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La Crosse Public Library
staff selected the following subjects to highlight from the La
Crosse Area Clipping File. While these include just a taste
of the vast materials available at the Library, we invite you
to please contact us with any specific question you may have
about the La Crosse area. Our thanks to the La Crosse Tribune for
their permission in bringing you these materials. We tried
to create printable images and the paper size and orientation
are given after the title of the article.
Steamboat
"War Eagle" Tragedy:
On May 14,
1870, the "War Eagle", a sidewheel packet boat, arrived
at La Crosse. She dropped off passengers at the city landing at
State and Front streets, then proceeded north to the railroad depot
on the Black River to take on freight and await the midnight train
from Milwaukee. When the train arrived, passengers and freight
were transferred to the "War Eagle" for transport to St. Paul,
MN. Among
the items loaded were wooden barrels filled with "Danforth's Non-Explosive
Petroleum Fluid" - a kind of lamp oil. While not explosive, it
turned out to be quite flammable.
While loading the barrels
onto the "War Eagle," it was reported
to Capt. Thomas Cushing that one of the barrels was leaking. The
Captain ordered the boat's carpenter to fix it. Soon, the barrel
was ablaze as well as the ship's carpenter. He jumped into the
water to extinguish the fire from his clothes. The barrel was
rolled off the left side of the boat, a barge lay alongside, preventing
the crew from rolling it into the water. Fire and black smoke
rapidly spread to the wooden boat. Only five people are believed
to have lost their lives as a result. However, many other buildings
and trains were damaged, and freight lost as well as the steamboat "War
Eagle." |