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Beware the London Fog!!!
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Very interesting article, Steadmund. Twelve thousand human deaths-- whew!Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
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Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
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Originally posted by Steadmund Brand View Post"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
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Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
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Originally posted by Pcdunn View PostI have no reason to doubt it, Abby. Killer fogs were often reported during the coal-burning days. This one is just extraordinary in its toxicity.
http://www.history.com/news/the-kill...n-60-years-ago"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Pcdunn View PostVery interesting article, Steadmund. Twelve thousand human deaths-- whew!
Sometimes it goes in a different direction due to chance catastrophes happening on the same day. On October 8, 1871 Chicago had it's infamous fire (the one supposedly started by a fire in the barn of a Mrs. O'Leary by her cow kicking a lantern on some dry hay). About 200-300 people perished in the city wide fire. Few are aware (outside of Michigan) of the simultaneous "Peshwego" fire in the forests of that part of the state. They lasted several days and killed over 1,600 people. But it was not an urban center and national transportation hub like Chicago (or - for that matter on the West Coast - San Francisco). So the worse tragedy was barely noticed.*
*Similarly at the end of the American Civil War, after Lee's surrender and the assassination of Lincoln, on the same day that John WIlkes Booth was shot and killed and General Joe Johnston surrendered his large army to General William Sherman in North Carolina, the steamboat "Sultana" carrying over 2,200 Northern troops home (many of them survivors from Andersonville military prison) blew up north of Memphis, Tennessee, and in the fire on the Mississippi River some 1,800 Union troops and passengers and crew burned to death or drowned. The "Sultana" (not the "Titanic" or the "Lusitania") was the worst shipwreck in terms of loss of life in U.S. history. But it was barely mentioned in the newspapers of the day, as it happened as the war was winding down, and the nation slowly recovering from the horror of the war and of Lincoln's murder. The tragedy only has become better recalled since the end of the 19th Century.
Jeff
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostI've never heard of it before? Is this true???- Ginger
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