Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Here Is Another Pic From My Files, San Antonio City Cemetery

In Railroadiana > Show & Tell.
All items96857 of 244521Man standing at lamp post lampVintage rhinestone jewellery
23
Love it
0
Like it

bucketheadbuckethead loves this.
ttomtuckerttomtucker loves this.
gargoylecollectorgargoylecollector loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
ManikinManikin loves this.
ho2cultchaho2cultcha loves this.
PostCardCollectorPostCardCollector loves this.
PhilDMorrisPhilDMorris loves this.
TreyTrey loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
RadegunderRadegunder loves this.
kyratangokyratango loves this.
NevadaBladesNevadaBlades loves this.
walksoftlywalksoftly loves this.
TheGateKeeperTheGateKeeper loves this.
TassieDevilTassieDevil loves this.
SpiritBearSpiritBear loves this.
officialfuelofficialfuel loves this.
racer4fourracer4four loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
ravage60ravage60 loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
CaperkidCaperkid loves this.
See 21 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 8 years ago

    packrat-pl…
    (310 items)

    "On the morning of March 18, 1912, dozens of men at the Southern Pacific yard in San Antonio were working around an engine of the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railroad. The men were firing up the engine to test it and ready the train for service. At 8:55 a.m., the boiler exploded, sending the engine and many tons of railroad parts flying in every direction. The pressure wave and flying debris leveled the nearby railroad shops and rippled out into the neighborhood, snapping trees and smashing into homes. As the explosion spent itself, shattered metal and human remans rained down for blocks in every direction. The front end of the engine, almost intact, came to earth seven blocks away, flattening a house and killing a woman inside. The force of the explosion could be felt miles away.

    It was the worst railroad boiler explosion in U.S. history. Back at the train yard, survivors were trapped under fallen buildings and debris and in danger of being burned alive as fire spread through the wreckage. San Antonio fire fighters and police, military personnel, and railroad workers frantically worked to free the survivors and fight the fire. Eerily, an engine damaged in the blast had its whistle bent open, and screamed for two hours before its boiler pressure subsided enough to shut down the noise. The final toll was 26 killed, with about 50 people injured and about 10 men unaccounted for and presumed dead."

    logo
    Railroadiana
    See all
    The Lost Ways (HardCover special edition)
    The Lost Ways (HardCover special ed...
    $49
    Old Baseball Cards Unopened Packs from Wax Box - Vintage 100 Card Lot Plus BONUS
    Old Baseball Cards Unopened Packs f...
    $16
    Vintage to now mixed jewelry craft wear resale up to 20 lbs LFR box full FUN !
    Vintage to now mixed jewelry craft ...
    $79
    Railroad Crossing Warning Train Sign Tin Vintage Garage Distressed Old Round
    Railroad Crossing Warning Train Sig...
    $18
    logo
    The Lost Ways (HardCover special edition)
    The Lost Ways (HardCover special ed...
    $49
    See all

    Comments

    1. Caperkid, 8 years ago
      Amazing story!
    2. Caperkid, 8 years ago
      Reminds me of the Halifax explosion which was the largest explosion till the Hiroshima bomb
    3. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      Thank you very much Caperkid, Oroyoroyisthatyourhorse, Manikin, vetraio50, ravage60 & brunswick...........
    4. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 8 years ago
      Remembered reading about the Halifax explosion, but went back to it for a refresher. What an explosion & 2,000 dead.
    5. racer4four racer4four, 8 years ago
      Incredible tale, well told packrat. That's an amazing bit of history there.
    6. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      Thank you very much fortapache, racer4four, officialfuel, buckethead, SpiritBear & TassieDevil................................
    7. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      Thank you very much TheGateKeeper & walksoftly...............
    8. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 8 years ago
      I still marvel at the part about half of the eng. coming down 7 blocks away ! Was the reason ever determined ? They do have relief valves & gauges that the engineers are supposed to monitor.
    9. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      "The locomotive — basically a boiler on wheels — had been repaired, but when tested, “The pressure valves had indicated a possible problem, and the initial firing of the boiler had been stopped,” writes Farrell L. Tucker in “The Great Locomotive Explosion: A Socio-Historical Examination of a Tragedy,” available on the website of the UTSA College of Liberal and Fine Arts. “The boiler was then refired, and the pressure was allowed to build for a second time.”
      Just before 9 a.m., the pressure literally blew sky-high. The metal structure encasing the boiler cracked, and the built-up steam was forced out through a sudden split, “breaking the boiler from its carriage and launching the multi-ton cylinder,” Tucker says. “Buildings, structures and people on the ground in the immediate area of the engine were blown to pieces or if closer to the engine, simply disintegrated.”
      The pressure wave rocketed pieces of the wreckage — some weighing hundreds or even thousands of pounds — as far as seven blocks away. People were killed, and houses were destroyed; workers and equipment were “atomized,” says Tucker. First on the scene were ambulances and cavalry soldiers from Fort Sam Houston, followed by city police and firefighters. Emergency personnel kept order, aided the injured and started the grisly work of collecting body parts."
    10. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 8 years ago
      Also mentioned were some possibly faulty or defective boiler bolts.
    11. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      Thank you very much blunderbuss2, ttomtucker & SEAN68.................
    12. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      Thank you very much NevadaBlades, kyratango & Radegunder..........
    13. PostCardCollector PostCardCollector, 8 years ago
      That was chilling!! How awful!
    14. ho2cultcha ho2cultcha, 8 years ago
      wow! early industrial accidents! thanks for the history lesson!
    15. packrat-place packrat-place, 8 years ago
      Thank you very much Trey, PhilDMorris, PostCardCollector & ho2cultcha........

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.