The Ninth Ward School disaster occurred on November 20, 1851, at Ward School No. 26 on Greenwich Street in New York City. While classes were in session, panic suddenly arose among the teachers and students about a possible fire in the building. A mass of students proceeded to flee down a staircase, causing the bannister to fail and the students to tumble into a large pile—reportedly 10 to 12 feet (3.0 to 3.7 m) deep—at the bottom of the staircase. Forty-three students died, mostly due to suffocation. An investigation determined that the students' escape had been slowed by inward-swinging exit doors and that the construction of the staircase bannister was insufficient to support the weight of the students. While a coroner's jury found no fault in the accident, it recommended that all schools be built with fire-protected stairways and outward-opening exit doors.
References
- "THE CATASTROPHE.: ACCIDENT IN THE NINTH WARD SCHOOL. CORNER'S INVESTIGATION. VISIT OF THE JURY TO THE BUILDING, FURTHER PARTICULARS. BURIAL OF THE DEAD. SOLEMN CEREMONIES. INCIDENTS ATTENDING THE DISASTER". New-York Daily Times. November 24, 1851. p. 3.
- ^ "THE NINTH WARD CALAMITY.: CORONERS'S INQUEST". New-York Daily Times. November 22, 1851. p. 2.
- "The Ninth Ward Accident--The Inquest and the Firemen". New-York Daily Times. December 2, 1851.
- Friedman, Donald (September 5, 2018). "The engineer as expert: early structural forensic reports in the United". Building Knowledge, Constructing Histories. 6th International Congress on Construction History (July 9-13, 2018). Brussels: CRC Press. pp. 59–66. ISBN 978-0-429-01362-1.
40°44′7.5″N 74°0′0″W / 40.735417°N 74.00000°W / 40.735417; -74.00000
This article about disaster management or a disaster is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |