Suche books:   





Ship Ablaze: The Tragedy of the Steamboat General Slocum
Ed O'Donnell

Broadway, 2004 - 368 pages

average customer review:based on 51 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

   highly recommended  highly recommended





Where Our History is Lost

"Ship Ablaze" helps fill in gaps of history that for one reason or other our parents, grand-parents, uncles and aunts. I grew up in that neighborhood and attended the LCMS (Trinity) Lutheran Church on 9th St. and Ave. B., yet I had to wait until late in life to learn of this disaster and the long term impact it had on the area. While the congregation I belonged to was not in worship fellowship with St. Mark's, I am certain that one would find a history of humanitarian fellowship at the time. But, these would be in the old records of that congregation written in German script. We need not only researchers, but multilingual researchers, in this incident as although there were those born in America, they lived a German life. My generation was the first not to speak German from birth. When I went to Germany to live for a while, I find myself very much at home despite the fact that this was post WWII Germany. If there are researchers interested out there who are fluent in German, a place they might want to look at is the resources of the NY Public Library and Concordia Historical Institute, St. Louis (records of the original Trinity on microfilm).


 for more information click here


Mesmerizingly Morbid!

An excellent book about the General Slocum disaster, a 1904 steamboat fire that killed more than 1,000 people, mostly women and children on a church outing. Absolutely mesmerizing from start to finish.









 for more information click here


Well done, but enough to make you gag...

I think this is the year as a reader, as a watcher of television and news, that I've finally reached my endpoint as concerns human disasters. I've always been interested to an extent of this type of story...if we weren't newspapers would not fare well. But I started picking up more of these books after the making of the movie, Titanic, and it's about 7 years later, and I am pretty sure I've had it. Nothing about the writer's abilities, just between the constant onslaught of real life disasters with the hurricane season now ending, the tsunami of last year, constant reportage on this ridiculous war in Iraq, and normal everyday life, I cannot take on any more sorrow and of course, the stupidity and greed that goes with these stories. I didn't even finish this one. If you like this genre, and this type of reading doesn't depress you deeply, as it did me, then this book is for you.

This is not the 'ostrich' burying it's head. It's rather I decided to stop rubbernecking in this manner. I don't do it when there are fires or car accidents, so I don't know why this should be anything different. If I am interested in it from an engineering or scientific view of things, as occurred with the 1927 dynamiting of the New Orleans levees, then I'll go for the history. I know this stuff happened, and where it is absolutely necessary to know more for family research or whatever, fine, I can look it up online. This is not the type of reading that I consider as being of benefit for me, nor is it entertaining to read about the needless deaths of so many. There are other things I'd rather do and read than books of this genre, though it is obvious that as with true crime, this is a popular genre which will not be going away soon.

Karen Sadler


 for more information click here






Horrifying Tale Spun Well

Edward T. O'Donnell tells a horrific tale in Ship Ablaze. In a matter of minutes a steamboat full of a German-American church group went from enjoying a ride down the East River on a beautiful day towards picnic grounds to fighting for their lives as an inferno consumed the lives of over a thousand people, mainly children and women, through fire or drowning. The very life preservers themselves became instruments for the deaths of many as it dragged them straight to the bottom of the river. The author does a magnificent job of setting the scene for the tragedy but his best work comes in the description of the disaster itself. It is heartbreaking and breathtaking and impossible to pull away from. This book is a wonderful memorial to a time and event that should not ever be forgotten.


 for more information click here


Hidden From History

This disaster has been hidden from historical references better than anything I've ever come across. Over 1,000 people die horribly, mostly women and children, and the following has occurred:

The 2004 Microsoft Encarta DVD Encyclopedia makes absolutely no reference to this event.

The book "New York Times Page One" does not show this as one of it's important front page dates.

The book "Chronicles of the 20th Century" (1300+ pages) only makes mention of the ship's owners being found negligent, not the event itself.

The largest loss of life from a single disaster from 1904 until 2001 and they can't mention it! Thankfully, this book does it justice and brings the hidden truth to light.


 for more information click here


reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



There were few experienced swimmers among over 1,300 Lower East Side residents who boarded the General Slocum on June 15, 1904. It shouldn?t have mattered, since the steamship was chartered only for a languid excursion from Manhattan to Long Island Sound. But a fire erupted minutes into the trip, forcing hundreds of terrified passengers into the water. By the time the captain found a safe shore for landing, 1,021 had perished. Ship Ablaze draws on firsthand accounts to examine why the death toll was so high and how the city responded. Masterfully capturing both the horror of the event and the heroism of men, women, and children who faced crumbling life jackets and inaccessible lifeboats as the inferno quickly spread, historian Edward T. O?Donnell brings to life a bygone community while honoring the victims of that forgotten day.




 for more information click here



hot or not?    What's your opinion?     Write a review and share your thoughts!



recommendations

Disasters we can't afford to forget (25+ books)
Best Non Fiction Adventure




steamboat

The Western River Steamboat (Studies in Nautical Archaeology, No. 8)
Robert Fulton: From Submarine to Steamboat
Chesapeake Steamboats: Vanished Fleet
Steamboats Come True: American Inventors in Action
Steamboat Seasons: A Medley of Recipes Celebrating the Flavors of ...



tragedy

100 Natural Disasters: Spectacle and Tragedy (Environment)
09/11 8:48 am: Documenting America's Greatest Tragedy
10 Books in 1: Adventures of Tom Sawyer-Huckleberry Finn-Tom Sawyer ...
09/11 8:48 AM; Documenting America's Greatest Tragedy
2003 Columbia Space Shuttle Tragedy: Commemorating and Documenting ...



ablaze

Bubbles Ablaze (Bubbles Books)
A Heart Ablaze: Igniting a Passion for God
Life Ablaze: A Women's Novena
Setting the East Ablaze: Lenins Dream of an Empire in Asia
Ablaze!: The Mysterious Fires of Spontaneous Human Combustion



search for books
the tragedy, ablaze, general, ship, slocum, steamboat, tragedy


Impressum / about us


Suche books: