<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>THE DYNAMITE WORKER</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>I</h2>
<h3>THE STORY OF SOME MILLIONAIRE HEROES AND THE WORLD'S GREATEST POWDER EXPLOSION</h3>
<div class='cap'>THERE is illustrated in this career of the explosive
maker a splendid fact touching courage, that, once
a man has begun to practise it, the habit holds him with
stronger and stronger grip, so that he <i>must</i> be brave
whether he will or no. I think a fireman, for instance,
who for years had jumped at the tap of a bell into any
peril, would show the same fine courage all alone, let
us say, in some crisis on a desert island. He couldn't
turn coward if he tried.</div>
<p>It is good to know, too, that these fearless qualities
may be transmitted from father to son, so that we have
whole families born, as it were, to be brave, and we see
the son of a pilot facing the seasick torture for twenty-odd
years, as his father faced it before him for thirty.
Nor is it possible to be in close relations with a very
brave man without yielding in some measure to his
personality; heroes produce heroes through a sort of
neighborhood influence, just as surely as thieves produce
their kind. Thus the brother-in-law of a lion-tamer,
though previously a mild enough man, takes to
taming lions, and does it well. And wives of acrobats
find themselves one day quietly facing perils of
the air that would surely have blanched their cheeks
had they married, let us say, photographers.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_349" id="Page_349"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>All of which brings me to a remarkable family of
explosive makers—the Duponts of Wilmington, who
for generations now have had practical monopoly in
this country of the powder-making business, including
dynamite and nitroglycerin. In this enterprise a great
fortune has accumulated, so that the Duponts of to-day
are very rich men, far beyond any need of working in
the mills themselves, and have been for years. Yet,
work in the mills they do, all of them, practically, and
direct in detail every process of manufacture, and face
continually in their own persons the same terrible dangers
that the humblest mixer faces. There has grown
in their hearts through the century, along with riches,
a great pride of courage, like that of the officer who
leads his men into battle—a pride far stronger than
any longing for idleness or pleasure. And they <i>cannot</i>,
if they would, leave these slow-grinding mills,
where any day a spark may bring catastrophe to make
the whole land shudder, as it has shuddered many times
after the fury of these giant magazines.</p>
<p>There came a day, for instance—this was a long time
ago—when a swift flame swept through one of the
mixing-rooms, nearly empty of powder at the time,
yet so permeated with the stuff in floor and walls that
instantly the building was burning fiercely. No man
can say what started it. The cause of trouble at
a powder-mill is seldom known; it comes too quickly,
and usually leaves no witness. A nail overlooked in
a workman's heel may have done the harm by striking
a stone, though of course there is an imperative rule
that all footgear made with nails be left outside the
walls; or a heavy box slid along the wooden floor may
have brought a flash out of the dry timbers. At any
rate, the flash came, and the blaze followed on it so
swiftly that the building was wrapped in fire before men<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_350" id="Page_350"></SPAN></span>
inside could reach the door, and they presently burst
out blazing themselves, for their clothing, as it must be,
was sifted through with explosive dust. Indeed, it is always
true in fires at powder-mills that the workmen
themselves are a serious menace to the buildings by reason
of their own inflammability.</p>
<p>So the next thing was a plunge into the placid Brandywine,
which winds across the yards between willow-hung
banks. In went the men, in went young Alexis
Dupont, and with a little hiss their flaming garments
were extinguished. Then, as they struck out into the
stream, they looked back and saw that the wind was
carrying a shower of sparks from the burning building
to the roof of a cutting-mill near by, where tons of
powder lay. For one of the sparks to reach the tiniest
powder train would mean the blowing up of this mill,
and almost certainly the blowing up of another and another
by the concussion, for it is in vain that they try
to protect powder-mills by scattering them over wide
yards in many little buildings. When one explodes,
the great shock usually sets off others, as a falling
rock turns loose an avalanche.</p>
<p>All this young Dupont realized in a single glance.
There would be an awful disaster presently, with many
lives imperiled, unless those falling firebrands could
somehow be kept off that roof. To know this was to
act. Millionaire or not, peril or not, it was his plain
duty as a Dupont to fight those sparks, and, without a
moment's wavering, he turned back and scrambled up
the bank.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Page_351" id="Page_351"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus78.jpg" width-obs="414" height-obs="600" alt="YOUNG DUPONT WORKING TO SAVE THE POWDER-MILL." title="" /> <span class="caption">YOUNG DUPONT WORKING TO SAVE THE POWDER-MILL.</span></div>
<p>"Come on, boys!" he cried; "start the bucket line,"
and a moment later he was climbing to the roof of
the threatened mill, where he did all that a brave
man can do—stamped out the falling embers, dashed
water again and again upon the kindling fire as the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_352" id="Page_352"></SPAN></span>
men passed up full buckets, and for a time seemed
to conquer. But presently the fire flamed hotter, the
sparks came faster, and the water came not fast enough.
He saw—he must have seen—that the struggle was
hopeless, that the mill beneath him was doomed, that
the explosion must come soon. From the ground they
shouted, calling on him to save himself. He shouted
back an order that they pass up more water, and keep
passing water. There was only one thing in the world
he wanted—water.</p>
<p>The men below did their best, but it was a vain effort,
for in those days the roofs of powder-mills were
made of pitch and cement—not of iron, as to-day—and
by this time the fire had eaten its way nearly
through. Alexis Dupont, working desperately, stood
there with flames spreading all around him. It was
plain to every one that the minutes of his life were
numbered. Again they shouted—and—</p>
<p>The explosion came like an execution, and out of
the wreck of it they bore away his crushed and broken
body. The last thing he knew was that he had played
the game out fairly to the end—he died like a Dupont,
said the men.</p>
<p>Such was the spirit of the second generation (Alexis
Dupont was a son of old Eleuthere, founder of the
line), and later we find the same courage in the third
generation, as on March 29, 1884, when La Motte
Dupont, one of the grandchildren, took his stand inside
the dynamite-mill—his mill—when it was threatened
by fire, and stayed there after every man had left it,
struggling with hand and brain against the danger
until the explosion, coming like a thousand cannon,
crashed his body deep into a sand-heap and left it with
the life gone out.</p>
<p>I suppose this is only an instance of nature's tendency<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_353" id="Page_353"></SPAN></span>
to furnish always what is needed, to raise up a
hero for each emergency; but it is encouraging to know
that the very finest kind of courage may be thus developed
by the mere pressure of moral responsibility in a
man under no master, but free to be a craven if he
will. We have seen something like this in the splendid
devotion of fire-department chiefs, who often outshine
all their men simply because they cannot resist
the gallant spirit in their own hearts.</p>
<p>Now for the exception to this rule of persisting
courage, an exception sometimes presented in the lives
of explosive makers (and in the other lives, too), and
showing that in certain cases courage may suddenly
and strangely disappear. A man may be brave for
years, and then cease to be brave. The wild-beast
tamer may awaken some morning and discover himself
afraid of his lions. The steeple-climber who has never
flinched at any height may shrink at last. The pilot
in the rapids, the acrobat on his swing, the diver sinking
to a wreck, may feel a quaking of heart unknown
before. Here is apparent contradiction, for how can
courage be made by habit and then unmade? I don't
know. I merely give the facts as I have found them,
and it is quite certain that a sturdy Irishman who has
shoveled powder all his life and waded in it knee-deep,
as if it were so much coal-dust, may, for no reason he
can put finger on, find himself lying awake of nights
reflecting on what would happen if a spark should
strike under one of the big rollers he feeds so carelessly,
or, remembering uneasily that dream of his wife's
about a white horse—every powder-man knows the
close relation between dreams and explosions, and—well,
they will all tell you this, that the only thing for
a man to do when his heart feels the cold touch of fear
is to quit his job. If he doesn't his knell is sounded, he<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_354" id="Page_354"></SPAN></span>
is marked for sacrifice, his tigers will rend him, the deep
waters will overwhelm him, a swift fall will crush
him—he will surely die.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus79.jpg" width-obs="267" height-obs="350" alt="EFFECTS OF DYNAMITE EXPLODED UNDER WATER." title="" /> <span class="caption">EFFECTS OF DYNAMITE EXPLODED UNDER WATER.</span></div>
<p>The greatest catastrophe in the records of powder-making
came because a man ignored such plain warning
of his own fear. At least, the workmen at the
Dupont mills will
tell you this if you
can get them to
break through their
usual reserve. The
man was William
Green, and, whatever
his fault, he
paid the fullest
price for it. Green
was stationed in
one of the magazines,
with the responsibility
of sealing
up hexagonal
powder, a very
powerful kind used
by the government
in heavy guns.
This powder comes
pressed into little six-sided cakes of reddish color,
which are packed in large wooden boxes lined with tin,
and it was Green's duty to solder the tin covers tight
with a hot iron. In each box there was enough of this
powder to blow up a fortress, and it is no wonder the
occupation finally told on Green's nerves. He said to
his wife that sooner or later a speck of grit would touch
his iron and make a spark, and then— The theory is
that a spark is required to explode powder which will<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_355" id="Page_355"></SPAN></span>
only burn harmlessly at the touch of a hot iron or a
flame.</p>
<p>However this may be (and I should add that the
theory is disputed), Green felt that he was in danger,
and by that fact, say the powder-men, if for no other
reason, he <i>was</i> in danger. And one day—it was October
7, 1890—the spark came; surely that was a most
important spark, for it caused the explosion of one
hundred and fifty tons of gunpowder, the instant death
of thirteen men and one woman, and the serious or
fatal injury of twenty-two men and nine women.</p>
<p>Only an earthquake could have wrought such terrible
destruction. The city of Wilmington was shaken to its
foundations. Great chasms were rent in the solid rock
under the exploding magazines. Trees were torn up by
the roots. Iron castings, weighing tons, were hurled
clean across the Brandywine. Iron columns thick as a
man's waist were twisted and bent like copper wire.
Horses outside the yards were found with legs missing;
men were found stripped clean of their clothes, and this
curious fact was developed, that a man or a horse in
the region of explosion would have shoes blown from
the feet (iron shoes or leather shoes) if the legs were
on the ground at the moment of shock, but would keep
shoes on if the legs were lifted. Thus poor Green was
found with both feet shod, and so identified, although
his body had no other stitch of covering, and the explanation
was that he probably saw the spark in time
to spring away, and was actually in the air when the
explosion came.</p>
<p>In my investigations I have heard various stories
showing what uncertainty there is as to the behavior
of dynamite in the presence of fire. Workmen who
handle it constantly in blasting operations say you
can put fire to a stick of dynamite without danger,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_356" id="Page_356"></SPAN></span>
and it will simply burn away in bluish flame. On the
other hand, they admit that in every fifty or a hundred
sticks there may be one where the touch of fire <i>will</i>
bring explosion.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus80.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="397" alt="THE EXPLOSION IN THE NEW YORK CITY TUNNEL." title="" /> <span class="caption">THE EXPLOSION IN THE NEW YORK CITY TUNNEL.</span></div>
<p>It is quite certain this was the case in New York's
recent tunnel accident near One Hundred and Eightieth
Street, and I have some facts of interest here obtained
from a workman who was in the main gallery at the
time. This man heard a shout of warning, and, looking
down the rock street, saw a puddle of blazing oil
from one of the lamps lapping at the side of a heavy
wooden box. He knew that the box was full of dynamite,
and as he looked he saw the yellow oil flame turn<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_357" id="Page_357"></SPAN></span>
to blue. That was enough for him, and he started to
run for his life. But the explosion caught him in the
first step, lifted him from the ground, and bore him on,
while his legs kept up the motions of running. He was
running on the air.</p>
<p>As he was thus hurled along his knee struck a large
stone between the siding and the north heading, and
he fell on his face, half dazed. The air was thick with
strangling fumes, there was a frightful din about
him—yells and crashing stones. Every lamp had been
blown out, and in the utter darkness he could see the
glaring eyeballs of fleeing negroes, who cursed in
awful oaths as they ran. He pressed his mouth close
to the ground, and found he could breathe better. He
felt some one step over him, and seized a leg. The leg
kicked itself free and went on. He groped about with
his hands, and touched an iron rail; it was the little
track for hauling the dumping-cars. He crept along
this painfully to the siding, then down the siding to the
shaft, where, in the blackness, he found a frantic company—negroes
mad with fright, Italians screaming and
praying, Irishmen keeping fairly cool, but wondering
why, oh, why! the elevator did not come, and several
men stretched on the ground quite still or groaning
quietly.</p>
<p>Time lacks for the rest of the story; they took out
men dressed in a collar and shirt-band only—everything
else blown off, and some whose faces were mottled
with fragments of stone, a kind of dynamite tattooing,
and some grievously injured. There are no
limits to the fury of dynamite, once it sets out to be
cruel.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />