Angola Horror: The 1867 Train Wreck That Shocked the Nation and Transformed American Railroads

Available
Product Details
Price
$27.95  $25.99
Publisher
Three Hills
Publish Date
Pages
312
Dimensions
6.41 X 9.49 X 1.01 inches | 1.31 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780801449086

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About the Author

Charity Vogel is Assistant City Editor at The Buffalo News and a magazine writer whose work has appeared in American History and The Believer. She served for ten years as an adjunct instructor of journalism in the English Department at the State University of New York at Buffalo.

Reviews

In this impressively researched book, Charity Vogel uncovers the once-lost story of the horrific accident. She provides a gripping narrative of the events leading up to the wreck, the crash itself, and its aftermath. She also firmly situates the episode in the context of nineteenth-century American railroad history, the development of modern journalism, and post-Civil War concers about death, burial, and remembrance. Vogel has conducted extensive research to re-create the tragedy, using or visiting over thirty archives, consulting sixty-five different period newspapers and magazines, and incorporating dozens of other primary sources. She deftly weaves those numerous sources into a detailed account of the accident, describing the passengers on the train and their backgrounds, explaining how the derailment occurred, and recounting the gruesome aftermath. The narrative is compelling, creating an air of suspense.

-- "Journal of American History"

On December 18, 1867, the New York Express train from Cleveland to Buffalo derailed in frigid temperatures at Angola, NY, resulting in horrific injuries and heavy loss of life. Charity Vogel has written an exhaustive history of the accident.... Her narrative tracing the train's route builds suspense with every mile and station until the train meets its doom.... Verdict: This is history writing at its best, as Vogel immerses her readers in the event's 1867 context. Highly recommended. - STARRED REVIEW

-- "Library Journal"

Surprise is hard to achieve when a historian sets out to tell a story with an outcome long established, but The Angola Horror reads like a classic thriller... Vogel makes good use of suspense to build tension, mood and character reconstruction to play on reader emotions, and a heightened expectation of terror to come... Readers of The Angola Horror will find a compelling human drama that should be studied and enjoyed by anyone looking to understand this moment in New York history.

-- "New York History"

Vogel's work is gracefully written, and the notes and bibliography reveal a staggering amount of research into contemporary newspapers and other primary sources. This is social history; the author imaginatively reconstructs the lives and experiences of those traveling on the Express that day, as well as the men and women of Angola, New York, who rose to the occasion when disaster struck.... The overall result... is a vivid depiction of antebellum life and travel.

-- "Railroad History"

Written in a format that allowed readers to place themselves onboard the 1867 train and experience a closeness and relationship with the eighty-seven characters presented.

-- "The Innovation Journal"

The book will have a wide readership far beyond the focused group of rail aficionados. Recommended.

-- "Choice"