In September of 1862, just as the battle of Antietam raged, a spark ignited barrels of musket powder at the Allegheny Arsenal cartridge laboratories in Pittsburgh. Seventy-six people (mostly women, girls, and boys) were blown to pieces, burned to death, or succumbed to injuries (burns and traumatic amputations). While inquiries that followed the blast never determined with certainty the cause of the accident (rebel sabotage was pretty well ruled out), theories focused on sparks caused either by iron-shod horses or wagon tires on cobbled streets. Another theory identified the possibility of a static charge linked to silk dresses or crinolines.
I have two questions that have been raised during the preparation of an exhibit on Allegheny Arsenal (scheduled to open at the Heinz History Center in November):
1. Could any amount of friction applied to Civil War era women's clothing (silk or otherwise) have produced a spark sufficient to ignite gunpowder, powder dust, or any other flammable material found at an arsenal?
2. Newspapers reported witnesses seeing steel dress hoops in the charred and still-smoldering ruins of the laboratory. What in tarnation would women cartridge rollers be doing wearing steel hoops to work? Wouldn't they have worn more sensible/comfortable clothing when working at an arsenal? Did the Civil War "Rosie the Riveter" equivalents go to work looking like Godey's fashion plates, or were hoops worn in everyday work attire?
Please let me know your thoughts on these history mysteries. Are there any history myth busters out there?
I have two questions that have been raised during the preparation of an exhibit on Allegheny Arsenal (scheduled to open at the Heinz History Center in November):
1. Could any amount of friction applied to Civil War era women's clothing (silk or otherwise) have produced a spark sufficient to ignite gunpowder, powder dust, or any other flammable material found at an arsenal?
2. Newspapers reported witnesses seeing steel dress hoops in the charred and still-smoldering ruins of the laboratory. What in tarnation would women cartridge rollers be doing wearing steel hoops to work? Wouldn't they have worn more sensible/comfortable clothing when working at an arsenal? Did the Civil War "Rosie the Riveter" equivalents go to work looking like Godey's fashion plates, or were hoops worn in everyday work attire?
Please let me know your thoughts on these history mysteries. Are there any history myth busters out there?
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