Worcester, Massachusetts
Boiler
Explosion
July
22, 1859
Terrific Boiler Explosion at Worcester.
[From the Worcester Spy, July 23.]
One of the most terrific explosions that ever
occurred in this vicinity took place in this
city yesterday afternoon, at the wire factory of
MESSRS. I. WASHBURN
& CO., on Grove street. The large steam boiler,
thirty feet long and four feet in diameter, and
weighing about five tons, attached to their
powerful engine, exploded with tremendous force,
shattering the engine house (which is of brick)
into atoms, demolishing a portion of the walls
of the main building adjacent, and injuring
several workmen, one severely, but it is hoped
not fatally.
So immense was the force of the explosion
that the ponderous boiler, leaving the fire-box
and the crown-sheet behind, shot through the
engine-house walls into the air, to an altitude
of two hundred feet at the highest, as estimated
by many observers, and reached the ground,
striking with the top downward, in the garden of
MR. J. M. C. ARMSBY,
on Lincoln street, over a quarter of a mile
distant and driving itself into the earth to the
depth of four feet; but it rebounded from the
garden, and breaking off a portion of the top or
rim, which it left buried there, finally spent
its force in landing itself on the furthest side
of Lincoln street, where it lay extending
diagonally across. It tore away MR. ARMSBY'S
fence for a width of fifteen feet, and injured
the fence of MR. J. H..
GERAULD. One of the blues of the
boiler, being disengaged after the bursting off
of the top or rim, shot out, and precipitated
itself alongside of the boiler in the street.
The explosion produced a dull, heavy sound,
and was not very extensively heard. As the
report of the occurrence spread, the
consternation and excitement thereby produced
was very great. It is a long time since there
has been anything like it in Worcester. The gas
explosion last winter produced an excitement
like this in some respects.
There were over one hundred men at work in
the factory at the time, and a number of persons
were at work upon the grounds outside. It seems
almost miraculous that all escaped with their
lives and that so few were injured. When the
boiler rebounded across Lincoln street, two men
were riding by in a carriage, and very narrowly
escaped death. The following persons were
injured: JOHN
MORRISSEY, a middle-aged man, was at
work outside, wheeling gravel, and was struck by
the steampipe. He had two ribs broken, and was
injured internally seriously, if not fatally.
HENRY C. WILSON, the engineer, was
badly bruised by the flying bricks, and
considerably injured, but not seriously. MR.
WILSON was not regularly at work, having been
ill several days. He happened to come out
yesterday, after dinner. The engine was in the
care of another person.
DANIEL GUILFORD was slightly
injured by the flying bricks.
WILLIAM PROUTY
was bruised but not badly. He was about to enter
the engine room, and was providentially delayed
by some circumstance.
PATRICK GUMFORTH was injured badly
across the back, but not seriously.
Within a hundred feet of the place where the
boiler struck the garden is the residence of
WILLIAM A. WHEELER,
Esq., that of MR. ARMSBY being not
more then twenty feet distant. Had that
ponderous mass of iron struck either of those
elegant mansions, (and it might have fallen upon
the roof of either,) the structure would have
been crushed in a moment, and there could have
been nothing but instant death for the inmates.
The weight of the mass could not have been less
than three and a half tons, and it had gone
flying over the tops of building to the place
where it fell.
The cause of the catastrophe is explained by the
proprietors of the establishment in this way:
While some of the men were at work hoisting
up wire, the rope became entangled around the
shafting, rendering a stoppage of the engine
necessary, with a closing of the safety-valve.
The consequence was an increased pressure of the
steam, which caused the explosion. This was the
state of the case as they understood it. Perhaps
some other explanation may be found on further
inquiry. The boiler was strong, and had all the
modern improvements. It was made by Thurston,
Gardner, & Co., Providence, R. I., and cost
about $1,000. It had been in use some five
years, and the proprietors were about to
exchange it for a new one. The engine had been
stopped only some four or five minutes when the
explosion occurred. The damage to the building,
which is owned by Hon.
Stephen Salisbury, is not for from
five thousand dollars. The damage to the engine
must be considerable.
Philadelphia Press Pennsylvania 1859-07-27
Submitted & transcribed by Stu
Beitler Thank you,
Stu!

Search for more information on the
Worcester Boiler Explosion and other disasters in the Historical Newspapers on line at genealogybank.com.
Search over 1300 different newspapers.
Search for ancestors in
Worcester, MA among billions of names at ancestry.com.
Find birth records, census images, immigration
lists and genealogy other databases for your
surnames. Use this
Free trial to search for your ancestors.
Massachusetts Census, 1790-1890
Searchable
database online at ancestry.com. Use this
Free trial to search for your ancestors.
|