• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

In 1814, London Was Terrorized By A 320,000-Gallon Tsunami Of Beer

November 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Life in the city can be dangerous, but one way you don’t expect to perish on the streets of London is by drowning, and least of all in beer. Yes, yes, , but this horrifying nightmare became reality on Monday October 17, 1814, when the city was literally flooded with beer.

The disaster began at the Horse Shoe Brewery along Tottenham Court Road, one of the city’s most famous spots in the modern era that was densely populated in the 19th century. It was home to a great towering vat of brown porter ale, a dark beer that’s reportedly a chocolate-caramel profile on the tongue, but decidedly less favorable on the lungs.

Advertisement

According to Historic UK, the tower was 6.7 meters (22 feet) high and contained around 3,500 barrels of the beer, but this all changed on October 17, 1814, when one of the crucial iron rings holding it together snapped. The rupture saw over 320,000 gallons of beer flood into the streets in a 4.6-meter (15-foot) wave that ripped through the area.

Houses collapsed and places of work were flooded, including the Tavistock Arms Pub where a barmaid was killed. In total, eight people are said to have died from the immediate aftermath of the beer flood, but a ninth reportedly died days later from alcohol poisoning.

When faced with streets paved with beer, hundreds began scooping and guzzling to rescue what was left, in a spirit of spillage is lickage that would make any uni student proud. Even once the beer was gone it couldn’t be forgotten, as the smell of such a dark beer lingered on for months after the accident.

Despite the very earthly origins of the beer tsunami, the accident was ruled an “Act Of God” when the brewery was later taken to court. They were therefore free of blame in the eyes of the law, but it still cost them the modern equivalent of £1.25 million in damage, which at the time was a measly £23,000. Don’t you just love inflation?

Advertisement

In the wake of the disaster, some of the survivors put their deceased loved ones on display to try and raise funds – an activity that proved so popular one exhibition was plunged into a beer-filled basement after the floor collapsed from so much footfall. It might seem strange in modern-day society, but such morbid exhibits used to be all the rage. In Paris, crowds would gather to see famous faces like “woman cut into two pieces” at Le Musée de la Mort, where bodies went on display just behind the Notre-Dame Cathedral.

Everything is content, I guess.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Two UK tech figures plan to row the Atlantic for charity supporting minority entrepreneurs
  2. Microsoft now more focused on ‘killing Zoom’ than Slack, says Stewart Butterfield
  3. Taiwan central bank says currency stable, flags more modest intervention
  4. Growing Bones And Gut Feelings: The Latest Steps On The Quest To Map Every Human Cell

Source Link: In 1814, London Was Terrorized By A 320,000-Gallon Tsunami Of Beer

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Man Broke Down Wall In His Basement And Discovered An Ancient Underground City That Once Housed 20,000 People
  • Same-Sex Penguin Couple Adopt And Raise Chick – And They’ve All Got 10/10 Names
  • Dolphins May Not “See” With Echolocation, But Instead “Feel” With It
  • Confirmed! Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Indeed An Interstellar Visitor, Quite Different From Its Predecessors
  • At 192, Jonathan – The Oldest Living Land Animal – Has Lived Through 40 US Presidents
  • 300,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools “Made By Denisovans” Discovered In China
  • Why Do Cats Eyes Glow? For The Same Reason Great White Sharks’ Do, Silly
  • G-astronomical News: Michelin-Starred Meal To Be Served On The ISS
  • In 2032, Earth May Witness A Once-In-5,000-Year Event On The Moon
  • Brand New Microscope Designed For Underwater Reveals Stunning Details Of Corals
  • The Atlantic’s Major Circulation Current Is Showing Worrying Signs, But Is Collapse Near?
  • “The Rings Held The Answer”: How We Finally Figured Out Saturn’s Day Length In 2019
  • Mystery Of Leonardo Da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man” Solved By A Dentist And A Protractor
  • Asteroid Ryugu’s Latest Mineral Is As Weird As Finding “A Tropical Seed In The Arctic”
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Are We Living Through A Sixth Mass Extinction?
  • Alien Abduction Or A Trick Of The Mind? A Down To Earth Explanation Of Close Encounters
  • Six Months Into Trump’s Presidency, Americans Report Record Low Pride In Being American
  • TikToker Unknowingly Handles Extremely Venomous Cone Snail And Lives To Tell The Tale
  • Scientists Sequence Oldest Egyptian DNA To Date, From A Whopping 4,800 Years Ago
  • “Uncharted Waters”: Large Hadron Collider Begins Colliding Oxygen For The First Time
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version