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History's A Disaster

Andrew
History's A Disaster
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  • Dublin Whiskey Fire
    Send us a textBlue flames raced down Dublin’s streets as thousands of gallons of whiskey burst from a burning warehouse and turned the Liberties into a flowing inferno. We take you straight into the 1875 Dublin Whiskey Fire—how casks exploded, why water made everything worse, and the moment a fire chief chose manure, ash, and tannery waste to smother an alcohol-fed blaze. It’s a wild story with sharp lessons on urban risk, crowd behavior, and the improvisation that saves cities when playbooks fail.We set the scene in a city stripped by the Acts of Union, where grand Georgian homes had become crowded tenements and the whiskey trade filled vast bonded storehouses beside homes, stables, and tanneries. When Malone’s warehouse ignited, vapor and heat turned containment into chaos. Horses stampeded through blue flame, mourners fled a wake, and soldiers fixed bayonets to guard salvaged barrels as onlookers scooped raw spirit with bowls, hats, and boots. The result was grim and telling: thirteen deaths, none from burns, all from alcohol poisoning after drinking contaminated, unaged whiskey straight from the street.Along the way, we unpack the decisions that mattered. Captain James Ingram understood that an alcohol fire is a spill problem before it’s a structure problem: identify the moving fuel, control the flow, and smother the surface. His call for absorbent waste—ash from privies, horse manure, and tan from tanneries—created a crude, effective barrier that modern responders would recognize as the logic behind alcohol-resistant foam and spill berms. Once the spread slowed, the Dublin Fire Brigade beat back building fires and held the line for days to prevent flare-ups and looting.If you love vivid history with practical takeaways—fire science, urban planning, emergency strategy—this story delivers. Hear how industry, infrastructure, and human impulse collided on a single June night, and what it still teaches about storing risk in the heart of a city. If this episode made you think, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help others find the show.Facebook: historyisadisasterInstagram: historysadisasteremail: [email protected] Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
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  • Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus Train Crash of 1918
    Send us a textA midnight circus run. A hot axle on a curve. An empty troop train racing through signals toward a sleeping engineer. Before dawn near Ivanhoe, Indiana, steel met wood, kerosene met sparks, and one of America’s worst rail disasters turned a rolling home into a furnace. We walk through the Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus Train crash of 1918 step by step—how the show moved by rail, why old wooden cars and open-flame lighting created lethal conditions, and how wartime fatigue and overworked crews pushed a fragile system past its limits.We trace the collision from the brakeman’s flare to the grinding path of the locomotive through multiple sleepers, then into the desperate escapes that drew on acrobat strength and performer grit. Local responders and a delayed fire brigade faced an inferno measured in minutes, not hours. The aftermath is as human as it is historical: the grim work of identification, entire acts erased, and a community forced to rebuild while grieving. At Showman’s Rest, stone elephants bow over shared graves—some named, many marked unknown—reminding us that spectacle and risk have always traveled together.The legal fight centers on engineer Alonzo Sargent, the manslaughter charge, and a not-guilty verdict that split public opinion. We unpack the evidence, the defense’s medical claims, and the broader industry context that made fatigue inevitable. From there, we connect the dots to reforms: phasing out wooden passenger cars, tightening hours-of-service limits, and advancing signal enforcement and automatic braking so safety doesn’t depend on a single tired human. It’s a story about accountability, design choices, and the slow march of rail safety that too often follows tragedy.If this story moved you, tap follow, leave a quick review, and share it with a friend who loves history told with edge and empathy. Got thoughts or questions? Email us at historiesandisaster at gmail.com and join the conversation.Facebook: historyisadisasterInstagram: historysadisasteremail: [email protected] Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
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  • Apollo 13
    Send us a textA routine moon mission that no one was watching turned into the most gripping survival story in spaceflight. We open on the quiet confidence of Apollo-era repetition, then snap into crisis as a routine cryogenic stir triggers an explosion that cripples the spacecraft and forces a complete rewrite of the plan. Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert, and Fred Haise retreat into the lunar module—built for two days on the Moon—and turn it into a four-day lifeboat while Mission Control, led by Gene Kranz, invents procedures on the fly.Together, we trace the pivotal moments that kept the crew alive: the square-peg CO2 fix crafted from plastic bags, cardboard, and tape; the brutal power and water rationing that turned the cabin into a 38-degree freezer; and the manual navigation burns aligned to Earth’s day-night edge and the stars. We unpack the reentry gamble—powering up a frozen command module on a shoestring, hoping the heat shield survived the blast—and the relief of parachutes over the Pacific. Then we dig into the investigation that found the root cause: a damaged oxygen tank, voltage mismatches, and overheated components that transformed small oversights into a catastrophic chain reaction.The conversation draws out the leadership and engineering lessons that still matter: why redundancy saves lives, how to solve with constraints, and how training and structure turn panic into procedure. Expect vivid storytelling, technical clarity, and takeaways you can use—from crisis management and systems thinking to team communication under stress. If space history, engineering problem-solving, and high-stakes decision-making light you up, you’ll feel right at home here.Enjoyed the story and the insights? Subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with a friend who loves space and great problem-solving under pressure.Facebook: historyisadisasterInstagram: historysadisasteremail: [email protected] Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
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  • Meltdown at Three Mile Island
    Send us a textA stuck valve. A wall of alarms. A company line that insisted everything was “fine.” We walk through the morning when Three Mile Island went from a routine shutdown to America’s most defining nuclear scare—and why the fallout was as much about trust as technology.Facebook: historyisadisasterInstagram: historysadisasteremail: [email protected] Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
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  • Crash at Tenerife
    Send us a textOn a foggy March day in 1977, the tiny Los Rodeos Airport on Tenerife in the Canary Islands became an unintended host to multiple diverted jumbo jets after a terrorist bombing closed their intended destination. Among them were two Boeing 747s: KLM Flight 4805 and Pan Am Flight 1736. What happened next would claim 583 lives and revolutionize aviation safety forever.The KLM aircraft was piloted by Captain Jacob Veldhuyzen van Zanten, the airline's chief flight instructor and the face of their advertising—a man whose authority went virtually unquestioned. Under pressure from looming duty-time restrictions and deteriorating weather, van Zanten made a fateful decision to take off without proper clearance, despite his flight engineer's hesitant questions. Meanwhile, the Pan Am jet was still taxiing on the same runway, invisible in the thick fog that had enveloped the airport. Without ground radar, the control tower was blind to the impending disaster, and a cruel radio interference blocked the final warnings that might have saved hundreds of lives.The collision was catastrophic—all 248 aboard KLM perished instantly, while only 61 of the 396 people on Pan Am survived. From this tragedy emerged fundamental changes that have shaped modern aviation: Crew Resource Management training that encourages all cockpit personnel to speak up regardless of rank, standardized communication protocols that eliminate ambiguity, and technological improvements like mandatory ground radar at major airports.Listen as we dissect this tragic chain of events that reminds us how fragile our systems can be when communication breaks down and assumptions go unchallenged. Follow History's A Disaster on social media and share your thoughts at [email protected]. Because understanding yesterday's disasters helps prevent tomorrow's tragedies.Facebook: historyisadisasterInstagram: historysadisasteremail: [email protected] Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
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About History's A Disaster

Bloody history and bloodier crimes. Andrew takes a weekly look at all things bloody. From natural disasters to man made atrocities
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