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Emma Castro

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The Dam of the Elites: Hubris and the Johnstown Flood
How did an exclusive, secretive vacation resort built for the wealthiest billionaires in the world directly cause the utter annihilation of an entire working-class American city? The Johnstown Flood of 1889 remains one of the most catastrophic and infuriating examples of corporate negligence in United States history.
High in the Pennsylvania mountains, elite industrial titans-including Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick-formed the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club.
To create a private recreational lake for their yachts, they purchased an abandoned earthen dam. However, they drastically lowered the dam's height to build a carriage road across it and installed iron screens that blocked the spillways to prevent their expensive game fish from escaping. When unprecedented rains hit in May 1889, the compromised, unmaintained dam catastrophically failed. A 40-foot-high wall of water, mud, and debris completely obliterated the industrial town of Johnstown in the valley below, instantly killing 2, 209 people. This devastating historical autopsy explores the collision of Gilded Age privilege and working-class vulnerability.
It documents the terrifying physics of the floodwave, the desperate rescue efforts, and the enraging legal loopholes that allowed the billionaires to escape paying a single cent in damages. Observe the deadly cost of exclusivity. The Dam of the Elites proves that when the infrastructure of the wealthy is built directly above the lives of the poor, gravity is ultimately unforgiving.
To create a private recreational lake for their yachts, they purchased an abandoned earthen dam. However, they drastically lowered the dam's height to build a carriage road across it and installed iron screens that blocked the spillways to prevent their expensive game fish from escaping. When unprecedented rains hit in May 1889, the compromised, unmaintained dam catastrophically failed. A 40-foot-high wall of water, mud, and debris completely obliterated the industrial town of Johnstown in the valley below, instantly killing 2, 209 people. This devastating historical autopsy explores the collision of Gilded Age privilege and working-class vulnerability.
It documents the terrifying physics of the floodwave, the desperate rescue efforts, and the enraging legal loopholes that allowed the billionaires to escape paying a single cent in damages. Observe the deadly cost of exclusivity. The Dam of the Elites proves that when the infrastructure of the wealthy is built directly above the lives of the poor, gravity is ultimately unforgiving.
How did an exclusive, secretive vacation resort built for the wealthiest billionaires in the world directly cause the utter annihilation of an entire working-class American city? The Johnstown Flood of 1889 remains one of the most catastrophic and infuriating examples of corporate negligence in United States history.
High in the Pennsylvania mountains, elite industrial titans-including Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick-formed the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club.
To create a private recreational lake for their yachts, they purchased an abandoned earthen dam. However, they drastically lowered the dam's height to build a carriage road across it and installed iron screens that blocked the spillways to prevent their expensive game fish from escaping. When unprecedented rains hit in May 1889, the compromised, unmaintained dam catastrophically failed. A 40-foot-high wall of water, mud, and debris completely obliterated the industrial town of Johnstown in the valley below, instantly killing 2, 209 people. This devastating historical autopsy explores the collision of Gilded Age privilege and working-class vulnerability.
It documents the terrifying physics of the floodwave, the desperate rescue efforts, and the enraging legal loopholes that allowed the billionaires to escape paying a single cent in damages. Observe the deadly cost of exclusivity. The Dam of the Elites proves that when the infrastructure of the wealthy is built directly above the lives of the poor, gravity is ultimately unforgiving.
To create a private recreational lake for their yachts, they purchased an abandoned earthen dam. However, they drastically lowered the dam's height to build a carriage road across it and installed iron screens that blocked the spillways to prevent their expensive game fish from escaping. When unprecedented rains hit in May 1889, the compromised, unmaintained dam catastrophically failed. A 40-foot-high wall of water, mud, and debris completely obliterated the industrial town of Johnstown in the valley below, instantly killing 2, 209 people. This devastating historical autopsy explores the collision of Gilded Age privilege and working-class vulnerability.
It documents the terrifying physics of the floodwave, the desperate rescue efforts, and the enraging legal loopholes that allowed the billionaires to escape paying a single cent in damages. Observe the deadly cost of exclusivity. The Dam of the Elites proves that when the infrastructure of the wealthy is built directly above the lives of the poor, gravity is ultimately unforgiving.
