Incident Overview · Festival Disorder
Bull IslandFestival Riot
The Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival was moved at the last minute to Bull Island after legal action blocked the original Indiana site. The result was a huge, under-served gathering marked by congestion, shortages, illness, drug sales, looting, fires, and disputed fatality reporting.
Overview
What Happened
Core Findings
A Festival Moved Too Late
The event was first planned for Chandler Raceway Park in Indiana, but legal action stopped it. Organisers then shifted the festival to Bull Island, a hard-to-access area near Griffin on the Wabash River, creating immediate control, access, welfare and jurisdiction problems.
Sources describe massive attendance, rain, poor sanitation, traffic jams, food and water shortages, open drug sales, medical problems, robbery or beatings, performer cancellations, looting and fires. Later accounts commonly report the stage or music stand area being burned at the end.
The casualty picture is not clean. Stronger local and contemporary-linked sources support two deaths: one drowning and one overdose. Some later sources claim three drownings plus one overdose, but this was not verified from a stronger open contemporary source in the supplied research.
View Conflicts →Quick View
Incident Highlights
Chronology
Known Sequence
The event is widely described as chaotic, but “riot” is not always the formal wording used by sources. Fatality figures are especially messy: the best-supported cluster found here says two deaths, while later sources claim four.
Disputed Details
Conflicting Information
Fatality count
Sources do not agree on the number of deaths linked to the festival.
Open Culture, Evansville Living and Louder support one drowning and one overdose.
Far Out and Grunge report an overdose plus three drownings, but this was not confirmed by stronger open contemporary sources in the research file.
Editorial note: report the fatality count as conflicting. The stronger source cluster in this research supports two deaths.
Attendance
Crowd size estimates vary, and some figures refer to people in the area rather than people physically on the island.
At least 275,000 in the area and about 200,000 already on Bull Island.
Commonly give a broader 200,000–300,000 range.
Editorial note: no precise final attendance figure was verified.
Formal name of the incident
The user title uses “riot,” but sources more often refer to the Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival, Labor Day Soda Pop Festival, Bull Island, chaos, looting, fires, or stage burning.
Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival / Bull Island Rock Festival.
Bull Island Festival Riot captures the disorder but may not be the formal contemporary label.
Editorial note: keep “riot” as an incident descriptor, not a confirmed official title.
Unverified Details
References
Reference Cards
Evansville Courier & Press
Woodstock on the Wabash: The Bull Island rockfest, 40 years later
2 September 2012
Local retrospective on the planning, legal problems, last-minute move to Bull Island, and the chaos that followed.
Visit Source →UPI / Daily Colonist
Untitled UPI wire report on Bull Island
3 September 1972
Contemporary report stating tens of thousands were on Bull Island, with police estimates of at least 275,000 in the area and about 200,000 already on the island.
Visit Source →Evansville Living Magazine
Our ’70s Story
17 January 2020
Retrospective summary describing the move from Chandler to Bull Island, crowd size above 200,000, shortages, looting, drug sales, two recorded deaths, and the burning of the stage area.
Visit Source →Evansville Living Magazine
Bull Island
29 July 2011
Photo feature and recollections covering nudity, food shortages, inflated concession prices, crowd anger, and helicopter removal of overdose victims.
Visit Source →Evansville Living Magazine
Festival Fiasco
14 April 2021
Brief retrospective marking the 1972 Labor Day Soda Pop Festival / Bull Island story as an infamous local event.
Visit Source →Open Culture
The Horrors of Bull Island, “the Worst Music Festival of All Time” (1972)
18 June 2021
User-supplied starting source describing the last-minute move, poor sanitation, drug market, rain, looting, one drowning, one overdose, beatings/robberies, one birth, and the stage fire.
Visit Source →Indiana Rock History
Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival (Fri 9/2-Sun 9/4)
2 September 1972 page date
Compilation placing the event near Griffin on Bull Island, describing the Illinois/Indiana jurisdiction issue, 200,000–300,000 crowd estimate, 20-mile traffic backup, and limited policing.
Visit Source →The Woodstock Whisperer
Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival
2 September 2016
Retrospective placing the event on Bull Island on the Wabash River, giving the 2–4 September dates, and describing traffic standstill, food shortage, and collapse of the festival.
Visit Source →Louder / Classic Rock
So many drugs the cows got high: the chaotic festival that heralded Woodstock 99
9 August 2022
Later retrospective using interviews and recollections; reports two deaths, specifying a 24-year-old drowning victim and a 20-year-old overdose victim.
Visit Source →Indiana Court of Appeals / Justia
Smith v. Indiana State Board of Health
13 February 1974
Court decision documenting the August 1972 injunction effort against the originally planned Erie Canal “Soda” Pop Festival at Chandler Raceway Park in Indiana.
Visit Source →PBS / WNIN
Two Main Street: Bull Island Rock Festival
2022 page availability
Public television discussion describing Bull Island as farmland along the Wabash near Griffin and reflecting on attendee illness and poor conditions.
Visit Source →Open Evidence
Source Link Banners
Evansville Courier & Press
Woodstock on the Wabash: The Bull Island rockfest, 40 years later
Local retrospective on the planning, legal problems, last-minute move to Bull Island, and the chaos that followed.
2 September 2012UPI / Daily Colonist
Untitled UPI wire report on Bull Island
Contemporary report stating tens of thousands were on Bull Island, with police estimates of at least 275,000 in the area and about 200,000 already on the island.
3 September 1972Evansville Living Magazine
Our ’70s Story
Retrospective summary describing the move from Chandler to Bull Island, crowd size above 200,000, shortages, looting, drug sales, two recorded deaths, and the burning of the stage area.
17 January 2020Evansville Living Magazine
Bull Island
Photo feature and recollections covering nudity, food shortages, inflated concession prices, crowd anger, and helicopter removal of overdose victims.
29 July 2011Evansville Living Magazine
Festival Fiasco
Brief retrospective marking the 1972 Labor Day Soda Pop Festival / Bull Island story as an infamous local event.
14 April 2021Open Culture
The Horrors of Bull Island, “the Worst Music Festival of All Time” (1972)
User-supplied starting source describing the last-minute move, poor sanitation, drug market, rain, looting, one drowning, one overdose, beatings/robberies, one birth, and the stage fire.
18 June 2021Indiana Rock History
Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival (Fri 9/2-Sun 9/4)
Compilation placing the event near Griffin on Bull Island, describing the Illinois/Indiana jurisdiction issue, 200,000–300,000 crowd estimate, 20-mile traffic backup, and limited policing.
2 September 1972 page dateThe Woodstock Whisperer
Erie Canal Soda Pop Festival
Retrospective placing the event on Bull Island on the Wabash River, giving the 2–4 September dates, and describing traffic standstill, food shortage, and collapse of the festival.
2 September 2016Louder / Classic Rock
So many drugs the cows got high: the chaotic festival that heralded Woodstock 99
Later retrospective using interviews and recollections; reports two deaths, specifying a 24-year-old drowning victim and a 20-year-old overdose victim.
9 August 2022Indiana Court of Appeals / Justia
Smith v. Indiana State Board of Health
Court decision documenting the August 1972 injunction effort against the originally planned Erie Canal “Soda” Pop Festival at Chandler Raceway Park in Indiana.
13 February 1974PBS / WNIN
Two Main Street: Bull Island Rock Festival
Public television discussion describing Bull Island as farmland along the Wabash near Griffin and reflecting on attendee illness and poor conditions.
2022 page availability