Introduction: The Dance of Nineteenth Century Steamboat and Railroad Accident Investigation Reports
Two 1911 ICC Reports
Shifts in America Affecting Accident Investigation Reports
Three Shifts in the Discourse Community
PART ONE: USING SCIENCE AS A CORPORATE DEFENSE
Chapter 1: The Collaboration of Science and the Corporations
Takes Center Stage While the Coroner's Jury is Befuddled by
Complexity
The Accident-The Explosion of the Steam Boat New England, October
9, 1883
The Coroner's Jury Investigation
The Company Investigation Report Exonerates Its Actions Using
Science
Establishing a Scientific Ethos for the Investigation Report
Dispositio (Arrangement) as a Means of Persuasion in the
Investigation Report
"Outside Experts" Give Their Findings . . . But Not Very
Persuasively Other "Outside Experts" Offer Their Critical Comments,
But Much Later
In the End
Chapter 2: Science for Sale
The Accident-Explosion of the Locomotive Engine Richmond near
Reading, Penna. on the 2nd of September 1844
The Coroner's Jury Verdict-Act of God or an Act of Man
The Shaky Scientific Ethos of Dionysus Lardner
Needing to Present Both Sides when Lardner Declaims
Committee on Science and the Arts Report
In the End
PART TWO: PUBLICITY, POLITICAL PRESSURE, AND EMOTIONAL INVOLVEMENT BY AUTHORS TRANSFORM DISASTER INVESTIGATIONS
Chapter 3: Publicity, Politics, and Emotions Enter the
Investigation Constellation-The Steamboat Moselle Explosion, Spring
1838 The Steamboat Moselle Explosion on the Cincinnati Waterfront
Cincinnati in the 1830s: Frontier Law and Order
Political Control of the Investigation Locke's Highly Charged
Personal Emotional Involvement in the Investigation
How Locke Used Silliman's Report
The Beginning of a New Approach to Accident Investigation
In the End
Chapter 4: What Happens When the Scientific Ethos is Missing in
Investigation Reports: The Camden and Amboy Railroad Disaster, 29
of August 1855
Railroad Dangers
The Joint Companies (the Camden and Amboy Railroad and the Delaware
and Raritan Canal) and Commodore Robert F. Stockton
The Coroner's Jury Verdict
The Joint Companies Try to Exonerate their Actions but Meet with
Disdain
The Franklin Institute Scientists Offer a Sermon, Not Science The
Stockton-Van Rensselaer Controversy
In the End
Chapter 5: The Gasconade Bridge Accident, November 2, 1855
A Celebration with Political Effects
Railroad Truss Bridges
Unfinished Bridges were Routinely Used
The Accident
The Coroner's Inquest
The Press Weighs In
The Company's Report-Does Not Fully Exonerate the Company
Henry Kayser-A Critical Scientific Voice of the Company
Julius Adams's Rebuttal
In the End
PART THREE: THE ANTEBELLUM PERIOD OF DISASTER INVESTIGATION:
TRANSFORMATION ENDS AND A CONSTELLATION OF ROLES AND REPORTS
BECOMES NORMAL
The Role of the Newspapers in the Investigative Process
International Influences in the United States Investigative
Process
Chapter 6: The Eastern Railroad Accident at Revere,
Massachusetts, August 26, 1871
The Accident
Instant Analysis, The Railroad Gazette, September 2, 1871
Coroner's Jury Verdict, September 10
Report of the Committee of the Directors, October 20, 1871, and
"Justice" in the American Railroad Times, October 21 to December
23
The Massachusetts Railroad Commission Report, January 1872
Charles Francis Adams, Jr.'s Account of the Revere Accident,
Atlantic Monthly, January 1876
In the End
Chapter 7: The Ashtabula Railroad Disaster, December 29, 1876-
The State and the Professionals Take Over
Four Variations on the Tried-and-True Howe Truss Design
The Accident
The Investigations
Three Unique Investigations
In the End-Move toward Legislative Action
Chapter 8: Notes on Railroad Accidents
A Railroad Philosopher
Contemporary Reviews of Notes on Railroad Accidents
Rhetorical Element One: "Thrilling Incidents"
Rhetorical Element Two: "Accident Taxonomy"
Rhetorical Element Three: "Statistics"
Rhetorical Element Four: "Scientific Analysis"
The Impact of Notes on Railroad Accidents
Glossary
Index
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