Archive for April 27th, 2025

STILL THE LARGEST MARITIME DISASTER

The sinking of the Sultana | Horror

The steamboat Sultana exploded on the Mississippi River near
Memphis, killing 1,700 passengers including many discharged
Union soldiers. The accident is still considered the largest
maritime disaster in U.S. history in terms of lives lost.

The Sultana was launched from Cincinnati in 1863. The boat
was 260 feet long and had an authorized capacity of 376
passengers and crew.

It was considered one of the most modern vessels of its era
and was soon employed to carry troops and supplies along
the lower Mississippi River.        

        
On April 25, 1865, the Sultana left
New Orleans
with 100
passengers. It stopped at Vicksburg, Mississippi, for repair
of a leaky boiler.

R. G. Taylor, the boilermaker on the ship, advised Captain J.
Cass Mason that two sheets on the boiler had to be replaced,
but Mason ordered Taylor to simply patch the plates until the
ship reached St. Louis.

   
    
    
   
The Sultana Disaster — Hillsdale County Historical Society
The only known photograph of the Sultana taken on the last
day of its fateful voyage in Helena, Arkansas on April 27,
1865.


Today In History: 27th March 1865 Explosion of SS Sultana in Mississippi  River - Samoa Global News

The Sultana Disaster - April 27, 1865 | A refreshing oasis of excellence in  the often toxic cesspool that is the internet

Image:

The Sultana Disaster
Model of Sultana by artist & Lincoln Shrine docent Ken Jolly.

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,DEATH,Explosion,HISTORY,Maritime Disaster and have No Comments

CIVIL WAR LEADER BORN ON THIS DAY

Ulysses S. Grant in St. Louis 1854-1860 (U.S. National Park Service)

General Ulysses S. Grant, between 1860 and 1870 : r/ColorizedHistory

Ulysses S. Grant - People at The Fort - Fort Vancouver - Pacific NW History  and Historical Sites
Ulysses S. Grant (April 27, 1822 – July 23, 1885)

Ulysses S. Grant, Civil War leader and 18th president of the
United States, was born on April 27, 1822, in Point Pleasant,
Ohio.

The son of a tanner, Grant showed little enthusiasm for joining
his father’s business, so the elder Grant enrolled his son at
West Point in 1839.

Though Grant later admitted he had no interest in the military
apart from honing his equestrian skills, he graduated in 1843
and went on to serve in the
Mexican-American War, though
he opposed it on moral grounds. He then left his beloved wife
and children again to fulfill a tour of duty in California and
Oregon.

Bookmark] Discovering the Promise of Asia and America in Grant's Visit to  Japan | JAPAN Forward

posted by Bob Karm in BIRTHDAY,Civil war,Currency,HISTORY,MILITARY,President and have No Comments