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The meetinghouse tragedyThe meetinghouse tragedy

The meetinghouse tragedy1998

Clark, Charles E.

About this book

One fine September day in 1773 the people of Wilton, New Hampshire, gathered to realize their dream, raising the frame of a brand new meetinghouse that would be the literal and symbolic center of this small farming community. But dream became nightmare when a huge center roof beam gave way, dropping fifty-three workers three stories to the ground and collapsing tons of trusswork, planks and joists, and metal tools on them. Five died. Forty-eight were injured, many seriously. The catastrophe might have been lost in history had Charles E. Clark not discovered an heirloom copy of an anonymous, forty-three-stanza ballad memorializing it. Sifting through clues from the ballad and from archival records, Clark pieces together the mystery to give a full picture of the disaster. His Meetinghouse Tragedy offers a fascinating glimpse into architectural history, popular and folk culture, religious traditions, and the ways communal memories are formed and then endure.

Details

First published
1998
OL Work ID
OL1900713W

Subjects

HistoryBuildingChurch buildingsAccidentsState & LocalHistory & ArchaeologyUnited States Local HistoryGeneralRegions & Countries - AmericasNew england, biographyNew hampshire, historyChurch architecture, united statesBuilding, accidents

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.