A young man who was raised by my grandparents was one of the victims in 
Halifax that day.

jm


>From: "Tom C" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: OT - 1917 Halifax Explosion
>Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 10:03:46 -0700
>
>An interesting bit of trivia I did not know.  From Todays "Writer's
>Almanac".
>
>And it was on this day in 1917 that an accidental explosion destroyed a
>quarter of the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia. It was the height of World War
>I, and Halifax was serving as an important port city for many of the ships
>carrying supplies for the battlefront in Europe. One of the ships coming
>into the port that day was a French warship called the Mont Blanc, carrying
>200 tons of TNT, 2,300 tons of other explosives, as well as 10 tons of
>cotton and 35 tons of highly flammable chemicals stored in vats on the
>ship's upper deck.
>
>As the Mont Blanc sailed through the narrow channel into the Halifax 
>Harbor,
>it collided with a Norwegian freighter. The collision started a fire on the
>Mont Blanc, and the captain gave the order to abandon ship. The crew piled
>into lifeboats and then paddled frantically away. Unfortunately, the fire
>drew a crowd of onlookers along the shore of the channel. The docks filled
>with spectators, trams slowed down, people stood at office windows and on
>factory roofs to see the blaze. Then, a few minutes after the fire had
>started, the Mont Blanc exploded.
>
>It was the single most powerful man-made explosion at that point in human
>history, and there wouldn't be another more powerful explosion until the
>first atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
>
>The blast wave of water hit the shore, sweeping away buildings, bridges,
>roads, vehicles, and people. City streets split open into deep fissures.
>Houses, churches, schools, and factories collapsed. The entire city was
>showered with debris. Virtually every building in the city had its windows
>broken. About a quarter of the city, within a square mile of the blast, was
>completely destroyed.
>
>Almost 2,000 people were killed in the blast and as many as 9,000 were
>seriously injured, many of them blinded by pieces of broken glass. 
>Thousands
>of people were left homeless in the middle of a bitter winter. Volunteers
>poured in from the United States and Great Britain to help in the recovery
>efforts, and children who survived the blast were photographed for 
>postcards
>to be sold to help rebuild the city.
>
>Even though World War I was being fought across the Atlantic, Halifax was
>damaged far greater than any European city. It is the worst disaster of any
>kind in Canadian history.
>
>
>
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