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-   -   November 16, 2008: BadaBoom (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=18726)

xoxoxoBruce 11-16-2008 12:18 AM

November 16, 2008: BadaBoom
 
BadaBoom, Big BadaBoom.
Quote:

In 1944, on July 17 to be specific, munitions being loaded onto a ship in Port Chicago, California, (very close to San Francisco) detonated. No one knows what exactly caused the blast, but the damage was biblical. All in all, more than 5,000 tons of high explosives, plus whatever else was in the stores on the base and on any ships docked, was involved. The explosion was so massive it was felt as far away as Las Vegas (500 miles distant) and people were injured all over the Bay Area when windows were shattered by the immense pressure wave.
320 were killed immediately and almost 400 were seriously injured, but that’s not the real tragedy. Most of these men were African American and this single disaster accounted for almost 15% of African American casualties during that war.
http://cellar.org/2008/badaboom1.jpg

http://cellar.org/2008/badaboom2.jpg

Quote:

Still fearing for their safety, the remaining men, who had just spent three weeks pulling the bodies of their fellow sailors from the wreckage, refused to load any further munitions. The Army, in a characteristic show of support, considered this an act of mutiny and court-martialed 208 sailors, sending an additional 50 to jail for 8 to 15 years.
Refusing a direct order, especially in war time, is something the military frowns on.
It shakes the very foundation of their organization... authority.

spudcon 11-16-2008 12:46 AM

(snip)320 were killed immediately and almost 400 were seriously injured, but that’s not the real tragedy. Most of these men were African American and this single disaster accounted for almost 15% of African American casualties.(snip)
I imagine the families of those sailors that died weren't interested in that 15% figure. !00% of their husbands, fathers, and sons died. I'll also bet they didn't consider their ethnicity in their grief.

xoxoxoBruce 11-16-2008 01:36 AM

True, but in the back of their minds, they knew the people killed were there because of their color. Even though the alternative, had they been allowed, would have been combat duty which isn't exactly safer.
I agree, however, it's only a footnote to this terrible tragedy.

amykins 11-16-2008 03:00 AM

:yelsick: Whoa. That's definitely devastating for all involved. What a story... I think the next time SF area will look like that will be a reeeally devastating earthquake. (Any minute now...) And now I have The Fifth Element quotes running rampant through my head. Thanks Bruce!

bluecuracao 11-16-2008 03:43 AM

The aftermath was horrible too, but at the very least it paved the way for desegregation of the armed forces.

http://www.portchicagomemorial.org/

Stupid that it takes bad situations to make things right. But even to this day, we've still got a ways to go.

StereoMike 11-16-2008 05:06 PM

Halifax explosion from 1917. Wiped out a whole city (plus 18m tsunami after the explosion).
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...d_restored.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...xplosion-2.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halifax_Explosion
http://www.cbc.ca/halifaxexplosion/

Biggest man-made and non-nuke explosion.

mike

xoxoxoBruce 11-16-2008 05:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by StereoMike (Post 504965)
Biggest man-made and non-nuke explosion.

mike

Nope, it killed more people but was only 3,000 tons of boom, compared to 5,000 tons at Port Chicago.
It probably did more damage, and killed more people, because it was a crowded port city rather than a military facility, and in 1917 everything was made of wood. Bigger disaster but not the biggest boom.

busterb 11-16-2008 07:31 PM

When I worked at Exxon refinery at Benicia, CA I took a shortcut by there each day.
A Naval station there now. BTW. The refinery had old ammo bunkers alll over it.

Gravdigr 11-16-2008 08:39 PM

Funny, would there be that much concern for the black folk if they hadn't been blown to 'Kingdom Come'?

Hey!? Where's that guy that always climbs up my ass whenever I use the word 'black'? Or 'pimp'?:apimp:

Stonan 11-17-2008 10:33 PM

I would think that the 1917 blast did more damage because it was in deeper water. The rebounding shock wave would be spread out more that if it was in shallow water (such as being dockside)

xoxoxoBruce 11-17-2008 10:59 PM

It was dockside. After the french abandoned ship, it drifted into the dock, setting it ablaze. The firefighters had just arrived to put out the dock fire, when the ship blew up.

WillieO 11-18-2008 09:33 PM

So the snively French are to blame? I Knew it!

TheMercenary 11-18-2008 09:57 PM

I feel a good natural disaster coming on. Who is next? seriously.

ZenGum 11-18-2008 11:51 PM

Yeah, it's been a while.

This could be a thread, like the celebrity death thread. All tip where, what kind of disaster, and death toll.

Out of the blue, I'm going to say, earthquake, South America under the Andes, mmmm Peru, 6,000 dead.

spudcon 11-19-2008 12:19 AM

I say Iran, at one of their nuke arsenals, before January 20th.


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