List of pipeline accidents in the United States before 1900 explained

The following is not a complete list of natural gas and petroleum product accidents before 1900, which run into the thousands. The oil and gas industry was as yet unregulated, so leaks and explosions were not tracked in an organized fashion except by city fire departments. Many natural gas accidents were not recorded unless they occurred in population centers with newspapers to report them.[1]

In the twentieth century, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), a U.S. Department of Transportation agency, would be established to develop and enforce regulations for the safe and environmentally sound operation of the United States' pipelines, and to collect data on pipeline leaks, accidents, and explosions.[2]

1860s

1870s

1880s

Notes and References

  1. Many nineteenth-century newspapers have been digitized and are searchable online. The U.S. Library of Congress provides access to 2,493 newspapers at https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/newspapers/, accessed 2018.01.19. Some states have digitized their newspapers; see Colorado Historic Newspapers at https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org and Utah Digital Newspapers at https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/. Many libraries also provide access to the early New York Times, Boston Globe and other nineteenth-century newspapers, or databases of historic newspapers such as ProQuest or Gale NewsVault.
  2. Data sets of PHMSA Pipeline Safety-Flagged Incidents for 1986-2001, 2002-2009, and 2010-2017 can be downloaded from the tab by that name on the PHMSA Pipeline Incident Flagged Files page, https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/data-and-statistics/pipeline/pipeline-incident-flagged-files, accessed 2018.01.10.
  3. “Domestic Gas,” Cleveland Morning Leader, (Cleveland [Ohio]), 22 March 1860, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  4. “Gas Explosion,” Daily Herald, (Cleveland, Ohio), March 15, 1860, Gale NewsVault Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers.
  5. ”Explosion of an Oil Well,” Plymouth Weekly Democrat (Plymouth, Ind.), 02 May 1861, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  6. ”The Oil Well Explosion,” Deseret News (Salt Lake City, Utah), 1861-05-22, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  7. ”The Great Gas Explosion in the Register Office,” The Democratic Press (Eaton, Preble County, Ohio), 24 April 1862, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  8. "Explosion of Gas," Daily Evening Bulletin [San Francisco, California], 2 May 1863, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers.
  9. Rutland Weekly Herald (Rutland, Vt.), 10 Dec. 1863, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers Library of Congress,
  10. "A Fruit-House Partially Demolished by a Gas Explosion," Daily Cleveland Herald [Cleveland, Ohio], 10 Jan. 1866, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  11. ”Latest by Telegraph,” Rocky Mountain News (Denver, Colorado), March 24, 1866, Colorado Historic Newspapers, https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/, accessed 2018.01.21.
  12. "Particulars of the Gas Explosion in Baltimore," Daily National Intelligencer [Washington, D.C.], 19 Apr. 1866, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, 17 Jan. 2018.
  13. ”Washington,” The Evansville Journal (Evansville, Ind.), 02 July 1867, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, , accessed 2018.01.17.
  14. ”Fatal Gas Explosion,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 30 Jul 1867, p. 3, .
  15. "The Detroit Gas Company are suffering from a serious leak," Daily Cleveland Herald [Ohio], 28 Jan. 1868, Gale NewsVault, Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, 17 Jan. 2018.
  16. ”Remarkable Gas Explosion,” Vermont Daily Transcript, (St. Albans, Vt.), 14 Dec. 1868, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  17. ”Gas Explosion and Fire,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 19 May 1869, p. 3, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/60750227/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  18. ”Gas Explosion,” The Hancock Jeffersonian, (Findlay, Ohio), 28 May 1869, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  19. ”Fires,” Rocky Mountain News (Denver, Colorado), December 9, 1869, Colorado Historic Newspapers, https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/, accessed 2018.01.21.
  20. ”A Gas Explosion,” The Evening Telegraph (Philadelphia [Pa.]), 08 Dec. 1870, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  21. ”Gas Explosion,” Holmes County Republican (Millersburg, Holmes Co., O. [Ohio]), 29 Dec. 1870, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  22. "Brooklyn City Gas Works Destroyed," Daily Evening Bulletin [San Francisco, California], 6 Feb. 1871, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  23. “Touching off a Gasometer-a Boy Blown Thirty Feet,” Salt Lake Herald (Utah), 1871-04-18, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  24. "New York," Milwaukee Sentinel [Milwaukee, Wisconsin] 25 Dec. 1871; and "Explosion of Metropolitan Gas Company's Works," Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper [New York, New York] 13 Jan. 1872: 279, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  25. "The Cosmopolitan Well at Shrubgrass, Penn.,” Boston Daily Advertiser [Boston, Massachusetts] 27 Dec. 1871, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  26. ”Boston’s Calamity,” Mineral Point Tribune (Mineral Point, Wis.), 21 Nov. 1872, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  27. ”Gas Explosion,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 08 May 1873, p. 4, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/50506584/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  28. "Fires," Milwaukee Daily Sentinel [Milwaukee, Wisconsin] 21 Jan. 1874, and "Gas Explosion in Bennington, Vt," Independent Statesman [Concord, New Hampshire], 22 Jan. 1874: 132, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  29. ”Terrible Explosion – Bursting of a Boston Gas-Main,” National Republican (Washington D.C.), 23 Dec. 1875, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  30. ”Cause of the Boston Gas Explosion,” Memphis Daily Appeal (Memphis, Tenn.), 30 Dec. 1875, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  31. ”Boston Gas Explosion,” Evening Star (Washington, D.C.), 23 Dec. 1875, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  32. ”News from the Metropolis,” The Cincinnati Daily Star (Cincinnati, Ohio), 26 Dec. 1876, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, .
  33. ”Fire Marshal’s Report,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 03 Sep 1877, p. 4, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/50378419/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  34. "Conflagrations," Inter Ocean [Chicago, Illinois], 30 Apr. 1878: 5, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  35. ”Local Brevities,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 29 Oct 1879, p. 4, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/50394838/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  36. "Terrific Explosion of Gas," Daily Graphic: An Illustrated Evening Newspaper [New York, New York] 29 Nov. 1880, 214, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  37. “Gas Works Explosion," Daily Evening Bulletin [San Francisco, California]. 31 Oct. 1881, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  38. "A Wrecked Retort," St. Louis Globe-Democrat [St. Louis, Missouri], 3 Dec. 1881: 6, from Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  39. "Gas Explosion," Daily Arkansas Gazette [Little Rock, Arkansas], 1 Feb. 1882, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  40. "Mishaps of a Day," St. Louis Globe-Democrat [St. Louis, Missouri], 7 Mar. 1882: 3, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  41. "A Series of Explosions," Los Angeles Daily Times [Los Angeles, California], 20 Oct. 1882, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  42. "Terrific Gas Explosion," Milwaukee Sentinel [Milwaukee, Wisconsin], 3 Mar. 1883: 2, from Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 18 Jan. 2018.
  43. S.E. Barton, "The Relation between Fire Insurance and the Electric Interests from the Underwriters' Standpoint," The Electrical Engineer, v. 9 (May 28, 1890), p. 388.
  44. “Fatal Gas Explosion in Boston,” Cooperstown Courier (Cooperstown, Griggs Co., Dak. [N.D.]), 01 Feb. 1884, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress,
  45. ”Gas Explosion,” Bismarck Weekly Tribune (Bismarck, Dakota [N.D.]), 06 Feb. 1885, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress,
  46. “Fatal and Disastrous Gas Explosion,” in "News by Telegraph," Daily Evening Bulletin [San Francisco, California], 20 Mar. 1886: 3, Gale NewsVault: Nineteenth Century U.S. Newspapers, accessed 19 Jan. 2018.
  47. ”A Disastrous Gas Explosion,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 06 Jan 1887, p. 4, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/60771987/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  48. David A. Waples, The Natural Gas Industry in Appalachia: A History from the First Discovery (2012), p. 202.
  49. S.E. Barton, "The Relation between Fire Insurance and the Electric Interests from the Underwriters' Standpoint," The Electrical Engineer, v. 9 (May 28, 1890), p. 388.
  50. “Fearful Explosion,” Utah Enquirer, 1888-04-27, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  51. ”Shaking up a Town,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 15 July 1888, p. 9, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/60726976/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  52. ” Explosion of a Gas Tank,” Colorado Daily Chieftain (Pueblo, Colorado), December 22, 1889, Colorado Historic Newspapers, https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  53. S.E. Barton, "The Relation between Fire Insurance and the Electric Interests from the Underwriters' Standpoint," The Electrical Engineer, v. 9 (May 28, 1890), p. 388.
  54. Web site: Columbus Mileposts - Jan. 24, 1890: Natural-gas explosion kills four, injures 32. Gerald Tebben. The Columbus Dispatch. 18 January 2016.
  55. For more natural gas incidents, see David A. Waples, The Natural Gas Industry in Appalachia: A History from the First Discovery (2012), p. 202.
  56. “Natural Gas Explosion,” Mitchell Capital (Mitchell, Dakota [S.D.]), 23 Oct. 1891, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Library of Congress,
  57. “Seven Men Injured, Two Fatally, in a Gas Explosion near Kokomo,” Indianapolis journal (Indianapolis [Ind.]), 08 Nov. 1892, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress,
  58. ” Explosions,” Deseret Evening News (Salt Lake City, Utah), 1893-01-05, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  59. “Terrific G Explosion,” Ephraim Enterprise (Ephraim, Utah), 1893-02-01, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  60. ” An Explosion of Gas,” Colorado Daily Chieftain (Pueblo, Colorado), February 7, 1894, Colorado Historic Newspapers, https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  61. North Platte semi-weekly tribune (North Platte, Neb.), 30 April 1895, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress,
  62. News: NATURAL GAS EXPLOSION; Houses Wrecked and Burned in Wilkinsburg, a Suburb of Pittsburg -- Two Women Severely Injured . The New York Times . April 29, 1895.
  63. North Platte semi-weekly tribune (North Platte, Neb.), 30 April 1895, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress,
  64. ” Gas Well Explosion,” Aspen Weekly Times (Aspen, Colorado), March 7, 1896, Colorado Historic Newspapers, https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  65. Wolfe Koplan vs. Boston Gas Light Company, Massachusetts, in Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Judicial Court, Massachusetts Reports, Volume 177 (October 1900 - February 1901), pp. 15-27. See also the Boston Gas Light Company's official statement, American Gas Light Journal, Volume 66 (March 15, 1897), pp. 408-109.
  66. David A. Waples, The Natural Gas Industry in Appalachia: A History from the First Discovery (2012), p. 202.
  67. “A Gas Explosion,” Brownsville Daily Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), 07 Sept. 1897, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress,
  68. “Gas explosion,” Wheeling Daily Intelligencer (Wheeling, West Virginia), 28 March 1898, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Library of Congress,
  69. “Killed and Injured in Explosion,” Salt Lake Herald (Utah), 1898-05-05, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  70. “Fire in the Capitol,” Deseret Evening News (Salt Lake City, Utah), 1898-11-07, Utah Digital Newspapers, https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  71. ”Two Gas Explosions Shake Broadway” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 12 Jan 1899, p. 5, https://bklyn.newspapers.com/image/50405057/?terms=gas%2Bexplosion.
  72. “Gas Explosion Sends Nine to the Hospital,” Aspen Tribune (Aspen, Colorado), April 18, 1899, Colorado Historic Newspapers, https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/, accessed 2018.01.20.
  73. “Fearful Fatalities,” Salt Lake Herald (Salt Lake City [Utah), 22 Feb. 1885, Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress, <http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058130/1885-02-22/ed-1/seq-1/></ref> * An explosion of natural gas on March 20, 1886, at [[Murrysville, Pennsylvania]], injured seven people, three fatally, and burned seven houses. The Charter Gas Company was connecting a pipeline from a new gas well to their main line; the increased pressure ruptured the main and the escaping gas filled nearby houses before the leak could be fixed. The gas ignited from the grate in one house and quickly spread to the others.[46]
    • On January 6, 1887, a man was “burned to a crisp” as he slept when gas exploded at Youngstown, Ohio. Several others were reported missing. Four buildings including the new Baptist Church and the just completed $70,000 Andrews Block were destroyed by the ensuing fire.[47]
    • In July 1887, two workers for Chartiers Natural Gas Company were suffocated by leaking natural gas in a ditch at Allegheny, Pennsylvania.[48]
    • In 1888, the United States had at least 63 fires caused by gas explosions.[49]
    • On April 26, 1888 at Chicago, Illinois, two men drilling a hole across a street to make a conduit for electrical wires accidentally punctured a gas main. Their next mistake was to light a candle to see what was wrong. In an instant, seventy-some clerks and customers from the store overhead were flying through the air and the building was on fire. The two workmen were badly injured, as were several clerks. The explosion did half a million dollars in property damage.[50]
    • At Washington, Pennsylvania on July 14, 1888, five workers were seriously burned when gas unexpectedly began flowing through the pipes they were connecting. The natural gas ignited in a fireball that shot 75 feet into the air.[51]
    • At Asheville, North Carolina on December 21, 1889 the gasometer at the city gas works exploded. Of the four men making repairs inside of it, two were instantly killed and two wounded.[52]
    • In 1889 alone, New York had eight fires caused by gas explosions. In the previous six years there had been 28 gas explosions. Three destroyed clothing stores; seven destroyed dry goods stores.[53]

    1890s

    • On January 24, 1890, a gas explosion destroyed a home in Columbus, Ohio, attracting a crowd of onlookers. While people were still gathered to look at the ruins of the home, a second gas explosion happened in a nearby home. The second explosion caused 4 deaths, and there were 32 injuries from both explosions.[54]
    • In 1890, a natural gas explosion at Greenville, Pennsylvania "blew out the front of a grocery store."[55]
    • On October 21, 1891, three people were seriously injured in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, when a carpet store was blown up by a natural gas explosion.[56]
    • On November 7, 1892, near Kokomo, Indiana, seven men were terribly burned, two of whom died, in a natural gas explosion that ignited while they were tapping a main on the Chicago pipeline.[57]
    • At Chicago, Illinois, on January 4, 1893, a natural gas explosion wrecked a printshop and injured more than 20 firefighters and a number of laborers, some not expected to survive. Two firemen were fatally burned. An employee of the Natural Gas Company had repaired a leak that morning, but fire ignited in the afternoon and the first explosion threw all the employees to the floor. When firefighters arrived, another explosion occurred, flinging them across the room. A third explosion followed, injuring the rescuers. They had just been removed from the building when a fourth and more violent explosion erupted. Finally the gas company shut off the gas and the fire was controlled. Property damage was estimated at $20,000.[58]
    • In January 1893, a hotel in Anderson, Indiana was shaken by a terrific natural gas explosion which literally threw guests out of bed. The explosion was caused by a broken gas pipe in the street nearby; the escaping gas passed through the ground into the hotel basement, where it was ignited by a gas heater.[59]
    • A family was blown up at Indianapolis, Indiana, on February 4, 1894 when a house was demolished by a natural gas explosion. It is supposed that the gas accumulated in the cellar and seeping through the floor above, ignited at an open fireplace. A family with four children occupied the upper portion of the house: one dead and five fatally injured.[60]
    • At Edgewood, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Pittsburgh, a house was blown apart by an explosion of natural gas which leaked into the basement through a drain on April 29, 1895. One resident was killed and two others injured. The initial explosion was followed by two more which destroyed adjacent homes.[61]
    • On April 25, 1895, a woman in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania was investigating the smell of gas in a basement, while using a portable lantern. A series of explosions then followed, injuring that woman, and another woman, and damaging 4 homes. The gas leak was caused by gas being diverted into an older, defective gas main in the area.[62]
    • On April 29, 1895, at the Elyria, Ohio, G.A.R. hall, a gaslight jet was opened without being lighted, and the building filled with gas overnight. When the janitor arrived in the morning and struck a match, the gas exploded, burning him seriously and almost demolishing the building.[63]
    • On March 6, 1896, at Mannington, West Virginia, a gas well “broke loose” and caught fire, burning two men to death and six others seriously.[64]
    • On March 4, 1897, gas exploded in a subway excavation at the corner of Tremont and Boylston Streets in Boston, Massachusetts. In the excavation area were located gas pipes from eight inches to 24 inches in diameter, as well as electrical conduits which were thought to have sparked the explosion.[65]
    • In May 1897, natural gas caused a fire that killed a watchman at a manufactory in Erie, Pennsylvania.[66]
    • On September 3, 1897, in San Antonio, Texas, a match struck to light a gaslight jet ignited an explosion in the county courthouse vault. The blast destroyed county papers, threw one man 20 feet out of the vault and knocked another unconscious.[67]
    • On March 28, 1898, in Wheeling, West Virginia, a boy struck a match to light a lantern in a stable next door to the gas company's meter shed; the match ignited escaping gas that exploded.[68]
    • At Paterson, New Jersey on May 4, 1898, part of a roller mill was blown up by an explosion in the boiler room and gas section, killing one and injuring three. Damage was estimated at $75,000.[69]
    • On November 6, 1898, a gas leak at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. destroyed the Supreme Court courtroom and rooms adjoining it. The force of the explosion distended the outer walls by two inches, left the rooms in ruins, and blew out all the windows. Fire immediately followed, fed by a broken four-inch gas main in the basement. Flames flew up the elevator shaft to the Supreme Court rooms and destroyed priceless records including 20,000 legal reference books and the justices’ archives before the fire was brought under control.[70]
    • In New York on January 12, 1899, two underground natural gas explosions during morning rush hour hurled steel manhole covers three feet square into the air, damaged a hotel and frightened passersby. The concussion broke windows 50 yards away. An electrician speculated that the explosion might have been caused by a blown fuse igniting a gas leak under the street.[71]
    • At Denver, Colorado on April 17, 1899, fire broke out in the Denver Gas Company's works. Nine firemen were badly hurt by an explosion but none fatally.[72]

    References