Uncharted Lancaster

The Reed Run Nitroglycerin Disaster of 1874

Adam Zurn Season 2 Episode 3

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0:00 | 43:22

In the winter of 1874, a quiet stretch of southern Lancaster County became the site of one of the region’s most devastating and mysterious industrial tragedies. In this episode, we explore the Reed Run nitroglycerin disaster, where Philip Cramer and his two sons were killed in a massive explosion caused by a 96-pound canister of volatile fuel left behind by railroad workers. The blast tore open the earth, was heard for miles, and left behind a scene so violent it stunned the surrounding community.

Drawing from newspaper accounts and modern family reflections, we examine the lingering questions at the heart of the story—was it a tragic accident, or were the victims attempting to move the dangerous explosive for reward? Today, the site remains a quiet, scarred depression in the woods near Clark Nature Preserve, a haunting reminder of the risks and realities of 19th-century railroad expansion.

To learn more, visit UnchartedLancaster.com.

Ghosts, Monsters, & Tales of Adventure
Uncharted Lancaster’s Ghosts, Monsters, and Tales of Adventure takes readers on a 283-page spine-tingling journey through Lancaster County’s haunted history, eerie legends, and hidden treasures. From ghostly apparitions to outlaw loot, these 64 true local stories blend real history with gripping folklore. Order your copy here.

SPEAKER_01

Imagine uh just a completely frozen, desolate stretch of Pennsylvania woods. Right. It's December twenty-third, eighteen seventy-four. So just two days before Christmas.

SPEAKER_00

And it would have been bitterly cold.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely freezing. The air is so cold it hurts to breathe. The ground is as hard as iron, and the river hills are just, you know, completely silent.

SPEAKER_00

It's the dead winter quiet.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But then suddenly this massive explosion just rips through the trees.

SPEAKER_00

And we are not talking about a small pop.

SPEAKER_01

No, no. I am not talking about a gunshot or like a standard mining charge. I mean an explosion so violent, so incomprehensibly massive that it instantly gouges a crater into the earth big enough to swallow a team of horses. Yeah. The boom is deafening. It echoes for miles down the river valley, rattling windows, shaking the frost off the pines. And the locals who hear this world-ending sound, they just shrug.

SPEAKER_00

Which is wild.

SPEAKER_01

They barely even look up from their work. They just go right back to whatever they were doing.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell It's a surreal image, isn't it? I mean, a cataclysmic event treated as completely mundane background noise.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell It really is. And so today on the deep dive, we are looking into exactly why that community didn't react. Right. And uh what actually happened in those woods. We are on a mission to reconstruct a forgotten, very visceral tragedy from roughly 150 years ago.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell The read-run nitroglycerin disaster.

SPEAKER_01

Trevor Burrus Exactly. And this isn't just about a big boom in the forest, you know. We are exploring the incredibly chilling intersection between everyday rural survival and the brutal, entirely unregulated march of 19th century industrial progress.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And we have a truly fascinating stack of sources to guide us through this today.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Tell us about the sources.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So we are looking at original transcripts of frantic and honestly sometimes directly contradictory 1874 newspaper articles.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell From Lancaster County, right?

SPEAKER_00

Yes, from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Specifically, we've pulled reports from the Intelligencer, the Daily Examiner, and the semi-weekly New Era.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

But to balance out that 19th-century journalism, which uh can be flawed, we also have modern genealogical records from Find a Grave.

SPEAKER_01

Which is so helpful for getting the actual facts straight.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Absolutely. We also have this incredibly evocative 2016 retrospective piece. It was written by a journalist known locally as The Scribbler.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, right. The one who actually went on the family pilgrimage.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. He went to the blast site. Oh. And finally, we have corporate historical data detailing the rise and fall of the Columbia and Port Deposit Railroad.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell You know, it's funny. If you're driving over a set of train tracks today or hiking a paved nature trail, it's just so easy to assume those paths were always there. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

People take it for granted. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

We really do. We like our history visible, right? Bronze plaques, little roadside markers. Trevor Burrus, Jr. Sure. But the truth is, the most profound history is often the history we can't see. It's buried under the gravel and the ferns. We are stepping onto a landscape that is holding on to ghosts that have been almost entirely erased by time in progress.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Which is exactly why my role here today isn't just to walk us through a timeline of a disaster. I want us to step back and really synthesize the bigger picture. This is a profound look at how history records trauma.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

It's about how corporate liability functioned in the 1870s, which is to say it largely did basically nonexistent. Right. And perhaps most importantly, it shows us how family lore preserves the quiet, uncomfortable truths that official legal records try so desperately to bury.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, so before we can even look at the catalyst of this explosion or the railroad, we really need to understand exactly who was in those woods that day.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell We have to move from the abstract idea of a historical disaster to the actual flesh and blood human beings involved.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. We need to look at the Kramer family portrait.

SPEAKER_00

It's really the only way to grasp the stakes. I mean, the abstract numbers of casualties in old newspapers, they don't tell the story. The lived reality of the Kramer family does.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, let's unpack this. Let's introduce our central figure. His name is Philip Kramer. The modern genealogical records tell us he was born in January of 1823. So on this freezing day in late December 1874, he is just a few weeks shy of his 52nd birthday.

SPEAKER_00

And we actually have physical descriptions of him, don't we?

SPEAKER_01

We do. From his military records, which I love because it really grounds him in reality. He was a five foot-nine man with light hair and great eyes. He was married to an Irish-born woman named Eleanor, who went by Ellen Duffy, and together they were raising a massive family. We're talking at least seven children.

SPEAKER_00

Seven kids, wow. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Eliza Jane, George Washington, Mary Ann, James Henry, Alice, John, and Charles.

SPEAKER_00

Think about the sheer caloric requirements of a family of nine living in the Susquehanna River Hills during the 1870s.

SPEAKER_01

That's a lot of mouths to feed.

SPEAKER_00

It's an unrelenting, physically exhausting endeavor. There was no social safety net, you worked, or your children starved. The sources detail his varied livelihood, and it's just a reflection of pure survival. The 1860 census listed him as a laborer. He was a farmer, owning a small tract of land in Mardock Township, and later living in Lower Chancellor Township in York County.

SPEAKER_01

But crucially, later accounts identify him primarily as a collier.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

Now when I first read the word collier in the sorts material, I immediately pictured coal mining.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, sure.

SPEAKER_01

I pictured a guy with a pickaxe, deep underground, covered in black dust, digging out anthracite.

SPEAKER_00

It's a very common assumption, especially when you're talking about Pennsylvania history. But in this specific regional context, in the river hills, a collier was something different.

SPEAKER_01

But equally grueling, right?

SPEAKER_00

Oh, absolutely. A collier was a man who went into the deep woods, cut down massive amounts of timber, and carefully burned it in enormous smoldering earth mounds to produce charcoal.

SPEAKER_01

So he's essentially manufacturing fuel by hand.

SPEAKER_00

Precisely. This charcoal was then sold to local iron furnaces, which were really the absolute backbone of the region's early industrial economy before coal transportation became universally cheap.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, that makes sense.

SPEAKER_00

But the process of making charcoal was incredibly demanding. You didn't just light a fire. Right. You had to stack the wood perfectly, cover it with soil and leaves to restrict the oxygen, and then tend to this smoldering mound day and night for over a week. A whole week. Yeah. If you let too much air in, the whole mound burns to worthless ash. If you don't let enough in, the fire dies.

SPEAKER_01

So you can't just leave it.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. It required constant vigilance. You're living out in the woods, in makeshift huts, breathing in thick smoke, constantly covered in soot.

SPEAKER_01

Man. So he's out there day in and day out doing heavy manual labor. And turning 52 in 1874 is not like turning fifty-two today. Not at all. He has lived a hard life and he is carrying the physical toll of his past. The records show he was a Civil War veteran.

SPEAKER_00

Which is a whole other layer to his story.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. He mustered into federal service in August 1864. So late in the war during some of the most brutal campaigning. He was a private and company D of the 2nd Pennsylvania Cavalry, the 59th Regiment, and he served until he was honorably discharged by general order in May 1865.

SPEAKER_00

So this guy survived the absolute nightmare of the Civil War cavalry, comes back home to his Irish wife and growing family, and just goes right back into the woods to burn charcoal and farm.

SPEAKER_01

Just to keep food on the table.

SPEAKER_00

He is the quintessential portrait of rural American endurance in the 19th century.

SPEAKER_01

He's essentially a 19th century gig worker.

SPEAKER_00

That's a good way to put it.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Because he isn't just a farmer with a neat little plot of land and a predictable yield. He is constantly piecing together a living through charcoal burning, day labor, whatever seasonal odd jobs he can find, whatever it takes to feed those seven kids.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell The gig economy comparison is spot on because just like today, all the risk was pushed onto the worker. Yep. The concept of a single, stable career with benefits or a pension, it simply didn't apply to rural laborers like Philip Kramer. If farming slowed down in the winter, he had no safety act.

SPEAKER_01

He had to go into the freezing woods.

SPEAKER_00

And the panic of 1873 had just occurred the year prior. That triggered a massive economic depression across the entire country. Cash was incredibly scarce.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Which brings us to who was with him in the woods that day. His two sons, James, Henry, and John. Right. They weren't in school. They were out there working alongside their father because their labor was economically necessary for the family's survival.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus And this is where we hit our first massive discrepancy in the historical record.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, yeah, let's look at the math here. Because if you read the 1874 newspaper articles, the Intelligencer, the Examiner, they report that Phillips' sons were industrious, hardworking young men in their early 20s.

SPEAKER_00

That's what they printed.

SPEAKER_01

Specifically, the Intelligencer says they were from 20 to 23 years of age. But then we look at the modern genealogical record.

SPEAKER_00

The actual family records.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The records supplied by descendant Don Kramer. And the dates of birth tell a completely different, much darker story. James Henry was born in January 1856. John was born in September 1861. That means on the day of the disaster, James was only 18 and John was just 13 years old.

SPEAKER_00

It's a staggering difference.

SPEAKER_01

Why are the papers aging up a middle schooler to a full grown man?

SPEAKER_00

It fundamentally changes the entire emotional weight of the scene, doesn't it?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

We aren't looking at three grown men swinging axes. We are looking at an aging father, a teenager, and a literal child.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell, I mean 13 to 20 is a massive, visually obvious gap.

SPEAKER_00

It is.

SPEAKER_01

Was it just incredibly sloppy reporting in the rush to get the paper to print? Or does it feel somehow less tragic or maybe less legally perilous for the readers and the powers that be if the victims are adults rather than young children?

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Well, what's fascinating here is that it's almost certainly a combination of both sloppy journalism and the sociology of the era. Aaron Powell Let's look at the mechanics of breaking news in the 1870s. It relied heavily on hearsay secondhand accounts and telegraph operators tapping out quick summaries.

SPEAKER_01

So they weren't exactly doing deep investigative fact checking.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Not at all. The reporters sitting in the newspaper offices in Lancaster City likely didn't travel deep into the rural hollows of the river hills to verify birth records with the grieving mother.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

They likely asked a local on the street or railroad foreman who gave a rough estimation based on the fact that these boys were out there doing the heavy grueling work of grown men. A thirteen year old swinging an axe in the freezing woods to make charcoal was treated like an adult by the economy, so the community may have simply viewed him as one.

SPEAKER_01

That makes sense from a purely functional standpoint. If you do a man's work, you're seen as a man.

SPEAKER_00

But your second point about psychological distancing is vital. A tragedy involving three grown men is viewed as a harsh but accepted reality of industrial life. Men die building the country. But a tragedy involving a 13-year-old child points to a much deeper systemic cruelty. It raises uncomfortable questions about child labor, about the desperation of the local populace, and about the sheer negligence of whoever caused the disaster.

SPEAKER_01

The official record, intentionally or not, sanitized the human cost.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. It smoothed over the rough edges of the tragedy. This is exactly why the quiet, enduring truth of family records, like those preserved by descendants and platforms like Find a Grave is so absolutely essential.

SPEAKER_01

Because they correct the historical distortion that the newspapers left behind. Yes. It paints such a vivid, unforgiving picture of what life was like in the River Hills back then. It was harsh. It required the labor of the entire family. You didn't get to have a childhood the way we think of it today.

SPEAKER_00

No, you really didn't.

SPEAKER_01

That's why a 13-year-old and an 18-year-old were deep in the woods, miles from home, doing heavy manual labor just two days before Christmas. They weren't out building snowmen or looking forward to opening presents. They were trying to survive the winter.

SPEAKER_00

So we have a clear picture of the Kramers. They were working the land just to stay alive.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

But the land itself was being aggressively, violently altered by outside forces. The Kramers were a fixture of the old rural subsistence economy, but a new, modern, incredibly well-funded economy was literally blasting its way through their backyard. And that brings us to the second major actor in our deep dive.

SPEAKER_01

The railroad and its terrifying tools. The sleeping dragon. Yes. We are talking about the Columbia and Port Deposit Railroad, which the sources refer to as the C and PD. Right. The history here is pretty dense. The railroad was chartered back in 1858, initially under a different name, the Washington and Maryland Line Railroad, but that was changed. Actual construction finally began in 1866. And they weren't just some small local mom and pop operation. They were backed by the massive Pennsylvania Railroad, the PRR, which had purchased a controlling interest.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And for context, the PRR was one of the largest, most powerful corporations in the world at that time. They were curving a 34-mile line through the incredibly rough, rocky terrain of the river hills, trying to connect Columbia, Pennsylvania down to Port Deposit, Maryland.

SPEAKER_01

If you understand the geography of the Susquehanna River Hills, you understand what an absolute engineering nightmare this project was.

SPEAKER_00

Bo, without a doubt. You are not laying track across a flat prairie. The geology is unforgiving. Right. You are dealing with steep, jagged cliffs, dense metamorphic rock formations, deep ravines, and constant elevation changes right along the edge of a massive river.

SPEAKER_01

You can't just dig through that with shovels and pickaxes.

SPEAKER_00

No, you have to shatter the landscape into submission. And the tool of choice for the Columbia and Port Deposit Railroad to achieve that shattering was nitroglycerin.

SPEAKER_01

And here is where the specific hazard of our story comes into play. According to the Daily Examiner from December 24, 1874, the railroad workers had left a 96-pound can of nitroglycerin just sitting in the woods.

SPEAKER_00

96 pounds.

SPEAKER_01

Just sitting there. On the property of a local farmer named Thomas Stewart, near an area called Reed Run, 96 pounds.

SPEAKER_00

Terrifying.

SPEAKER_01

And the environmental factor here is critical. It was late December. The explosive had frozen.

SPEAKER_00

The chemistry and the environmental factor cannot be overstated here. Nitroglycerin, even under ideal laboratory conditions, was notoriously, terrifyingly unstable. Right. It was invented a few decades prior by an Italian chemist named Discanio Sobrero. He was actually so horrified by its destructive potential that he kept it a secret for a while.

SPEAKER_01

That tells you something.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. It's a heavy, colorless, oily liquid.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

But its molecular structure is essentially desperate to break apart and release massive amounts of energy and gas.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

When the temperatures drop and it freezes, which happens at a surprisingly high temperature, around 55 degrees Fahrenheit, its chemical instability multiplies exponentially.

SPEAKER_01

Wait, it freezes at 55 degrees, so it didn't even have to be a blizzard. Any standard autumn or winter day in Pennsylvania would freeze it solid.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. And when it freezes, it forms crystals. The mechanical friction of those crystals grinding against each other makes it incredibly shock sensitive. When frozen, you don't even need a spark or a fuse or a blasting cap to set it off. Rough handling, a crushing weight, or a single sharp blow is enough to trigger an immediate catastrophic detonation.

SPEAKER_01

That is wild.

SPEAKER_00

Alfred Nobel eventually figured out how to stabilize it by mixing it with diatomaceous earth to create dynamite. But in 1874, raw liquid, or in this case, frozen nitroglycerin, was still widely used because it was cheap and incredibly powerful.

SPEAKER_01

This is I mean, this is the equivalent of a modern construction crew leaving an unexploded live 96-pound bomb just sitting next to a public hiking trail and going home for the weekend.

SPEAKER_00

It really is.

SPEAKER_01

I am genuinely stunned by the sheer breathtaking negligence of the scenario. Was there absolutely no protocol? How does a 96-pound bomb just get left behind? I mean, you don't just misplace 96 pounds of anything, let alone high explosives.

SPEAKER_00

Well, if we connect this to the bigger picture of the 1870s industrial mindset, the concept of protocol or occupational safety as we understand it simply did not exist. Right. There was no OSHA. There were no hazardous material transport regulations. The corporate goal was conquering the terrain at all costs and as quickly as possible.

SPEAKER_01

Safety was an afterthought.

SPEAKER_00

If it was a thought at all. The landscape was treated as an exclusive industrial zone, regardless of who lived there or who technically owned the property. The railroad companies operated with a sense of total impunity.

SPEAKER_01

Unbelievable.

SPEAKER_00

They likely left it there intentionally. They probably thought, we'll need this to blast the next rock phase tomorrow or after the Christmas holiday. It's heavy, let's just leave it here. They were treating the rural woods as an open-air storage locker.

SPEAKER_01

And just assuming that the locals would know to stay away?

SPEAKER_00

Assuming they even thought about the locals at all.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

The burden of safety was entirely on the community, not the corporation. Wow. The locals living there, the farmers, the colliers, the children, were simply expected to navigate the collateral danger. It was an accepted hazard of living near progress.

SPEAKER_01

It's infuriating. It really highlights the power dynamic. So we have our subjects, Philip, 18-year-old James, and 13-year-old John Kramer, and we have the hazard of frozen, ultrasensitive, 96-pound bomb left out in the open. Right. Now we move chronologically to the afternoon of Wednesday, December 23rd. Let's explore the horrific collision of these two elements.

SPEAKER_00

The sources map out the geography of that morning quite clearly. The Kramers lived between York Furnace and McCall's Ferry, an area where the modern town of Holtwood is located today.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

They left their home early in the morning and traveled into Reed's Hollow, making their way onto the Thomas Stewart property. This was just north of the ridge separating Reed Run from Tuquan Glen. They were working on the land directly above the active railroad construction line.

SPEAKER_01

And even here, the sources give us conflicting reports of exactly what they were doing out there.

SPEAKER_00

Typical of the reporting then.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. The Daily Examiner and the Intelligencer confidently state they were there for the purpose of cutting wood for their charcoal burning business. But then you look at the Daily Evening Express, and they claim the Kramers were hunting for coons and rabbits on the Susquehanna Hills.

SPEAKER_00

It's very likely as both. In a subsistence lifestyle, you don't pass up any opportunity.

SPEAKER_01

Sure.

SPEAKER_00

If you are heading into the deep woods to cut timber for charcoal, you bring a rifle. A rabbit or a raccoon means fresh meat and valuable fur for a family of nine facing a long, brutal winter. They were maximizing their labor.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

But whether they were swinging an axe or tracking game, they were operating in an environment they believed they understood completely. They knew the woods, they knew the trees, they were utterly unaware of the frozen chemical trap waiting for them in the underbrush.

SPEAKER_01

So the morning passes, noon comes and goes, the short winter days mean the sun starts setting early.

SPEAKER_00

Right, it gets dark fast.

SPEAKER_01

The newspaper accounts say that when they didn't return for dinner, other members of the family became worried and went in search of them. Here's where it gets really interesting. Well, more like deeply, deeply tragic.

SPEAKER_00

The aftermath is grim.

SPEAKER_01

Think about the psychological horror of this moment. Imagine being Ellen Duffy, the mother or one of the older daughters, walking into the freezing woods as it's getting dark, holding a lantern, calling out into the trees for your husband and your sons. Awful. They didn't just find a logging accident. They didn't find a hunting mishap for someone tripped with a rifle. They walked into a literal war zone.

SPEAKER_00

The devastation described by the reporters who arrived on the scene in the following days is extremely graphic.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it is.

SPEAKER_00

They reported that the force of the explosion had gouged a crater in the frozen earth so massive that a four-horse team and the express even claimed a five-horse team could stand inside it and not be seen from a distance.

SPEAKER_01

That is just massive.

SPEAKER_00

Think about the physics required to displace that much frozen rocky soil. The blast threw out cartloads of earth and completely shattered all the old growth trees and shrubbery in the vicinity. Trunks snapped like matchsticks.

SPEAKER_01

And the human toll. The papers didn't sanitize this part at all. They used incredibly blunt, almost surgical language.

SPEAKER_00

They did.

SPEAKER_01

They reported that Philip and 18-year-old James were, quote, literally torn to atoms. They wrote that shreds of flesh and bits of bone were found scattered two or three squares distant from the scene.

SPEAKER_00

It's an absolute nightmare.

SPEAKER_01

It really is. The sheer violence of it is hard to wrap your head around.

SPEAKER_00

And then there was the fate of 13-year-old John. The physical evidence at the scene told a heartbreaking, desperate story. Based on the blast pattern, John was evidently slightly farther away from the epicenter of the explosion than his father and older brother.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

He survived the initial shockwave and the shrapnel of the can, but he was mortally wounded. The search party didn't find him near the crater. They found his body in a nearby shed.

SPEAKER_01

Oh my God.

SPEAKER_00

He had somehow managed to drag himself away from the devastation, seeking shelter from the freezing cold, and he died entirely alone in that shed before his family could find him.

SPEAKER_01

It's just devastating. A 13-year-old boy bleeding out in a freezing wooden shed in the dark on the eve of Christmas Eve, completely alone. Yeah. But there's a chilling detail in the Lancaster Intelligence or article that I keep coming back to. The paper explicitly notes that the report of the explosion was heard for miles around. The boom traveled down the river valley. But nobody came. Right. No one rushed out of their farmhouses to help. It didn't attract immediate attention because, and I'm quoting directly here, the residents have long been accustomed to hear loud and frequent reports of nitroglycerin explosions made while blasting rock along the line of the railroad.

SPEAKER_00

Unbelievable.

SPEAKER_01

That is wild to me. It's like living near an airport and just tuning out the jets overhead, but in this case you were tuning out deadly earth-shattering explosions.

SPEAKER_00

It shows just how numb this town had become. That specific detail speaks volumes about the desensitization of the community to the railroad's destructive presence.

SPEAKER_01

They were just used to it.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The railroad had beaten them down with so much noise and destruction over the years that an explosion loud enough to vaporize two human beings and dig a crater large enough for five horses was treated as background noise. It was just a Wednesday afternoon on the CMPD line. The community's sensory threshold for danger had been artificially raised so high by the corporation that it entirely severed their natural human instinct to investigate a massive blast. They just assumed it was the railroad doing what the railroad does.

SPEAKER_01

Torn to atoms, shreds of flesh.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, you don't see that today?

SPEAKER_01

Today, if you read a news report about an industrial accident, it would say something incredibly clinical like three individuals sustained fatal injuries in an industrial incident. But in 1874, they printed the visceral, bloody reality of what nitroglycerin does to the human body right there in the daily paper.

SPEAKER_00

It reflects a very different cultural relationship with death and tragedy. Nineteenth century journalism certainly leaned into sensationalism to sell papers, but it also didn't shy away from the gruesome mechanics of reality.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

There was no corporate PR firm drafting a polite, sterilized press release for the railroad. The reporter took a train or rode a horse out to the site, saw the shredded trees, talked to the traumatized search party, heard the accounts of the scattered remains, and wrote it down exactly as the horrific reality dictated.

SPEAKER_01

I just printed it all.

SPEAKER_00

However, while the physical outcome was unquestionable, a crater and three dead bodies, the exact mechanism of the explosion, the spark that ignited the tragedy, remained an absolute mystery. And this is where the historical record begins to heavily fracture.

SPEAKER_01

So you have this crater, you have a devastated family, and you have a railroad company that suddenly has a massive public relations and legal problem on its hands.

SPEAKER_00

A huge problem.

SPEAKER_01

Three locals are dead because of their explosive. They needed an explanation that didn't involve them carelessly leaving a bomb in the woods. And you can see that scramble for a narrative in the newspapers. Let's look at the three diverging theories presented in the historical record, because how a community explains a disaster tells you a lot about who holds power in that community.

SPEAKER_00

Theory number one is what we can call the wood chip theory. This was the primary assumption published by the newspapers, notably the Daily Examiner.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

The theory posits that the Kramers never actually touched the can of nitroglycerin directly. Instead, the narrative suggests that while they were forcefully chopping down a tree for their charcoal business nearby, the heavy limb of a falling tree or even a single high-velocity flying wood chip from their axes struck the frozen hypersensitive can.

SPEAKER_01

Just a chip of wood.

SPEAKER_00

Because frozen nitro is so unstable, this single sharp blow was enough to trigger the blast.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. A wood chip. A flying piece of bark setting off a 96-pound bomb.

SPEAKER_00

It's a stretch.

SPEAKER_01

I mean, I know you explained earlier that frozen nitro is incredibly sensitive and unstable, but that sounds extraordinarily convenient. It sounds like an act of God, a freak accident of nature. It sounds exactly like the kind of excuse a railroad company's lawyers would love to have printed in the daily paper.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, definitely.

SPEAKER_01

Hey, it wasn't our fault the bomb was there. It was the tree's fault for throwing a chip at it. The men caused their own deaths by chopping wood too aggressively.

SPEAKER_00

Your skepticism is entirely warranted. The wood chip theory relies on an extraordinary sequence of bad luck and perfect physics. Right. A piece of wood flying at the exact right angle with the exact right force to detonate a metal can. But it was widely circulated because it provided a very neat narrative.

SPEAKER_01

The victims were just doing their jobs.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, innocent men just doing their jobs. But crucially, the railroad wasn't directly culpable for the immediate ignition. It paints the event as an unforeseeable tragedy of circumstance.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It takes the target off the railroad's back. Then we have theory too, which I'll call the Good Samaritan's theory.

SPEAKER_00

Right, the other newspaper theory.

SPEAKER_01

The Daily Evening Express and the Intelligencer both floated this one. The idea is that Philip and his sons were hunting or cutting wood and they stumbled across this abandoned can. Okay. Recognizing what it was and understanding the immense danger it posed to themselves, or perhaps to other locals or children who might wander through the Stuart farm, they attempted to carefully move it to a safer distance. And while they were carrying this heavy frozen bomb, someone slipped or the casing was jostled and it accidentally detonated.

SPEAKER_00

This theory is slightly more plausible from a pure human behavioral standpoint.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I guess so.

SPEAKER_00

If you are a father and you find a massive hazard in your workspace, your instinct might very well be to remove it to protect your sons. However, if we look closely at how this narrative functions, it still falls into the category of an accident of good intentions. And critically, it shifts the immediate physical blame onto the victims themselves.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, I see what you mean.

SPEAKER_00

In this narrative, yes, the railroad left it there, but it was Philip Kramer's active decision to touch it, to try and move it, that ultimately caused his death. It makes it an issue of personal responsibility rather than corporate negligence.

SPEAKER_01

It's victim blaming disguised as praise. But then we get to theory three. The$40 contract.

SPEAKER_00

This is where it gets really dark.

SPEAKER_01

And this doesn't come from the official newspapers, this doesn't come from the corner, this comes from family lore. A piece of history preserved by a man named Ferris Kramer, who was the late postmaster of the town of Conestoga and a great grandson of Philip Kramer. Right. He got this information directly from an older local man named Emmanuel Erb. This theory claims that Philip and his sons did not stumble on the nitro by accident. It claims they didn't throw a wood chip at it. It claims they were actually contracted directly by the construction company building the Columbia and Port Deposit Railroad to move the explosive to a new location for exactly$40. And according to this family account, while attempting to fulfill this contract and move the nitro for the raw road, something went wrong.

SPEAKER_00

Going back to your gig worker analogy earlier, this was the ultimate predatory gig.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

If the$40 contract is true, it entirely rewrites the narrative of the event. The railroad didn't carelessly abandon the explosive by mistake. They intentionally outsourced the deadliest, most volatile job on the construction site to a local independent contractor because they didn't want the liability or the risk on their own books.

SPEAKER_01

And forty dollars in 1874 was a massive amount of money for a day laborer.

SPEAKER_00

Huge.

SPEAKER_01

We are talking about a guy who cuts wood and burns it into charcoal to survive. The economy was depressed from the panic of 1873. It's incredibly predatory. They dangled a fortune in front of a desperate father of seven to do a job that their own highly trained railroad engineers likely knew was way too dangerous to touch because the nitro had frozen overnight.

SPEAKER_00

That's the key part. The engineers knew better.

SPEAKER_01

If this is true, the newspaper's theories, the wood ship and the good Samaritan, aren't just innocent speculations, they are an act of cover-up.

SPEAKER_00

It's a classic example of how official inquests and authorized newspaper accounts often reflect and protect the interests of the powerful, while family oral histories serve as a vital counter narrative, preserving the uncomfortable, often highly exploitative truths that institutions omit. The newspapers sought to absolve the railroad of direct, actionable negligence. The family lore points a direct finger at corporate exploitation and a callous disregard for human life. We will never know with absolute empirical certainty which theory is correct, as the only three witnesses were vaporized.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

But looking at the legal aftermath heavily reinforces your suspicions about a cover-up.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Let's talk about the legal aftermath, because this is where the story shifts from a tragedy to an absolute injustice.

SPEAKER_00

Really is.

SPEAKER_01

With the bodies buried and the rumors of a contract circulating through the rural hollows, the legal system steps in to establish official blame. We look to the authorities to provide justice, or at least some clarity, after a trauma like this. But a close read of our sources reveals a system that was completely rigged from the start.

SPEAKER_00

The official response was handled by a man named Deputy Coroner U.S. Clark. He traveled out and held a coroner's inquest over the body of young John Kramer and whatever physical remains can be found of Philip and James.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

The official verdict returned by the coroner's jury was that the three men, quote, came to their death by the accidental explosion of a can of glycerin secreted on the farm of Thomas Stewart.

SPEAKER_01

First of all, the specific use of the word secreted. It implies the explosive was hidden, tucked away, maybe absolving the railroad workers of leaving it out in the open.

SPEAKER_00

Right. It shifts the blame again.

SPEAKER_01

It paints a picture of the Kramers rooting around where they shouldn't have been. But let's look at the glaring neon flashing red flag in this source material. The Daily Intelligencer reports that the official legal verdict was signed by only three jurors. Three. And who are these three men? Patrick Moss, Samuel Alexander, and Thomas Stewart.

SPEAKER_00

Thomas Stewart, the landowner.

SPEAKER_01

Are you kidding me? Thomas Stewart was the owner of the farm where the explosive was left.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, he was.

SPEAKER_01

It was his property where the men were killed. And he is sitting on the three-man jury investigating the accident that happened on his property. That is absurd. That is a massive, inexcusable conflict of interest.

SPEAKER_00

It's blatant.

SPEAKER_01

That's like the CEO of a chemical plant sitting on the jury for a toxic spill that happened in his own factory. How is that legally permissible in any functioning justice system?

SPEAKER_00

In the localized power dynamics of rural 1870s Pennsylvania, it was entirely permissible because power dictated the process.

SPEAKER_01

Unbelievable.

SPEAKER_00

You have to understand the legal framework of the era. The landowner and the railroad held all the economic cards in that region. The coroner's inquest wasn't an investigative body designed to find justice for an impoverished charcoal burner and his kids. Right. It was an administrative procedure designed to close the legal liability as quickly and quietly as possible. Having the landowner on the jury insured the verdict would protect the interests of the property, and, by extension, the massive railroad corporation leasing the right-of-way on that property. They were protecting their own investments.

SPEAKER_01

Even the newspaper knew it was a sham. The Intelligencer article actually notes this absurdity in print.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, they did.

SPEAKER_01

The reporter wrote that because the verdict was signed by only three jurors, Coroner Bear of the city will probably make a further investigation of the terrible tragedy. They knew it looked shady to the public.

SPEAKER_00

They did note it, yes. But as the modern retrospective piece points out, whatever ramification the railroad may have suffered is entirely unknown.

SPEAKER_01

So nothing happened.

SPEAKER_00

Given the coroner's decision and the tenor of the Gilded Age, it was almost certainly nothing. There is no historical record whatsoever of Coroner Bear overturning the verdict, launching a further investigation, or pursuing the railroad for damages. The verdict of accidental death neatly and permanently closed the legal question.

SPEAKER_01

Just wiped it clean.

SPEAKER_00

It completely shielded the Columbia Import Deposit Railroad from paying any restitution, damages, or acknowledging any wrongdoing.

SPEAKER_01

Think about Ellen Duffy for a second. Think about those surviving kids. The legal closure of this event did absolutely nothing to soften the human horror they were living through. Nothing at all. It left an Irish immigrant widow and a fatherless family to completely fend for themselves in a brutal winter economy while the railroad just marched on, laying tracks right past the smoking crater where her husband and two sons were annihilated. It's the ultimate erasure. They weren't just killed. Their right to justice, their right to have their deaths mean something legally, was erased by three signatures on a piece of paper.

SPEAKER_00

That erasure is the grim reality of unchecked industrial expansion. The people who bear the ultimate physical cost of progress are rarely the ones who reap the economic profits. And the legal system of the 19th century was explicit, structurally designed to protect the latter at the expense of the former.

SPEAKER_01

The law was a shield for the railroad, not for the Kramers.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

But history rarely ends with the strike of a gavel, and that's what I love so much about the final piece of our source material. We jump forward in time, we leave the corruption and the grief of 1874, and we jump forward to July 2016.

SPEAKER_00

Right, the pilgrimage.

SPEAKER_01

That's incredible.

SPEAKER_00

The descendants on this pilgrimage included Carl Groff of Washington Borough, Norma Gammon of Ephrata, and Anne Zimmerman of Farmersville. They are all great-great-grandchildren descending from George Washington Kramer, one of the sons who thanksfully wasn't in the woods that day. Wow. Accompanied by a local historian named Tom Grassell, they ventured into what is now the Lancaster Conservancy's Cork Nature Preserve, hiking along the Conestoga Trail.

SPEAKER_01

It's just an incredible image.

SPEAKER_00

Very quiet.

SPEAKER_01

The massive crater that could hide five horses. It's now just a shallow depression in the ground. The scribbler describes it beautifully. He says it's fronted by ferns, backed by a rocky cliff, filled with decades of eroded soil, and holding a puddle of shallow water that swells in a storm and runs off into a nearby stream.

SPEAKER_00

Nature reclaimed it.

SPEAKER_01

The forest just took it back. It healed over the wound.

SPEAKER_00

It highlights the profound impermanence of human endeavor versus the immense, silent patience of nature. A hundred years of falling leaves can soften any blow. And we see that impermanence not just in the healing forest, but in the corporate entity that caused the disaster in the first place.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

The Columbia Import Deposit Railroad, the giant that seemed completely untouchable and omnipotent in 1874, didn't last either.

SPEAKER_01

No, it didn't. The sources trace its long lineage and eventual decline. The rail line was finally completed in 1877. It was eventually swallowed entirely by its parent company, the Pennsylvania Railroad. In 1938, as technology advanced, PRR electrified the branch, hanging massive, heavy catenary wires over the tracks. Then the mighty PR eventually failed, merging into Penn Central in 1968, which famously went bankrupt, and the line passed to Conrail in 1976.

SPEAKER_00

A lot of turnover.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, passenger service on the line ended entirely in 1978. In 1981, Conrail actually tore down all the electrification equipment, though you can still see the rusting catenary pole standing like skeletons today if you walk the trail.

SPEAKER_00

I've heard that.

SPEAKER_01

And finally, in 1999, it was sold to Norfolk Southern. The untouchable corporation fractured, failed, changed hands half a dozen times. The electrical wires went up and came down, but the shallow depression in the woods where Philip Kramer died remained.

SPEAKER_00

And there's a specific moment during this 2016 visit that I think encapsulates the human element of this story perfectly.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. The metal detector. So they are out there at the site, and Carl Groff brings a metal detector. He's sweeping the area, specifically around this massive old sycamore tree that looked disfigured and old enough to have actually survived the blast in 1874. Right. He's looking for a piece of the nitrokin, a piece of shrapnel, some physical connection to his great-great-grandfather. He doesn't find any blast fragments. But the metal detector does ping. Okay. He digs in the mud and finds a bit of magnetite in the stream. And Groff notes that finding magnetite suggests a 50% chance that gold is also present in the soil. And with a wry smile, he jokes to the reporter, Maybe grandfather knew something we didn't. Maybe he was gonna do some blasting for gold.

SPEAKER_00

That moment is profoundly, beautifully human.

SPEAKER_01

It really is. I mean, instead of solemn weeping at the edge of this crater, treating it like a sacred tomb, the great great grandson is cracking jokes about his ancestor secretly blasting for gold.

SPEAKER_00

It shows exactly how families process generational trauma.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Eventually, over decades and centuries, the sharp, visceral, bleeding horror of the event softens. It becomes a story. It becomes a piece of family lore. The emotional trauma softens, much in the exact same way that the physical crater softened from a jagged, violent hole in the earth into a quiet, fern-covered puddle.

SPEAKER_00

And it raises an important question about memory and space. How many hikers walk the Conestoga Trail today? They hike through the Clark Nature Preserve on a beautiful Saturday afternoon, they step right over that shallow depression, they admire the ferns in the sycamore tree, completely blissfully unaware of the cataclysm that occurred on that exact spot in the final days before Christmas in 1874.

SPEAKER_01

It's just wild to think about.

SPEAKER_00

The land remembers the impact, the family remembers the names, but the people passing through do not.

SPEAKER_01

So let's bring this all together. Let's recap the arc of our deep dive today. We started with Philip Kramer, a forgotten pioneer, a tough Civil War veteran, a collier making charcoal by hand, and a father just trying to survive the harsh economic winter of 1874 with his teenage son James and his young boy John. We explored their horrific, fatal collisure with an unregulated, rapidly expanding industrial giant, the CNPD Railroad, and their frozen nitroglycerin. We navigated the conflicting narratives of blame, uncovering how local newspapers and rigged three-man coroner's juries protected corporate interests.

SPEAKER_00

And how quiet family lore preserved the much darker possibility of deadly exploitation with a$40 contract.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And we ended in a quiet, fern-covered hollow 150 years later, where the scars of the past have finally faded into the scenery.

SPEAKER_00

The broader takeaway from the sources we've examined is a stark reminder that the modern world we inhabit, the trains we ride, the infrastructure we rely on, the cleared paths we hike, was often built at a steep, entirely unrecorded human cost. Progress, especially in the 19th century, was entirely devoid of a safety net. It was built on the backs of people who had no power to refuse the work.

SPEAKER_01

And that brings me to a final thought I want to leave you with. Something to mull over the next time you're out in the woods, or waiting at a railroad crossing, or driving over a bridge. The official coroner's inquest closed the book on the Kramer family by legally calling the nitroglycerin secreted or abandoned. An unfortunate accident of negligence. But if the family's oral history is true, and Philip Kramer was actually paid$40 to move it, then that explosive wasn't abandoned at all. Not at all. It was a calculated, outsourced risk. The railroad knew exactly how dangerous it was, and they put a price tag on a poor man's life to keep their own engineers safe from the blast.

SPEAKER_00

It's a sobering thought.

SPEAKER_01

So consider this. How many of the modern conveniences and infrastructures we rely on every single day are built on top of unrecorded risks taken by people whose names never made it onto the corporate ledger? People who were wiped from the official record by a convenient legal verdict, surviving only in whispered family lore. We step into the woods expecting to see the past clearly marked for us with signs and plaques. But the truth is, the most profan history is the history that has been erased, paved over, or left to be swallowed by the ferns. Next time you step off the pavement, ask yourself what invisible history you're stepping on.