Sultana (steamboat)

Sultana
Sultana at Helena, Arkansas on April 26, 1865, a day before her destruction. A crowd of paroled prisoners covers her decks.
History
Name: Sultana
Owner: Initially Capt. Pres Lodwick, then a consortium including Capt. James Cass Mason
Port of registry:  United States
Route: St. Louis to New Orleans
Builder: John Litherbury Boatyard, Cincinnati
Launched: January 3, 1863
In service: 1863
Fate: Exploded and sank, April 27, 1865, on Mississippi River seven miles north of Memphis, Tennessee.
General characteristics
Tonnage: 1,719 tons
Length: 260 feet
Beam: 42 feet
Decks: Four decks (including pilothouse)
Propulsion: 34 ft (10 m) diameter paddlewheels
Capacity: 376 passengers and cargo
Crew: 85
Sultana on fire, from Harpers Weekly.

Sultana was a Mississippi River side-wheel steamboat. On April 27, 1865, the boat exploded in the worst maritime disaster in United States history. She was designed with a capacity of only 376 passengers, but she was carrying 2,155 when three of the boat's four boilers exploded and she burned to the waterline and sank near Memphis, Tennessee, killing 1,192 passengers.[1] This disaster was overshadowed in the press by other events surrounding the end of the American Civil War, most particularly the killing on the previous day of President Lincoln's assassin John Wilkes Booth.

The wooden steamboat was constructed in 1863 by the John Litherbury Boatyard[2] in Cincinnati, intended for the lower Mississippi cotton trade. The steamer registered 1,719 tons[3] and normally carried a crew of 85. For two years, she ran a regular route between St. Louis and New Orleans, frequently commissioned to carry troops.

The tragedy

Sultana Memorial at the Mount Olive Baptist Church Cemetery in Knoxville, Tennessee in 2010
Historic marker in Memphis

Under the command of Captain James Cass Mason of St. Louis, Sultana left St. Louis on April 13, 1865 bound for New Orleans, Louisiana.[4]:12 On the morning of April 15, she was tied up at Cairo, Illinois, when word reached the city that President Abraham Lincoln had been shot at Ford's Theater. Immediately, Captain Mason grabbed an armload of Cairo newspapers and headed south to spread the news, knowing that telegraphic communication with the South had been almost totally cut off because of the war.[4]:27–28 Upon reaching Vicksburg, Mississippi, Mason was approached by Lt. Col. Reuben Hatch, the chief quartermaster at Vicksburg. Hatch had a deal for Mason. Thousands of recently released Union prisoners of war that had been held by the Confederacy at the prison camps of Cahaba near Selma, Alabama, and Andersonville, in southwest Georgia, had been brought to a small parole camp outside of Vicksburg to await release to the North. The U.S. government would pay $4 per enlisted man and $10 per officer to any steamboat captain who would take a group north. Knowing that Mason was in need of money, Hatch suggested that if he could guarantee Mason a full load of about 1,400 prisoners, Mason would guarantee to give Hatch a kickback. Hoping to gain much money through this deal, Mason quickly agreed to the offered bribe.[4]:29–31

Leaving Vicksburg, Sultana traveled down river to New Orleans, continuing to spread the news of Lincoln's assassination. On April 21, 1865 the Sultana left New Orleans with about 70 cabin passengers, deck passengers, and a small amount of livestock. She also carried a crew of 85.[5] About ten hours south of Vicksburg, one of the Sultana's four boilers sprang a leak. Under reduced pressure, the steamboat limped into Vicksburg to get the boiler repaired and to pick up her promised load of prisoners.[4]:33,34–35,38,40–41

While the paroled prisoners, primarily from the states of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia,[4]:226–290 were brought from the parole camp to Sultana, a mechanic was brought down to work on the leaky boiler. Although the mechanic wanted to cut out and replace a ruptured seam, Mason knew that such a job would take a few days and cost him his precious load of prisoners. By the time the repairs would be completed, the prisoners would have been sent home on other boats. Instead, Mason and his chief engineer, Nathan Wintringer, convinced the mechanic to make temporary repairs, hammering back the bulged boiler plate and riveting a patch of lesser thickness over the seam. Instead of taking two or three days, the temporary repair took only one. During her time in port, and while the repairs were being made, Sultana took on the paroled prisoners.[4]:40

Although Hatch had suggested that Mason might get as many as 1,400 released Union prisoners, a mix-up with the parole camp books and suspicion of bribery from other steamboat captains caused the Union officer in charge of the loading, Captain George Augustus Williams, to place every man at the parole camp on board Sultana, believing the number to be less than 1,500.[4]:50,55–56 Although Sultana had a legal capacity of only 376, by the time she backed away from Vicksburg on the night of April 24, 1865 she was severely overcrowded with 1,961 paroled prisoners, 22 guards from the 58th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, 70 paying cabin passengers, and 85 crew members.[6] Many of the paroled prisoners had been weakened by their incarceration in the Confederate prison camps and associated illnesses but had managed to gain some strength while waiting at the parole camp to be officially released. The men were packed into every available space, and the overflow was so severe that in some places, the decks began to creak and sag and had to be supported with heavy wooden beams.[4]:62

Sultana spent two days traveling upriver, fighting against one of the worst spring floods in the river's history. At some places, the river overflowed the banks and spread out three miles wide. Trees along the river bank were almost completely covered, until only the very tops of the trees were visible above the swirling, powerful water.[4]:24 On April 26, Sultana stopped at Helena, Arkansas, where photographer T.W. Bankes took a picture of the grossly overcrowded vessel.[4]:72 Near 7:00 P.M., Sultana reached Memphis, Tennessee and the crew began unloading 120 tons of sugar from the hold. Near midnight, Sultana left Memphis, went a short distance upriver to take on a new load of coal and then started north again.[4]:74–79

Near 2:00 A.M. on April 27, 1865 when Sultana was just seven miles north of Memphis, her boilers suddenly exploded.[4]:79 First one boiler exploded, followed a split second later by two more. The cause of the explosions was too much pressure and low water in the boilers. There was reason to believe allowable working steam pressure had been exceeded in an attempt to overcome the spring river current. Also the Sultana's tubular boilers were made of Charcoal Hammered No. 1, a poor choice since the metal tended to crack and get brittle when heated and cooled repeatedly. (Charcoal Hammered No 1 was soon discarded for use in boilers.) [7]

The enormous explosion of steam came from the top rear of the boilers and went upward at a 45-degree angle, tearing through the crowded decks above, and completely demolishing the pilothouse. Without a pilot to steer the boat, Sultana became a drifting, floating hulk. The terrific explosion flung some of the passengers on deck into the water and destroyed a large section of the boat. The twin smokestacks toppled over, one backwards into the blasted hole, and one forward onto the crowded forward section of the upper deck. The forward part of the upper decks collapsed into the exposed furnace boxes, shoving kindling into the open fire boxes which soon caught fire and turned the remaining superstructure into an inferno. Survivors of the explosion panicked and raced for the safety of the water but in their weakened condition soon ran out of strength and began to cling to each other. Whole groups went down together.[4]:79–85

While this fight for survival was taking place, the southbound steamer Bostona (No. 2), built in 1860 but coming downriver on her maiden voyage after being refurbished,[8] arrived at about 3:00 a.m., an hour after the explosion, and arrived at the site of the burning wreck to rescue scores of survivors. At the same time, dozens of people began to float past the Memphis waterfront, calling for help until they were noticed by the crews of docked steamboats and U.S. warships who immediately set about rescuing the half-drowned victims.[4]:129 Eventually, the hulk of Sultana drifted about six miles to the west bank of the river, and sank at around 9:00 a.m. near Mound City and present-day Marion, Arkansas about seven hours after the explosion.[4]:164 Other vessels joined the rescue, including the steamers Silver Spray, Jenny Lind, and Pocohontas, the navy ironclad Essex and the sidewheel gunboat USS Tyler.[4]:146–147,168–176

Passengers who survived the initial explosion had to risk their lives in the icy spring runoff of the Mississippi or burn with the boat.[9] Many died of drowning or hypothermia. Some survivors were plucked from the tops of semi-submerged trees along the Arkansas shore. Bodies of victims continued to be found downriver for months, some as far as Vicksburg. Many bodies were never recovered. Most of Sultana's officers, including Captain Mason, were among those who perished.[10]

About 760 survivors were transported to hospitals in Memphis. Fortunately, since Memphis had been captured by Federal forces in 1862 and turned into a supply and recuperation city, there were numerous hospitals in the city with the latest medical equipment and trained personnel. Of the roughly 760 people taken to Memphis hospitals, only 6 died on the date of the explosion while another 20 died between April 28 and June 28.[6] Newspaper accounts indicate that the people of Memphis had sympathy for the victims despite the fact that they were an occupied city. The Chicago Opera Troupe, a minstrel group that had traveled upriver on the Sultana before getting off at Memphis, staged a benefit, while the crew of the gunboat Essex raised $1,000.[11]

In spite of the enormity of the disaster, no one was ever held accountable. Capt. Frederic Speed, a Union officer who sent the 1,961 paroled prisoners into Vicksburg from the parole camp, was charged with grossly overcrowding Sultana and found guilty. However, the guilty verdict was overturned by the judge advocate general of the army on grounds that Speed had been at the parole camp all day and had never placed one single soldier on board the Sultana.[4]:197–202 Captain Williams, who had placed the men on board, was a regular army officer and 1852 graduate of West Point, so the military refused to go after one of their own.[4]:202 And Colonel Hatch, who had concocted a bribe with Captain Mason to crowd as many men onto the Sultana as possible, had quickly quit the service and was now a civilian, no longer accountable to a military court. In the end, no one was ever held accountable for the greatest maritime disaster in United States history.[4]:198,200,202

Monuments and historical markers to Sultana and her victims have been erected at Memphis, Tennessee;[12] Muncie, Indiana;[13] Marion, Arkansas;[14] Vicksburg, Mississippi;[15] Cincinnati, Ohio;[16] Knoxville, Tennessee;[17] Hillsdale, Michigan[18] and Mansfield, Ohio.[19]

Casualties

The exact death toll is unknown, although the most recent evidence indicates 1,184, lower than the 1,517 deaths attributed to the Titanic disaster on the North Atlantic 47 years later. On May 19, 1865, less than a month after the disaster, Brig. Gen. William Hoffman, Commissary General of Prisoners, who investigated the disaster, reported an overall loss of soldiers, passengers, and crew of 1,238.[20] In February 1867, the Bureau of Military Justice placed the death toll at 1,100.[21] In 1880, the 51st Congress of the United States, in conjunction with the War Department, Pensions and Records Department, reported the loss of life aboard the Sultana as 1,259.[22] The official count by the United States Customs Service was 1,547.[23] In 1880, the War Department, Pensions and Records Department, placed the number of survivors at 931 but the most recent research places the number at 954.[24] Many of the dead were interred at the Memphis National Cemetery.[4]:206 Three victims of the wreck of the Sultana are interred at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee.

Cause

The official cause of the Sultana disaster was determined to be mismanagement of water levels in the boiler, exacerbated by the fact that the vessel was severely overcrowded and top heavy. As the steamboat made her way north following the twists and turns of the river, she listed severely to one side then to the other. Her four boilers were interconnected and mounted side-by-side, so that if the boat tipped sideways, water would tend to run out of the highest boiler. With the fires still going against the empty boiler, this created hot spots. When the boat tipped the other way, water rushing back into the empty boiler would hit the hot spots and flash instantly to steam, creating a sudden surge in pressure. This effect of careening could have been minimized by maintaining high water levels in the boilers. The official inquiry found that the boat's boilers exploded due to the combined effects of careening, low water level, and a faulty repair to a leaky boiler made a few days earlier.[25]

The most recent investigation into the cause of the disaster by Pat Jennings, Principal Engineer of Harford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company, which came into existence in 1866 because of the Sultana explosion, has determined that three main factors led to the explosion. No. 1) The type of metal used in the construction of the boilers - Charcoal Hammered No. 1, which tends to become brittle with prolonged heating and cooling. Charcoal Hammered No. 1 was no longer used for the manufacture of boilers after 1879. No. 2) The use of the dirty Mississippi River water to feed the boilers. The dirt tended to settle on the bottom of the boilers or clog between the flues and leave hotspots. No. 3) The design of the boilers. The Sultana had tubular boilers filled with 24 horizontal 5-inch flues. Beings so closely packed within the 48-inch diameter boilers tended to cause the muddy sediment to form hot pockets. They were extremely difficult to clean. Tubular boilers were pulled from use on steamboats plying the Lower Mississippi after two more steamboat with tubular boilers exploded shortly after the Sultana.[26]

In 1888, a St. Louis resident named William Streetor claimed that his former business partner, Robert Louden, made a death bed confession of having sabotaged Sultana by a coal torpedo.[27] Louden, a former Confederate agent and saboteur who operated in and around St. Louis, had the probable means, the motive and the opportunity to attack it. (Thomas Edgeworth Courtenay, the inventor of the coal torpedo, was a former resident of St. Louis and was involved in similar acts of sabotage against Union shipping interests. However, Courtenay's gr-gr-grandson, Joseph Thatcher, who wrote a book on Thomas Courtenay and the Coal Torpedo, denies that a coal torpedo was used. "If you read my book... you will note that we do not claim the Sultana, nor did Courtenay.")[28] Still, supporting Louden's claim are a couple of eyewitness reports of what appeared to be a piece of an artillery shell that was recovered from the sunken wreck. Louden's claim is controversial, however, and most scholars support the official explanation. The location of the explosion, from the top rear of the boilers, far away from the fireboxes, tends to indicate that Louden's claim of sabotage was pure bravado.[29][30]

Two year before William Streeter's claim that Louden sabotaged the Sultana, there was a claim that 2nd Lt. James Worthington Barrett, Co. B, 12th Kentucky Inf., an ex-prisoner and passenger on the steamboat, had caused the explosion. Barrett was a veteran of the War with Mexico and had fought bravely with his regiment until captured at Franklin, TN. He was injured on the Sultana and was honorably discharged in May 1865. There is no reason for him to have blown up the boat, especially with himself on board.[31]

Then, in 1903, another person came out with a report that the Sultana had been sabotaged by a Tennessee farmer who lived along the river and cut wood for passing steamboats. After a few Union gunboats filled up their bunkers but refused to pay, the farmer supposedly hollowed out a log, filled it with gunpowder and then left the lethal log on his woodpile. As stated in the 1903 newspaper article, the log was mistakenly taken by the Sultana. Unfortunately for the story, the Sultana was a coal burning boat, not a wood burner.[32]

The episode of History Detectives, which aired on July 2, 2014, reviewed the known evidence, thoroughly disputing the sabotage theory, and then focused on the question of why the steamboat was allowed to be crowded to several times its normal capacity before departure. The report blamed quartermaster Hatch, an individual with a long history of corruption and incompetence, who was able to keep his job due to political connections: he was the younger brother of Illinois politician Ozias M. Hatch, an advisor and close friend of President Lincoln. Throughout the war, Reuben Hatch had shown incompetence as a quartermaster and competence as a thief, bilking the government out of thousands of dollars. Although brought up on courts-martial charges, Hatch managed to get letters of recommendation from such noted authorities as President Abraham Lincoln and General of the Army Ulysses S. Grant. The letters reside in the National Archives in Washington DC. After the disaster, Hatch refused three separate subpoenas to appear before Captain Speed's trial and give testimony. Hatch died in 1871, having escaped justice due to his numerous highly placed patrons—including two presidents.[4]:193–197

Survivors

In December 1885, the survivors living in the northern states of Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio began attending annual reunions, forming the National Sultana Survivors' Association. Eventually, the group settled on meeting in the Toledo, Ohio, area. Perhaps inspired by their Northern comrades, a Southern group of survivors, men from Kentucky and Tennessee began meeting in 1889 around Knoxville, Tennessee. Both groups met as close to the April 27 anniversary date as possible, corresponded with each other, and shared the title National Sultana Survivors' Association.

By the mid-1920s, only a handful of survivors were able to attend the reunions. In 1929, only two men attended the Southern reunion. The next year, only one man showed up. The last Northern survivor, Private Jordan Barr of the 15th Michigan Volunteer Infantry Regiment, died on May 16, 1938 at age 93.[33] The last of the Southern survivors, and last overall survivor, was Private Charles M. Eldridge of the 3rd Tennessee Cavalry, who died at his home at age 96 on September 8, 1941, more than 76 years after the Sultana disaster.[34]

Remnants found

In 1982, a local archaeological expedition, led by Memphis attorney Jerry O. Potter, uncovered what was believed to be the wreckage of Sultana. Blackened wooden deck planks and timbers were found about 32 feet (10 m) under a soybean field on the Arkansas side, about 4 miles (6 km) from Memphis. The Mississippi River has changed course several times since the disaster, leaving the wreck under dry land and far from today's river. The main channel now flows about 2 miles (3 km) east of its 1865 position.[10]

Museum

In 2015, on the 150th anniversary of the disaster, an interim Sultana Disaster Museum was opened in Marion, Arkansas, the closest town to the buried remains of the steamboat. (Across the Mississippi River from Memphis, TN.) The museum is only temporary until enough funds can be raised to build a permanent museum to the greatest maritime disaster in American history. Featured in the museum are a few relics from the Sultana such as shaker plates from the boat's furnace, furnace bricks, a few pieces of wood, and some small metal pieces. The museum also features many artifacts from the Sultana Survivor's Association, as well as a 14-foot model replica of the boat. One entire wall is decorated with the names of every soldier, crewperson and passenger that was on the boat on April 27, 1865.

In culture

Artwork

Novelization

  • Hendricks, Nancy (2015). Terrible Swift Sword: Long Road to the Sultana. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1507764688.
  • Thom, James Alexander (2015). Fire in the Water. Blue River Press. ISBN 978-1935628569.
  • Smith, Joe W. (2010) Sultana! J & M Printing. ISBN 978-931916-64-6. Illustrations by Linda L. Smith.

Music

  • Jay Farrar of the band Son Volt wrote a song called "Sultana", paying tribute to "the worst American disaster of the maritime". Farrar calls the boat "the Titanic of the Mississippi" in the song, which was released on the American Central Dust album (2009)[37]
  • King's German Legion – "Blues in the Water" tells a stylized version of the Sultana disaster on their EP release Marching Orders. [38]
  • Josh Ritter's song "Monster Ballads" includes several references to the Sultana, including mentions of "Cairo" and "When the boilers blew".

Film

  • A boat with the same name as the Sultana appears in the 1963 Robert Aldritch movie 4 for Texas. It stars Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Ursula Andress.

See also

References

  1. June 2016 to July 2017 research by Gene Eric Salecker, Sultana author and historical consultant for the Sultana Disaster Museum, Marion, Arkansas
  2. Given as the "John Lithoberry Shipyard" on Ohio Historical Marker 18–31 (1999) on the Ohio River at Sawyer Point.
  3. Berry (1892), p. 7
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Salecker, Gene Eric (1996). Disaster on the Mississippi : the Sultana explosion, April 27, 1865. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Inst. Press. ISBN 1-55750-739-2.
  5. The St. Louis Daily Missouri Democrat, April 29, 1865 states that the "steamer Sultana left New Orleans on Friday evening the 21st, with about seventy cabin passengers, and about eighty five employees on the boat."
  6. 1 2 June 2016 to July 2018 research by Gene Eric Salecker, Sultana author and historical consultant for the Sultana Disaster Museum, Marion, Arkansas.
  7. Jennings, Pat, "What Happened to the Sultana?" https://www.nationalboard.org/SiteDocuments/General%20Meeting/Jennings.pdf
  8. Potter, Jerry O. "Sultana: A Tragic Postscript to the Civil War". American History Magazine. Archived from the original on 2008-01-28.
  9. Bennett, Robert Frank, CDR USCG (March 1976). "A Case of Calculated Mischief". Proceedings: 77–83.
  10. 1 2 Harvey, Hank (October 27, 1996). "The Sinking of the Sultana". The Blade. "Section C, pp. 6,3". Retrieved April 27, 2015.
  11. Memphis Daily Bulletin, and Memphis Daily Appeal, various dates, April 1865
  12. "Historic Memphis Elmwood Cemetery". Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  13. "Sultana Disaster Monument". Find a Grave. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  14. "Sultana Historic Marker". Arkansas: The Natural State. Arkansas Department of Parks & Tourism. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  15. "Disaster Multiplied". Historical Chronicles Press. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  16. "The Sultana". Historical Marker Database. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  17. "Sultana Monument – Civil War". East Tennessee River Valley GeoTourism Guide. National Geographic. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  18. "Sultana Memorial". Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  19. "Sultana Tragedy". Historical Marker Database. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  20. Fold3.com website, The Civil War, Sultana Disaster, April 1865, Quartermaster vessel file relating to the Sultana, page 68.
  21. Fold3.com website, The Civil War, Sultana Disaster, April 1865, Quartermaster vessel file relating to the Sultana, page 105.
  22. Fold3.com website, The Civil War, Sultana Disaster, April 1865, Enlisted Branch file (HAAQ 981 EB 1865, page 80
  23. Crutchfield, James (2008). It Happened on the Mississippi River. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-762-75236-2.
  24. Fold3.com website, The Civil War, Sultana Disaster, April 1865, Enlisted Branch file (HAAQ 981 EB 1865, page 80. June 2016 to July 2017 research by Gene Eric Salecker, Sultana author and historical consultant for the Sultana Disaster Museum, Marion, Arkansas.
  25. Huffman, Alan (2009). Sultana: Surviving Civil War, Prison, and the Worst Maritime Disaster in American History. Collins. pp. 242–243. ISBN 9780061470547.
  26. Jennings, Pat "What Happened to the Sultana?" https://www.nationalboard.org/SiteDocuments/General%20Meeting/Jennings.pdf
  27. "The Sultana Disaster (Coal Torpedo theory)". Civil War St Louis. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  28. History Detective Episode on Sultana, http://www.pbs.org/opb/historydetectives/investigation/civil-war-sabotage/
  29. Tidwell, William A. (1995). "April '65". Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press: 52.
  30. Rule, G.E.; Rule, Deb (December 2001). "The Sultana: A case for sabotage". North and South Magazine. 5 (1).
  31. National Tribune, (Washington DC), May 20, 1886, p. 3.
  32. Portsmouth [NH] Herald, June 13, 1903, p. 7
  33. Findagrave.com
  34. Ancestry.com, Texas Death Certificates, 1903-1980
  35. "The Sultana Departs from Vicksburg". Vicksburg Riverfront Murals. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  36. Huffman, Alan (October 2009). "Surviving the Worst: The Wreck of the Sultana at the End of the American Civil War". Mississippi Historical Society. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
  37. Deusner, Stephen. "American Central Dust". Pitchfork Media (Review). Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  38. "Blues in the Water, by King's German Legion". King's German Legion. Retrieved 2017-03-10.

Further reading

  • Bearss, Margie Riddle (Spring 1978). "Messenger of Lincoln Death Herself Doomed". The Lincoln Herald: 49–51.
  • Berry, Chester D. (2005) [1892]. Loss of the Sultana and Reminiscences of Survivors. University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 1-57233-372-3.
  • Bryant, William O. (1990). Cahaba Prison and the "Sultana" Disaster. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-0468-1.
  • Elliott, Joseph Taylor. (1913). The Sultana Disaster. E.J. Hecker. Indiana Historical Society Publications, v. 5, no. 3.
  • Hendricks, Nancy (2015). Terrible Swift Sword: Long Road to the Sultana. ISBN 978-1-5077-6468-8.
  • Huffman, Alan (2009). Sultana: Surviving the Civil War, Prison, and the Worst Maritime Disaster in American History. Collins. ISBN 0-06-147054-6.
  • Potter, Jerry O. (1992). The Sultana Tragedy: America's Greatest Maritime Disaster. Pelican Publishing. ISBN 0-88289-861-2.
  • Rule, G. E.; Rule, Deb. "The Sultana: A case for sabotage". North and South Magazine. 5 (1).
  • Salecker, Gene Eric (1996). Disaster on the Mississippi: the Sultana Explosion, April 27, 1865. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-739-2.
  • Salecker, Gene Eric (May 2002). "A Tremendous Tumult and Uproar". America's Civil War. 15 (26). ISSN 1046-2899.
  • Walker, Sally M. (2017). Sinking the Sultana: A Civil War Story of Imprisonment, Greed, and a Doomed Journey Home. Candlewick. ISBN 978-0-7636-7755-8.
  • "Sultana: Titanic of the Mississippi – Investigation with several videos".
  • On This Date in 1865: Tragedy on the Mississippi – Sultana Explodes – Thousands Die
  • Raising The Sultana
  • Steamboat Sultana: Biographical Information
  • A Soldier's Story (Sultana Remembered)
  • Sultana Disaster Records – Records relating to the explosion of the steamer Sultana, including lists of those aboard the boat.

Coordinates: 35°11′26″N 90°6′52″W / 35.19056°N 90.11444°W / 35.19056; -90.11444

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