This image is the cover for the book West Plains Dance Hall Explosion

West Plains Dance Hall Explosion

The real-life mystery of a catastrophic blast in 1920s Missouri that killed dozens at a Friday night dance and shattered an Ozark town.

One rainy night in 1928, a crowd, many of them the sons and daughters of prominent local citizens, gathered for a weekly dance held at Bond Hall. The explosion that occurred as midnight approached transformed Bond Hall into a raging inferno, left thirty-nine dead, and sparked feverish national media attention and decades of bitterness in the Missouri Ozark town. And while the story inspired a popular country song, the firestorm remains an unsolved mystery.

In this first book on the notorious catastrophe, Lin Waterhouse presents a clear account of the event and its aftermath that judiciously weighs conflicting testimony and deeply respects the personal anguish experienced by parents forced to identify their children by their clothing and personal trinkets. Based on extensive research into archival records and illustrated with numerous photos, this is a fascinating account of a heartbreaking disaster and the town it tore apart.

Lin Waterhouse

Lin Waterhouse is a freelance journalist and fiction author who seeks out the historical curiosities of the Missouri Ozarks region and explores the unique culture of the beautiful hills and “hollers” of the area. In addition to her books, she writes for local and regional magazines and newspapers.
 
Waterhouse’s nonfiction thriller The West Plains Dance Hall Explosion  details the cold-case mystery of the 1928 explosion that transformed a small-town dance hall into a raging inferno and sparked international media attention. In her fictional mystery, Bred to the Bone, retired educator Caroline Hudson discovers a cache of aged documents in a long-abandoned safe in the attic of Hunter's Mill. The find exposes family secrets of prejudice and pride that lead to murder.

The History Press