The Day the River Caught Fire

Barry Wittenstein

After the Industrial Revolution in the 1880s, the Cayahoga River in Cleveland, Ohio, caught fire almost twenty times, earning Cleveland the nickname “The Mistake on the Lake.” Waste dumping had made fires so routine that local politicians and media didn’t pay them any mind, and other Cleveland residents laughed off their combustible river and even wrote songs about it.But when the river ignited again in June 1969, the national media picked up on the story and added fuel to the fire of the recent environmental movement. A year later, in 1970, President Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency—leading to the Clean Water and Clean Air Acts—and the first Earth Day was celebrated. It was a celebration, it was a protest, and it was the beginning of a movement to save our planet.

Book Info

Publisher

Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books

EAN/UPC or ISBN

DU6F96F1ACE1AD4FD9BC69D822441D1730

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