When Food Was Fatal: The Great Molasses Flood of 1919

When Food Was Fatal: The Great Molasses Flood of 1919

Published on Aug 1
2034
For the Love of History - world history, women’s history, weird history
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Ever been killed by coffee? Poisoned by pepper? Drowned by molasses?! Welcome to the most unappetizing episode of the century. In this delightfully unhinged episode of For the Love of History, we're diving into the sticky, deadly, and downright absurd world of food disasters in the early 1900s. From lead-laced milk to spice-rack murder, we explore how everyday foods became instruments of death — all thanks to lack of regulation, industrial negligence, and profit-hungry robber barons. 🎙️ You’ll learn about: The horrific ingredients hiding in 1900s food (hello, formaldehyde coffee!) Why the Great Molasses Flood of 1919 turned Boston’s North End into a syrupy war zone How molasses killed 21 people and the industrial greed behind it The real reason the FDA even exists (spoiler: it wasn’t to help you) And yes, the Dublin Whiskey Fire of 1875, aka flaming boot whiskey that killed 13 drunk dudes This episode is part true crime, part food safety horror story...
When Food Was Fatal: The Great Molasses Flood of 1919 - For the Love of History - world history, women’s history, weird history - 播刻岛