Mississippi River Mayhem

About The Book

<P>In his memoir <I>Life on the Mississippi</I> Mark Twain personified the river as “Sudden Death and General Desolation! Sired by a hurricane dam’d by an earthquake half-brother to the cholera nearly related to the small-pox on the mother’s side! Look at me! I take nineteen alligators and a bar’l of whiskey for breakfast when I’m in robust health and a bushel of rattlesnakes and a dead body when I’m ailing!” Twain’s time as a steamboat pilot showed him the true character of The Great River with its unpredictable moods and hidden secrets.</P><P>Still a vital route for U.S. shipping the Mississippi River has given life to riverside communities manufacturing industries fishing tourism and other livelihoods. But the Mighty Mississippi has also claimed countless lives as tribute to its muddy waters. Climate and environmental conditions made the Mississippi the perfect incubator for diseases like malaria. Natural disasters like tornadoes floods and even an earthquake have changed and reshaped the river’s banks over thousands of years. Shipwrecks and steamboat explosions were once common in the difficult-to-navigate waters. But when there was money to be made there were some willing to risk it all—from the brave steamboat captains who went down with their ships to the illegal moonshiners and pirates who pillaged the river’s bounty. </P><P>In this book author and Mississippi River historian Dean Klinkenberg explores the many disastrous events to have occurred on and along the river in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries—from steamboat explosions to Yellow Fever epidemics floods and Prohibition piracy. Enjoy this journey into the darkest deeds of the Mississippi River.</P>
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