Carrolton, Kentucky
Redstone Steamer Disaster
April 3, 1852
More of the Redstone Explosion
From the Cincinnati Nonpariel.
When the Forest Queen passed the wreck of the ill-fated Redstone yesterday afternoon, the hull and wheel house was under water, the river having risen from eight to ten feet since the accident.
We are informed that the head engineer, Mr. Berry, was asleep in his berth, and not on watch at the time of the explosion.
Several experienced steamboatmen who saw the Redstone at Carrollton when she passed up, prophesied that she would explode her boilers from an over-charge of steam, and two of the party remained on the wharf for the express purpose and witnessed the explosion.
Eight of the unfortunate victims was buried at Carrollton on Sunday. The good people of that town did all in their power to relieve the distressed.
It has been ascertained to a certainty that sixteen of the crew were lost. In addition to the list of killed, was add the named of JAMES E. GOBLE, and MR. CRISSMAN, of Lawrenceburg, Ind.; DAVID CHAMBERLIN, second Engineer, of Madison, Ind. Mary Jackson, chambermaid and three deckhands, escaped unhurt. We have conversed with several persons who were on board when the accident occurred, all whom are of the opinion that ten or twelve of the passengers and crew went down with the wreck when it sank.
The noise of the explosion was heard a distance of forty miles, and the heat was so intense that spoons blown from the pantry were so suddenly heated that they fastened together.
New York Daily Times, New York, NY 13 Apr 1852
Terrible Steamboat Accident --- Great Loss of Life.
Madison, Indiana, April 3. � This afternoon, about half-past 2 o�clock, as the steamboat �Redstone,� Capt. Tate, hence for Cincinnati, with about 70 persons on board, including crew, was backing out from Scott�s landing, about three miles above Carrollton, had her boilers burst with tremendous force, killing a large portion of those on board, and dreadfully scalding and mangling most of the rest. The boat being completely shattered, immediately sunk in deep water, and many of the passengers who might otherwise have been saved, were drowned. Of the crew, only the Captain and Clerk were saved, and the former was so severely injured that it is thought he cannot recover. The boat having sunk, it was with difficulty that the bodies of those on board could be recovered. Up to 1 o�clock this morning, fifteen dead bodies were obtained, most of them so horribly mutilated as to baffle all attempts at identification. The names of the unfortunates have not been ascertained.
The Steamboat Explosion near Madison. �
By the explosion on board the steamboat Redstone, near Madison, Ind., on Saturday, the Rev. PERRY A. SCOTT, formerly of Covington, Ky., was killed. He had just stepped on board, after parting with his sisters on the wharf, who saw him blown to fragments. MR. GLOBE, editor of the Lawrenceburg Press, and MR. MYERS, the first and second engineers, and all the firemen, were also killed. � Capt. Tate and Mr. Langley, a pilot, had their legs broken. A large piece of one of the boilers was blown half a mile, lacking five or six yards, from the wreck! Eleven bodies were blown into a corn field, at some distance form the water � among them, those of the first and third engineers. The boat, which was backing out at the time of the explosion, was made a complete wreck.
Republican Compiler, Gettysburg, PA 12 Apr 1852
Mr. R. C. Seanland, who got on at that place, was on the forecastle, and seeing the danger, went to the stern of the herricane [sic] deck, and was by this timely forecast, saved.
Rev. PERRY A. SCOTT, who was on a visit to his parents, had just gone on board and his parents and sisters standing on shoe only to see him blown into eternity.
The Dixon Telegraph, Dixon, IL 24 Apr 1852
Articles transcribed by Jenni Lanham. Thank you, Jenni!
THE ILL-FATED �REDSTONE.�
In the early days of steamboating the government took no hand worth speaking of in regulating the traffic or the building of the crafts. Engines, boilers and other machinery were placed in the boat according to the ideas of the owner, and frequently the construction of engines and boilers especially was very faulty. Then there was no inspector to look over the machinery and inform the steamboat owners that their boats were unsafe. On account of such conditions, frightful accidents were frequent and often accompanied by great loss of life. In those days people who traveled by boat often had experiences that were never forgotten.
The sporting blood in both officers, men and passengers would frequently get the better of their judgment and great risks were taken with the boat machinery in order to forge ahead of their eager opponent. At such times the excitement would be intense and there would be much loud cheering and calls from boat to boat. Inflammable material was used to increase the speed. If the boat was carrying as freight a lot of sidemeat or oil it was unhesitatingly thrown into the furnace to add to the steaming capacity, regardless of owners� objections or danger from too great an amount of steam produced.
In the spring of 1852 one of the boats in the Madison trade was the �Redstone� It was a stern-wheel affair of not a great many tons burden but was well patronized, both in the way of freight and passengers. It was customary at that time to leave Madison for Cincinnati about noon so the boat could be in port in the morning by daybreak. Packets, then as now, were accustomed to land wherever there was a hail, stopping for either freight or passengers wherever a landing was possible, and at that time of the year the river was at such a stage that a landing could be made at most any point.
The boat landed at Carrollton, Kentucky, and took on freight on its way towards Cincinnati and as they untied their lines a boat of a competing line was alongside. Captain Thomas Pate, of Rising Sun, was the master of the �Redstone� and the competition being fierce it was important that he got ahead of his antagonist in order to secure the freight as the boat was hailed from the banks of the river. The other boat was just as anxious to lead as the �Redstone,� so a race was commenced. It is said the �Redstone� used bacon to increase the boiler�s steaming capacity. When only a mile or more above Carrollton the �Redstone�s� boilers let go with such force that the boat was wrecked and many of the passengers and crew lost their lives. The force of the explosion was so great that it was heard for miles around.
People living now can recall the dull rumbling sound that fairly rocked houses and chimneys as far as ten miles away.
Capt. Thomas Pate, it is said, was thrown by the force of the explosion about one hundred feet in the air, lighting in the river feet foremost and unhurt excepting a slight abrasion on his forehead. Many who were lost were never found, not even a shred of clothing. Others were cast up by the river and those who were yet alive were picked up by rivermen in skiffs as they floated down the river. Three men from Lawrenceburg on the boat who were taking the trip just for the pleasure of it perished in the disaster. They were all young men of great promise in the community and their death under such circumstances made a profound impression on the community. The names of the young men so suddenly ushered into eternity were James E. Goble, Edmond Durbin and Eli C. Crisman. They were all newspapermen and Goble had, in connection with the late Henry L. Brown, published a paper in Lawrenceburg called the Independent Press since 1850. He had served as First Corporal in Company K, Fourth Regiment, of Indiana Volunteers, in the Mexican War, although at that time only sixteen years of age. Mr. Goble was a half-brother of Frank Goble, the present city clerk, and his mother was a member of the pioneer family of Percival, well known in the early history of the county, Durbin was the son of William S. Durbin, a prominent citizen of Lawrenceburg at that time, and was an older brother to ex-Governor Winfield T. Durbin, of Anderson, Indiana. Crisman was a young man who was at that time in the city and working on the Press. The voting people of the town were so deeply impressed with the loss to the city of three such estimable young men that they erected a monument over their graves�all being buried on one lot in the old cemetery�where may be found inscribed the following:
�Erected to the memory of three noble-hearted young men who were killed by the explosion of the steamer �Redstone,� near Carrollton, Kentucky, on April 3, A. D. 1852. May they rest in peace. Eli C. Crisman, born March 11, 1830; died April 3, 1852; aged 22 years and 22 days. Edmond Durbin, born April 10, 1831; died April 3. 1852; aged 20 years, 11 months and 23 days. James E. Goble, born March 2, 1830; died April 3, 1852; aged 22 years, 1 month and 1 day.�
Robert D. Newton, who for years afterward resided at Dillsboro, was also a passenger on the boat and suffered the loss of one of his eyes in the catastrophe. Captain Pate was a man of great courage and will power. Although nearing the age limit when the Civil War broke out he recruited a company and served his country in that trying period as captain of a company in the Thirty-Seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry.
History of Dearborn and Ohio Counties, Indiana, 1885, pages 506-508
Knoxville, Tennessee
Row Boat Accident
July 30, 1896
COST THREE LIVES.
Terrible Accident at a Pleasure Resort in Tennessee.
Knoxville, Tenn., July 31.--Three people were killed and drowned and a fourth seriously injured in an accident at Lake Ottossaee, an outing resort three miles from Knoxville Thursday afternoon. The dead are: CHARLES PERRY, aged 18; WALTER WRIGHT, aged 21, and MISS CARRIE PHIBBS, aged 17. The injured is Mrs. Forester, a widow, who was chaperoning the party. The party was rowing on the lake in the park in a light rowboat, and through carelessness they came in the course of the chute boat as it came down the steep incline into the water. The chute boat, loaded with ten people, dashed down the incline at a terrific rate of speed and hit the water with much force. It rebounded into the air and on the second bounce struck the rowboat with its occupants. The crash upset the row boat and killed its passengers, with the exception of Mrs. Forester, who came to the surface and caught on to the upturned boat, where she clung until assistance arrived.
Stevens Point Daily Journal, Stevens Point, WI 31 Jul 1896
Transcribed by Audrey. Thank you, Audrey!