"The Amber Flood - The day a tidal wave of beer drowned a London slum" investigates the bizarre tragedy of October 17, 1814. In the St. Giles rookery of London, a massive 22-foot-tall fermentation vat at the Meux & Co. Brewery burst. The explosion unleashed 320, 000 gallons of porter, creating a 15-foot tsunami of beer that smashed through brewery walls and destroyed the surrounding tenements.
Author William Carter details the forensic aftermath of the disaster, which killed eight people-mostly women and children in basements. The book explores the lack of regulation, the poverty of the Irish immigrants who lived in the flood path, and the court ruling that dismissed the event as an "Act of God."
"The Amber Flood" is a grim reminder of the costs of industrialization. It moves beyond the humorous headline to reveal a story of negligence, class inequality, and the deadly power of fluid dynamics in a crowded city.