アメリカ内務省のインスタグラム(usinterior) - 8月3日 00時23分
In the summer of 1969, the Cuyahoga River caught on fire in Cleveland, #Ohio a few miles north of Cuyahoga Valley National Park (@cuyahogavalleynps). It was not the first #CuyahogaRiver fire or the biggest. Despite its small size, it holds a place in our memory as a reflection of poor treatment of the environment. Fifty years have passed since that impactful event and much of the story following the fire is positive and inspirational. #CuyahogaValley #NationalPark is part of the story. Established five years after the fire in 1974, the park now protects 22 miles of the river and 33,000 acres of its watershed. Come enjoy this lovely landscape and hear the story of a river renewed. Photo of Brandywine Creek just before it flows into the Cuyahoga courtesy of Nick Hoeller (@nickhoeller). #travel #history #FindYourPark #usinterior
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osumatthew
Five minute explanation: https://thememorypalace.us/tag/cuyahoga-river-fire/
Basically Rockefeller built the first oil refineries nearby, and nobody gave a damn about rivers a hundred years ago. Also not the only river to catch fire, that was a regular occurrence during the industrial revolution, but this is the one that caught the public’s attention at the right time after an article in the Times
laurabrinkmooney
@kmoonski The kids and I were just looking at pictures of the Cuyahoga National Park in the book you sent us and they were saying they want to do more adventures there when we visit next💚
organizd.cha0s
@atcwarren there’s no need for negativity here 😊. I know how to use Google, though I think many readers would like a little more explanation on the post.
17801245
@ginnymae yes a train caused a spark that caught oil and other gross stuff in the surface on fire
atcwarren
@organizd.cha0s there's this crazy new website, called Google...you should check it out.
ginnymae
Why did it catch fire? Were there flammable pollutants in the water or something?
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