can get both warm and sunny days followed by chilly ones as well. In older times, people used to shutter up their houses (or specific rooms in larger houses that could not be used in winter) for the winter. May was often the time to open the house back up again and let the warm spring air inside. On the old television show The Beverly Hillbillies granny would remove everything from the house to clean thoroughly inside.

Bouquet of beautiful red roses
Davidjose365, May 2015
Wikimedia Commons

In ancient times, festivals celebrated plants beginning to bloom. The tradition continues to this day with many festivals held in Europe and elsewhere. By the end of May, summer is approaching and many are already prepared for it. While astronomically it does not begin until mid-June, most mark the last day of June as the beginning of summer. Schools are ending for the summer, and many people begin to start their summer vacations also in May. For those interested, the May symbols are the emerald (birthstone), and for flowers lily of the valley and hawthorn.

Sources

———. “The month of May 2026: Holidays, fun facts, folklore.” Almanac.Com. Last modified April 23, 2026. Accessed April 30, 2026. https://www.almanac.com/content/month-may-holidays-fun-facts-folklore.

Rehberger, Georg. “May Is the Fifth Month of the Year.” TimeandDate.com. Accessed April 30, 2026. https://www.timeanddate.com/calendar/months/may.html.

———. “The Surprising History of May | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified May 27, 2025. Accessed April 30, 2026. https://www.history.com/articles/history-may-month.

Remembering History: Hitler Commits Suicide (30 April 1945

U.S. Army newspaper Stars and Stripes announcing Hitler’s death
2 May 1945
Original source: U.S. Army
Public Domain/Wikimedia Commons

Adolf Hitler, the leader and founder of the 1,000 Reich, committed suicide along with his wife Eva Braun. His death would end the war in Europe.

Since the defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad in 1943, it had become increasingly apparent that Allied forces had turned the tide. Germany had lost North Africa, Italy had been liberated, and Allied troops were on German soil. The capture and execution of Benito Mussolini also weighed on Hitler’s mind in his final days in the underground bunker. Since learning the war was lost with Soviet troops now in Berlin, he had become more erratic.

Hermann Goering, head of the Luftwaffe and Hitler’s designated successor, tried to take over but was denounced, arrested, and stripped of his powers. Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, had entered into secret negotiations with the Allies via Sweden. Hitler had considered him one of his most loyal subjects, but when the BBC announced the negotiations, he too was denounced, stripped of his powers, and ordered arrested. Both would commit suicide later; Himmler not long after he was caught and Goering the night before his scheduled execution for war crimes.

Most of Hitler’s aides and lieutenants had left except for General Krebs, Martin Bormann, and Joseph Goebbels. Albert Speer had been ordered to carry out a scorched earth policy in Berlin but declined to do it. Hitler believed Germany was unworthy and allowed themselves to be defeated. In the early hours of April 29, 1945, Hitler married his long-time mistress, Eva Braun. He dictated his will and political testament. The will was short while the testament laid out a defense of his life and actions taken for Germany. He also appointed those to lead after his death.

On the afternoon of April 30, 1945, Hitler shot himself in the head (though some argue he took poison in case he survived) while Eva took poison. He ordered both bodies be burned in the Chancellery Garden. Goebbels transmitted the message to Admiral Karl Doenitz that he had been appointed president by Hitler. Goebbels and his wife would take their own lives later but would first kill their children with cyanide. His death was announced on May 1, 1945, by Hamburg Radio. The surrender of German troops in Italy and elsewhere would begin thereafter and all German forces had surrendered by May 5, 1945. Celebrations broke out after his death and later the full capitulation of German forces. The war in Europe was over but the war against Japan would continue for several more months.

Sources
Adolf Hitler Commits Suicide in His Underground Bunker | April 30, 1945 | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified May 28, 2025. Accessed April 29, 2026. https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/april-30/adolf-hitler-commits-suicide.

Bullock, Allan. “Adolf Hitler.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Last modified April 29, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Adolf-Hitler/World-War-II.

Huxen, Keith. “The Death of Adolf Hitler.” The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. Last modified March 29, 2020. Accessed April 29, 2026. https://www.nationalww2museum.org/death-of-adolf-hitler.

Videos

HistoryChannel. “May 1, 1945: BBC Radio Announcement of Adolf Hitler’s Death.” Video. YouTube, November 7, 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btHJYt5YE9s.

Release – Topic. “Death of Hitler: German Announcement, 8 May 1945.” Video. YouTube, November 11, 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C6U_5cCoZvM.

Suggested Reading

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. This post may contain affiliate links, which means I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you.

 Ambrose, Stephen E. Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest. Simon and Schuster, 2017.

Ambrose, Stephen, and C. L. Sulzberger. American Heritage History of World War II. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016.

———. Citizen Soldiers: The U.S. Army from the Normandy Beaches to the Bulge to the Surrender of Germany June 7, 1944, to May 7, 1945. Simon and Schuster, 2013.

———. D-Day: June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II. Simon & Schuster, 1994.

Gilbert, Martin The Second World War: A Complete History (Elsevier, 2004).

Hanson, Victor Davis. The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won. Basic Books, 2017.

Keegan, John. The Second World War. Penguin Books, 2005.

Snyder, Louis Leo. Encyclopedia of the Third Reich. 1976. Reprint, New York, NY, United States of America: Marlowe & Company, 1989.

Remembering History: Mussolini Executed by Italian Partisans (28 April 1945)

 

Benito Mussolini
Public Domain

Benito Mussolini, who once ruled Italy and created Fascism, was executed by Italian partisans while attempting to flee Italy.

Benito Mussolini started out as Communist, became dissatisfied with it, and conceived a new ideology called Fascism that fused elements of Communism with Nationalism. Italy after World War I was economically suffering. It had supported the Allies and was promised territory but got nothing. Mostly agrarian based with only a few centers of large industry, Italy was considered backward by European standards. Mussolini sought to change this by making people believe in Italy again. Being an ardent Communist and editing one of Italy’s prominent Communist newspapers, he originally believed in its principles but World War I disillusioned him. He crafted a new ideology, Fascism, that incorporated elements of both Communism and Nationalism, that would bring about a better nation.

His movement garnered many supporters eager to make Italy a better and stronger nation. After King Emmanuel III dissolved parliament in 1921, Mussolini used this to demand more power. His party had gained seats and with uniformed members out on the streets, highly visible as well. They gained power in cities, and the Black Shirts went after Communists and Socialists destroying their offices. In 1922, King Emmanuel was faced with major problems of civil unrest. Calling out the army did little good and the Fascists controlled many municipalities. A march on Rome brought Mussolini and thousands to Rome demanding he be put into power. To avoid more unrest, King Emmanuel appointed him as Prime Minister and would rule Italy from 1923-1943.

Fascism, like Communism, disdained democracy as weak and governed as a one-party state where dissent was limited. Dissidents were imprisoned or executed depending on the severity of their actions. All media–print, radio, and movies–had to reflect the views of the government. Journalists had to belong to a national organization that would bound them to support Mussolini. Every aspect of life in Italy came under its control as Mussolini envisioned it would. The Catholic Boy Scouts were dissolved and replaced by a Fascist one called Opera Nazionale Balilla and all young boys were encouraged to join but it became mandatory in 1937. Much of what the Fascists did in Italy would become the model for Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party in Germany. Though Mussolini at first disdained Hitler, they eventually became friends. Both believed that Fascism was on the march and would replace the old order of Europe. The Spanish Civil War of 1936 saw both Hitler and Mussolini support General Francisco Franco against the Communist inspired government backed by Moscow.

Mussolini seized Ethiopia in 1935 sparking world-wide outrage over the use of mustard gas. Hitler backed him and both countries would exit the League of Nations in 1937. With the signing of the Pact of Steel in 1939, Mussolini had tied Italy to Germany’s war aims. Italy faced problems building up its military. It sorely lacked the industrial capability to build its own munitions, ships, and other necessities. Because of boycotts and refusals to sell resources from other countries, Italy became reliant on Germany for them. Germany also put pressure on Italy to adopt its policies about Jews and its eugenics policies. Scholars disagree on whether Mussolini was truly antisemitic or indifferent. He enacted some laws to satisfy them, but Germany was unhappy since they were considered lax by their standards. Only foreign-born Jews living in Italy would be deported. Jews in Italy and its territories faced no deportations until the Germans took control in 1943.

The signing of the Pact of Steel on 22 May 1939 in Berlin
Photographer unknown
Public Domain/WIkimedia Commons

World War II did not go well for Italy. From losing battles and needing German assistance in Greece and North Africa, it began to wear thin. Inflation and rationing caused unrest; Allied bombings of Rome and other places brought it home. The invasion of Sicily in 1943 and later southern Italy showed that the war was lost. Disillusionment with Mussolini was now louder resulting in the Fascist Grand Council, with the support of King Emmanuel, ousting Mussolini and starting negotiations to end the war. The Germans were furious and Mussolini, being held at Hotel Campo Imperatore on a remote mountain top, was rescued. Germany would invade and take control of Italy and its territories. Mussolini was put in charge of an Italian puppet state and would execute many who had removed him from power, including his son-in-law Count Galeazzo Ciano.

By April 1945 with increased partisan attacks and Allied troops making their way towards Milan, Mussolini and his mistress Clara Petacci fled inside German transports heading north near the Swiss border on April 27. Mussolini had hoped to flee to Spain where he hoped Franco would give him sanctuary. Unfortunately, partisans stopped the German transports on. After exchanging gunfire and lengthy negotiations, the partisans were allowed to search for Italians in the transports. Mussolini had put on a Wehrmacht noncommissioned officers coat and a helmet but was recognized. He, his mistress, and about fifty other Italians with him (some were wives and children) were arrested. Mussolini was taken to Dongo on Lake Como, interrogated and then put into a room with others who had been captured with him. He made a statement critical of Hitler and saying Stalin was the victor. He also signed a statement he had not been ill-treated.

The following day he, Clara, and others with him were shot and killed. Contradictory statements by different people over the years has made it difficult to pinpoint exactly who gave the order. Many of the partisans were aligned with Communist groups backed by Moscow, which used a radio beamed from Moscow (Radio Milano-Libertà) for Italians to announce his arrest. So many believe it was in the chain of command within those groups that ordered Mussolini’s execution. There are also different accounts as to what happened during the actual execution. They were executed with several bullets in their chests. The bodies were taken to the Piazzale Loreto in Milan and dumped there for all to see. People threw vegetables, spat on them, urinated, kicked the famous head of Mussolini, and even shot more bullets into their bodies. By the time American troops arrived, the scene was out of control. The bodies were taken to a half-built service station and hung upside down for all to see. The famous photograph was distributed showing to the world that the Duce was dead.

Piazzale Loreto, 29 April 1945, the displayed bodies of executed Italian fascists. From left to right, Nicola Bombacci, Benito Mussolini, Claretta Petacci, Alessandro Pavolini, Achille Starace
Photo: Vincenzo Carrese (1910–1981)
Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

His body, first buried in an unmarked grave then stolen, recovered, and then hidden in a monastery, is now at the family crypt in Predappio in Romagna.

Sources

“Benito Mussolini: Children, Death & World War II – HISTORY | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified June 30, 2025. https://www.history.com/articles/benito-mussolini.

Citno, Robert PhD. “Death of the Duce, Benito Mussolini.” The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. Last modified April 27, 2020. https://www.nationalww2museum.org/death-of-benito-mussolini.

Deac, Wil. “How Did Benito Mussolini Die? The Story Behind Il Duce’s Last Moments.” Warfare History Network. Last modified March 13, 2024. https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/how-did-benito-mussolini-die-the-story-behind-il-duces-last-moments/.

Foot, John. “Benito Mussolini.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Last modified April 24, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Benito-Mussolini.

“Mussolini, Mistress Executed by Firing Squad – UPI Archives.” UPI, April 29, 1945. https://www.upi.com/Archives/1945/04/29/Mussolini-mistress-executed-by-firing-squad/7511360114334/.

Videos

CriticalPast. “Dead Body of Benito Mussolini Lay on a Street of the Village Giulino Di Mezzegra …HD Stock Footage.” Video. YouTube, April 26, 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsnDmdVJtPE.

History Comes to Life. “Mussolini Dead, 1945 | Restored News Footage.” Video. YouTube, August 2, 2011. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mV7Cp9v13xI.

Remembering The Sultana Tragedy (27 April 1865)

On 27 April 1865 the steamboat Sultana, carrying recently released Union prisoners of war, exploded on the Mississippi River, killing 1,450 to 1,900 people. This disaster remains the deadliest maritime loss in U.S. history.

Sultana 26 April 1865 at Helena, Arkansas and obviously overcrowded. So many crowded on the port side to be in the photograph that it caused issues for the ship.
Original source: United States Library of Congress
Public Domain
Photo: Public Domain (U.S. Library of Congress, digital id#cph.3a48909)

The Sultana was built as a side-wheel steamboat in Cincinnati in 1863. The 260-foot-long wood steamboat transported passengers and freight between St. Louis and New Orleans on the Mississippi River. She was powered by four fire-tube boilers which could generate twice the amount of steam as conventional boilers. The one major drawback is that each boiler required water levels to be always maintained. Since it used river water, this had to be carefully monitored as sediment would block flues. And if the water level got too low hot spots would develop and an explosion would occur. With steamboats of this period using light weight wood that was covered with oil-based paint, fires were a major concern.

J. Cass Mason was the Sultana’s captain and was part owner. He was an experienced captain but had gotten into trouble trying to ship contraband. The Sultana departed St. Louis on 13 April 1865 for New Orleans. When he arrived at Cairo, Illinois on 15 April, he learned the shocking news of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. Grabbing a stack of newspapers, he immediately departed south as many places had no telegraph and would not learn the news of this event. Arriving in Vicksburg, he was approached by Captain Reuben Hatch, the chief quartermaster. He had a problem. The recently released Union Army prisoners of war needed to get home. And the government was willing to pay $2.75 for each enlisted man and $8.00 for each officer. Hatch knew that Mason needed the money and offered a 1,0000 Army soldiers. To secure this “guarantee” though, Hatch would get a kickback. Mason agreed and the Sultana continued its journey to New Orleans. Sultana departed New Orleans on 21 April 1865 with approximately 70 passengers, some livestock, and a crew of 85. On the way to Vicksburg, one of the boilers leaked and the steamboat limped into Vicksburg to pick up the Union prisoners heading home.

The boiler needed immediate repair but that would take several days. Mason was concerned that this delay would cost him money and other steamboats would take the released Union prisoners. The mechanic was ordered to make temporary repairs which only took a day hoping to make the full repair when he arrived back in St. Louis. Meanwhile the Sultanabegan taken on the prisoners. The ship had an official capacity of 376 people but would take on 1,950 of the prisoners along with 22 guards and 70 passengers. Every available space was used, and the overflow was so severe that at some places there was noticeable creaking and sagging requiring wooden beams for support. As Sultana departed on 24 April, it was carrying 2,127 people. Making matters worse, a massive Spring flood had occurred making it difficult traveling upriver. When she arrived in Helena, Arkansas on 26 April, a photo was taken showing how overcrowded the vessel was. Arriving at Memphis that night, she unloaded 200 men and sugar before departing around midnight to pick up coal upriver. Around 1 am, the ship continued its journey.

At 2:00 am on 27 April 1865 when Sultana was about seven miles north of Memphis, a massive explosion occurred with one boiler and then the three others exploded. The effect was catastrophic with it tearing through the crowded decks killing many and destroying the pilothouse. The ship was a burning hulk without anyone to steer it. The smokestacks collapsed causing further damage and death. Many became trapped inside as the forward part of the upper deck collapsed onto the middle deck. The twin openings of the main stairway survived allowing many to run down them. However, broken wood on the ship caught fire with the now exposed furnace boxes turning the ship into a raging inferno. Many jumped into the water, some in whole groups. Many were still recovering from their imprisonment and lacked the strength to survive. Whole groups of men clung together in desperation and perished together. Some grabbed ahold of debris to stay afloat.

The steamer Bostona was already heading downriver and came upon the scene at 2:30 am. She rescued scores of survivors in the water. Meanwhile many who had survived were being carried downriver by the current towards Memphis. There were cries of help heard and this caused the docked ships, several steamers and naval ships, to come to their aid. The water was icy cold from the spring runoff and many perished from hypothermia or drowned. A few survivors were even found on trees near the swollen riverbanks. Bodies of victims would be found downriver for months. Nearly all the Sultana’s officers perished including Captain James Cass Mason.

The news was greeted with shock when it was reported. Then it disappeared from the news. The assassination of President Lincoln and hunting down the assassin and those who aided him filled the news. It was not forgotten by the survivors nor by the people of Memphis, who went out of their way to assist those who had survived the disaster. The official investigation concluded that improper water levels along with overcrowding and being top heavy all contributed to the disaster. Another investigation in 2015 suggests that the quality of the metal in the boilers, the use of river water often filled with sediment, and the design of the boilers all contributed to the explosion. Some have speculated that sabotage was involved and while intriguing, no proof has been found to substantiate it. The PBS show History Detectives (2 July 2014) debunks those claims and focuses on the overcrowding and corruption as the major issues.

Despite the catastrophe, no one was held accountable. The military commission that investigated the tragedy determined the boiler explosion was the cause and discounted entirely the fact the ship was overloaded. J. J. Witzig, the supervising inspector of steamboats, found that the patch used for the emergency repair was too thin for the pressure of the return trip. There were other inquiries that pointed fingers at various officers that resulted in the overcrowding of the Sultana. Ultimately a court martial was ordered and both Captain Hatch and Captain Frederic Speed, who had overseen the troops being sent to the ship, were ordered to appear.  Hatch, who had allegations of corruption in the past and had been promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, never appeared. Speed was found guilty of all charges and to be dismissed from the service. This was overturned by the Army Judge Advocate General who determined Speed was not responsible for the actual loading, but Captain George Augustus Williams was.

It was Williams inaccurate numbers to Speed that caused problems with the exact numbers aboard Sultana. Williams was not prosecuted by the Army. Hatch, on the other hand, was relieved of his duties as chief quartermaster on 3 June 1865. Sometime later he was aboard the steamer Atlanticcarrying $14,490 in government money. A thief broke into the safe stealing the money but was captured before docking in St. Louis. However, there was $8,500 missing from the government money that Hatch claimed was in the safe. He was found in violation of government regulations in transporting the money and held liable for its loss.

In the wake of the disaster, safety laws for steamships were changed. The boilers responsible for the explosion were banned. The Act of 1871 established and revised the older Steamboat Act by creating a Steamboat Inspection Service giving it power to regulate all commercial steam-powered vessels, implement measures to protect passengers and crews, requiring licensing of ship masters and chief mates (and the authority to revoke them), and issue nautical rules for steamboat operations. This would shift to the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation (BMIN) in 1936 which was part of the Commerce Department. It would shift to the Coast Guard starting in World War II and has stayed there ever since.

The remains of the Sultana were found 1982 but not in the Mississippi River but under a soybean field on the Arkansas side of the river. The Mississippi River has changed course over the years and so now the remains are on dry land and 2 miles east of where it was in 1865. Various memorials exist to the victims. The Sultana Disaster Museum has opened in Marion, Arkansas. The disaster remains as one of the worst maritime disasters in the United States and yet few know of it.

Sources

Blakemore, Erin. “Why Nobody Remembers America’s Worst Maritime Disaster | HISTORY.” HISTORY. Last modified May 27, 2025. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://www.history.com/articles/why-nobody-remembers-americas-worst-maritime-disaster.

Rust, Randal. “Sultana Disaster of 1865 | Tennessee Encyclopedia.” Tennessee Encyclopedia. Last modified March 1, 2018. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/sultana-disaster-of-1865/.

Eschner, Kat. “This Civil War Boat Explosion Killed More People Than the Titanic.” Smithsonian. Last modified April 27, 2017. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/civil-war-boat-explosion-killed-more-people-titanic-180963008/.

Voulgaris, Barbara. “Sultana Fire – a Maritime Disaster That Helped Shape the Coast Guard’s Marine Safety Mission.” U.S. Coast Guard. Last modified April 25, 2025. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://www.mycg.uscg.mil/News/Article/4166478/sultana-fire-a-maritime-disaster-that-helped-shape-the-coast-guards-marine-safe/.

“STORIES | Sultana Museum.” Sultana Museum. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://www.sultanadisastermuseum.com/stories-from-the-sultana.

“Sultana: Titanic of the Mississippi.” Last modified April 27, 2001. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://www.unexplainedcases.com/2009/10/sultana-titanic-of-mississippi.html.

“The Sultana Disaster.” American Battlefield Trust. Accessed April 27, 2026. https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/sultana-disaster.

Videos

Fascinating Horror, “The Sinking of the Sultana | a Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror,” Video, YouTube, November 16, 2021, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=08Q-7YKw_RY.

The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered, “The Sultana Explosion, a Maritime Disaster,” Video, YouTube, March 23, 2017, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DLKI4VltuE.

 

 

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