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Trail Off Tuesdays: The Great London Beer Flood


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A tidal wave of beer that destroyed homes and claimed lives sounds like a pub joke gone wrong, but for the residents of St. Giles in 1814 London, it was a devastating reality. The London Beer Flood stands as one of history's most peculiar yet tragic industrial accidents.
The catastrophe began at the Horseshoe Brewery on Tottenham Court Road, where an enormous wooden vat containing over 600,000 liters of porter beer suddenly failed. 

The flood crashed through streets with waves reportedly four feet high, collapsing buildings and filling basements where many poor residents lived. Eight people—mostly women and children—lost their lives, drowned in their own homes by an avalanche of porter beer. This strange footnote in history reveals how industrial London valued profit over safety, with ordinary people paying the ultimate price.

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ClueTrailBy ClueTrail - Historical Mysteries & True Crime