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Sinking the Sultana
The worst maritime disaster in American history wasn’t the Titanic. It was the steamboat Sultana on the Mississippi River — and it could have been prevented. In 1865, the Civil War was winding down and the country was reeling from Lincoln’s assassination. Thousands of Union soldiers, released from Confederate prisoner-of-war camps, were to be transported home on the steamboat Sultana. With a profit to be made, the captain rushed repairs to the boat so the soldiers wouldn’t find transportation elsewhere. More than 2,000 passengers boarded in Vicksburg, Mississippi . . . on a boat with a capacity of 376. The journey was violently interrupted when the boat’s boilers exploded, plunging the Sultana into mayhem; passengers were bombarded with red-hot iron fragments, burned by scalding steam, and flung overboard into the churning Mississippi. Although rescue efforts were launched, the survival rate was dismal — more than 1,500 lives were lost. In a compelling, exhaustively researched account, renowned author Sally M. Walker joins the ranks of historians who have been asking the same question for 150 years: who (or what) was responsible for the Sultana’s disastrous fate?
Medium
Papier
Genres
Tween, Kids, Nonfiction
Angeboten von
Candlewick Press (Verleger)
(User: CandlewickPress)
Lieferung
August 2017
Startet: 2017-08-07
Abgeschlossen: 2017-08-28
Im Verkauf
2017-10-01
Länder
Kanada, Vereinigte Staaten
Links
Informationen zum BuchLibraryThing Werk-Seite
Erhalt
13 hat rezensiert, 1 als erhalten markiert
Lieferung geschlossen
15
Exemplare
467
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