46 people died as cars and trucks plunged 100 feet into the near-freezing water of the Ohio River.
All in Engineering
It was on this day in Los Angeles that the Baldwin Hills Reservoir crumbled apart and released 250,000,000 gallons of water into the surrounding neighborhoods.
In 1907 two massive sections of the bridge snapped off and plunged over 300 feet into the Saint Lawrence River.
In 1859 a semi-retired train conductor named Edwin Drake engineered the world's first successful oil drilling operation.
A B-25 bomber on a routine transport mission slammed into the Empire State Building.
114 people were killed and over 200 were injured when an elevated walkway collapsed at the Hyatt Regency in Kansas City, Missouri.
In 1979, America's first space station, the 100-ton Skylab, came crashing back to Earth.
Howard Hughes took one of the fastest planes ever built on a maiden flight that almost killed him.
The machine that Otto Rohwedder created not only sliced bread, but it also wrapped it.
In 1983, a 100-foot section of the Mianus River Bridge collapsed and 4 vehicles plunged into the shallow water below.
The first successful passenger elevator was installed on this day at 488 Broadway in New York City.
An undertaker invented a pivotal piece of technology that would automate phone exchanges.
Over 200 schools were destroyed in the disaster and it was clear that had the quake struck during school hours the death toll would have been significantly higher.
It was on this day that two work crews converged deep under the Swiss Alps to form one of the greatest engineering feats of all time.
Christopher Latham Sholes was a newspaper publisher, politician and most notably - the inventor of the QWERTY keyboard.
It was on this day that an Austrian tailor/inventor fell to his death from the Eiffel Tower.
It ignited the Texas oil boom and within a year over 500 oil and land companies were created.
King realized that what the world needed was a razor that was sharp enough to give you a good shave, but not big enough to slice open your jugular.
The only known fatal accident involving a nuclear reactor in America happened on this day.
92 of 159 passengers would die when a wrought-iron bridge collapsed and the Pacific Express fell 70 feet into the frozen Ashtabula River.