sultana$80179$ - перевод на Английский
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sultana$80179$ - перевод на Английский

US STEAMBOAT THAT EXPLODED ON APRIL 27, 1865
Sultana Disaster; SS Sultana; Remember the Sultana
  • An artist's impression of the fire (2015)
  • ''Sultana'' on fire, from ''Harper's Weekly''.
  • Historic marker in Memphis
  • date=April 2022}}
  • Memorial plaque for those who perished on the Sultana Steamboat on April 27, 1865.  Located in South Park, Mansfield, Ohio.
  • ''Sultana'' Memorial at the Mount Olive Baptist Church Cemetery in Knoxville, Tennessee in 2010

sultana      
n. sultana; uva sultana, pasa de Esmirna
sultana         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Sultana (disambiguation); Sultanas
pasa
sultana
raisin         
  • Drying raisins at [[Gata de Gorgos]], Video by [[Valencian Museum of Ethnology]].
  • California seedless grape raisins on the left and California [[Zante currant]]s on the right, along with a metric ruler for scale.
  • Golden raisins (sultanas)
DRIED GRAPE
Golden raisin; Raisins; Raisin (botany and cooking); Flame raisin; Sultana raisin; Dry grapes; Golden raisins; Munakka; Monukka; Manukka
la pasa de uva [Noun]

Определение

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Википедия

Sultana (steamboat)

Sultana was a commercial side-wheel steamboat which exploded and sank on the Mississippi River on April 27, 1865, killing 1,169 people in what remains the worst maritime disaster in United States history.

Constructed of wood in 1863 by the John Litherbury Boatyard in Cincinnati, Ohio, Sultana was intended for the lower Mississippi cotton trade. The steamer registered 1,719 tons and normally carried a crew of 85. For two years, she ran a regular route between St. Louis and New Orleans and was frequently commissioned to carry troops during the American Civil War. Although designed with a capacity of only 376 passengers, she was carrying 2,130 when three of the boat's four boilers exploded and caused it to sink near Memphis, Tennessee. The disaster was overshadowed in the press by events surrounding the end of the Civil War, including the killing of President Abraham Lincoln's assassin John Wilkes Booth just the day before. No one was ever held accountable for the tragedy.