Richmond, Indiana explosion

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The Richmond, Indiana explosion was a double explosion which occurred on April 6, 1968 in downtown Richmond, Indiana. The explosions killed 41 people and injured more than 150. The primary explosion was due to natural gas leaking from one or more faulty transmission lines under a building housing a firearms store; the secondary explosion was due to gunpowder stored in the building.

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[edit] Effects

Location of Richmond in the state of Indiana
Location of Richmond in the state of Indiana

Twenty buildings in and adjacent to the site of the explosion were condemned as a direct result of the explosions. Ultimately, the main street through downtown Richmond was permanently closed to traffic and the Downtown Promenade was built in 1972 (later expanded in 1978). This five-block pedestrian mall was torn down and the street reopened to traffic 29 years after the explosion, in 1997, as part of an urban revitalization effort.

A simple curved brick memorial honoring those lost in the tragedy was erected in the downtown, with metal lettering: In memory of the forty-one persons who lost their lives in the tragic downtown explosion April 6, 1968 and with everlasting gratitude to those who helped give rebirth to this city

[edit] Media

In April 2007, a team of Richmond-based filmmakers announced their work on a documentary film about the explosion and its effects, scheduled to premiere in April of 2008 as a part of commemorating the 40th anniversary of the explosion. [1]

[edit] References

Death in a Sunny Street: The Civil Defense story of the Richmond, Indiana disaster, April 6, 1968 by Esther Kellner (online library collection)

[edit] External links