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Grain Elevator Explosion Rocks Halifax Waterfront
CBC Nova Scotia ^ | August 7, 2003 | Staff

Posted on 08/07/2003 8:53:45 AM PDT by Loyalist

Explosion rocks waterfront WebPosted Aug 7 2003 11:49 AM ADT

HALIFAX — Emergency crews are scrambling to evacuate sections of Halifax's south end after an explosion at the city's grain elevators.

The explosion happened shortly before noon, sending what one witness described as a huge fireball into the sky.

Police have blocked off the roads near the waterfront and are evacuating a nearby hotel, gas station and the VIA rail tracks. They're concerned about a second explosion.

"There has been a smell coming out of this grain elevator for the last three days," says Sue Uteck, a municipal councillor who lives in the area.

The grain elevators are near the area where cruise ships dock. One of the city's two container terminals is also nearby.

There's no word yet on whether anyone was hurt. Uteck says a drop-in centre will be set up for people who've been forced to leave their homes.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Canada; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: explosion; grainelevator; halifax; novascotia
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1 posted on 08/07/2003 8:53:45 AM PDT by Loyalist
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To: Clive
Can you ping the Canada list?
2 posted on 08/07/2003 8:54:10 AM PDT by Loyalist
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To: Loyalist
BAN GRAIN ELEVATORS!!

All Canadians must register their grain elevators!

3 posted on 08/07/2003 8:56:24 AM PDT by Puppage (You may disagree with what I have to say, but I will defend to your death my right to say it)
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To: Loyalist
Wow, another Halifax Explosion. I hope that noone was hurt. Halifax is a terrific place, and the people there are universally nice.
4 posted on 08/07/2003 8:57:22 AM PDT by Radix
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To: Loyalist
"There has been a smell coming out of this grain elevator for the last three days,"

Billy Goat Klinton isn't missing, is he?

5 posted on 08/07/2003 8:57:39 AM PDT by JesseHousman
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To: Radix
Well, not the THE HALIFAX EXPLOSION (Monte Blonc) I'm sure. I too though of Halifax as a wonderful place, at least to visit. I'd need a little more in town that the curling club rink and an all purpose arena. Wonderful people.
6 posted on 08/07/2003 9:07:32 AM PDT by NYFriend
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To: Loyalist
The other Halifax explosion:


THE HALIFAX EXPLOSION: 6TH DECEMBER 1917.

Trevor Tasker



At 9:05 on the 6th December 1917, a munition ship exploded in Halifax harbour, (Nova Scotia, Canada). This explosion was so vast that it killed over 2,000 people and completely flattened two square kilometres of northern Halifax. This was the greatest explosion of the Great war, and the largest man-made explosion until the dropping of the bomb at Hiroshima in 1945.

The war in Europe demanded and consumed vast amounts of people and materials from the new world. Halifax is a deep natural harbour, which was ice-free. since the 1812 war, the harbour was defended by a series of forts, Halifax was now a garrison town, as well as a naval dockyard and harbour. In early 1917 the admiralty officially introduced the convoy system to help reduce the losses from u-boats. The inner harbour, known as the BEDFORD BASIN, (See illustration page), was ideal for an anchorage to asssemble the convoys, and was used in both world wars.

In December 1917, the Bedford basin was full of merchant ships. The naval escort were in the outer harbour; opposite the naval intallations, One of these was HMS HIGHFLYER; a Hermes class Cruiser. In August 1914 the Highflyer had caught the German ex-liner turned Armed Merchant Raider; Kaiser Wilhelm Der Grosse, refuelling at sea, and sunk her off the West African coast at Rio del oro, (Halpern 1994).

The harbour was also open to neutral ships, (though their crews were not allowed ashore for security reasons). One of these was a Norweigian ship the SS IMO, she was steaming alone, and had 'Belgium Relief' written on her sides to emphasise her 'neutrality' to u-boats, she was on her way to New York to load relief supplies for Belgium. The IMO was behind schedule by having to wait for coal, with this and being empty, she may have been travelling at a faster speed than normal, when she left the Bedford Basin.

The French Ship SS MONT BLANC came from New York where she was loaded with a cocktail of explosives and volatile material. The ship had her holds lined with wood, using non sparking copper nails, but too many volatile cargos had been mixed together. The Mont Blanc entered Halifax with 2,300 tons of wet and dry picric acid; (used for making lyddite foir artillery shells), 200 tons of trinitrotoluene, (TNT), 10 tons of gun cotton, with drums of Bezol; (High Octane fuel) stacked on her decks. The Mont Blanc was on her way to the Bedford Basin, but arrived too late to be let through the anti submarine nets, and had to wait until the next day to enter the harbour.

On the morning of the 6th December 1917, the IMO weighed anchor and headed for the sea, while the Mont BLanc entered the harbour; the collided in the bottleneck known as 'the Narrows'. Some of the Benzol dums broke loose, spilling on the deck, and soon caught fire. The intensity of the fire, and it's volatile cargo, Captain Le Medec ordered all hands to abandon ship. TheMont Blanc on fire, drifted towards Halifax where she rested against pier 6; (star [*] on the illustration page).

At around 9.05 am the Mont Blanc blew up, the whole ship disintergrated. The pressure blast flattened the immediate area for two square kilometers, and devastated an area of 325 acres, most of the windows in Halifax were blown out, (Kitz,1989). About 1,600 people were killed by the blast., eight crew of HMS Highflyer were splattered against the ship's superstructure, (Monnon, 1977). A mushroom-shaped cloud rose kilometres high, and 3,000 tons of the splattered ship rained down on the area. The ship's gun landed near Alboro Lake (2km away), and the stock of one of her anchor's landed in a wood 5km away (See illustration page). The Narrows were boiling with the slashes of shrapnel, also falling were rocks;believed to had been sucked up from the harbour bed.

Next came the pressure wave which washed up the shore line and rocked the ships nearby, some from their moorings, some smaller vessels (e.g. Tugs) were overwhelmed and sunk. This man-made 'tsunami' travelled across to the shores of Dartmouth, it was funnelled up Tufts cove, (due north of the explosion) where there was a settlement of the Micmac; (native American tribe of the area). The whole encampment was washed away by the gigantic wave.

The Halifax area opposite the Narrows was heavily populated, a rising hill gave an excellent view of the ship on fire. Naturally there were many spectators, which resulted in high cases of blindness/eye injuries among the thousands of wounded, as glass windows shattered.

After the blast, the rain of shrapnel, and the destructive wave, came the fires. The blast had turned houses into kindle wood, and also overturned coal and wooden stoves, which were in widespread use due to the winter temperature. Being a Naval port and Garrison town, there were lots of 'disciplined and organised' rescue workers available, but an hour after the explosion a rumour spread that the Naval Magazine at Wellngton Barracks, (near Admiralty House), was on fire and there was going to be another explosion. There was a massed exodus away from the north, to citadel hill and the parks to the south. The naval magazine did not blow, and was made safe by dumping its contents into the harbour. Slowly the rescuers moved back to the area, however, by nightfall another factor was to contribute to the final death toll; the worst blizzard for years. "It was almost as if Fate, unconvinced that the exploding chemicals in the hold of the Mont Blanc had struck a death blow to Halifax, was now calling upon nature to administer the coup de grace". (Bird, 1995, page 108).

Other rumours were widespread. Halifax was being bombed by Zeppelins, or maybe a German Naval bombardment. Anti-German hysteria was high, which was taken out on survivors with German sounding names. Earlier in the year, in Britain, a munitions factory had blown up, even though it had been proved to be an accident, people prefered to believe it was the 'darstardly Hun'. This was proof enough, (Sainsbury, 1917). The same stubbon belief, that it was 'somehow' the work of the Germans, still persists in Halifax today, by some survivors of the explosion, (Kitz, 1989).

News of the disaster spread quickly and funds came from around the world, even as far away as New Zealand. Most of the rescue relief came from the state of Massachusetts who sent the most comprehensive relief aid from the port of Boston. Not only medical staff and supplies, but food, clothing, transport, and even glass and glaziers. Every year Halifax presents Boston with a giant Christmas tree to show that thier help in December 1917 will not be forgotten.

It is 80 years since the Halifax explosion, what is thier to see at Halifax? In September 1997 I toured the area. In the CITADEL there is a museum which graphically illustrates Halifax Military History, emphasizing the defensive forts of the harbour. At the MARITIME MUSEUM OF THE ATLANTIC, there is an exhibition with video, "a moment in time" on the 1917 explosion, with artifacts found on the site, one of them a clock, broken and scortched by the explosion is very poignant, a reminder that this was the largest man-made explosion untill Hiroshima. Admiralty House, (which had its roof blown off in the explosion), is now the MARITIME COMMAND MUSEUM. Before the explosion Admiralty House was used as a naval hospital, one of the patients was Alfred Sprinket, who after the explosion left his bed, and went over to the house opposite, which did not sustain too much damage, but had the door blown off, and found an empty bed to get into until rescued. (Sprinket, 1996) I stayed in a B&B opposite the Maritime Command Museum, and wondered if it was the same house that Sprinket had found shelter in. At Fort Needham Hill in 1985 a monument to the victims of the explosion was unvieled. The MEMORIAL BELL TOWER has a carillon of bells taken from a church in the blast area. At FAIRVIEW CEMETERY there is a memorial to the unidentified of the "Great Disaster". I found a headstone to four members of the Stacey family; all died 6th December 1917. There was a plaque by the headstone, (See illustration page), to another family member killed on the same day. He was in the "66th Regiment". The local militia consisted of the 63rd Halifax Rifles and the 66th Princes Louise Fusiliers, (Monnon,1977). Also in this cemetery are 125 victims of the sinking of the Titanic in 1912.

The 1914-18 war was the first world wide war. Combatants came from many areas of the world, and the battlefields encompassed many continents and many oceans. Halifax was a part of that war, not only was she a major supply line to the trenches, (in people, horses, supplies and munitions), but for one terrible day; Halifax, Nova Scotia, experienced the death and destruction of this worldwide conflict. "A son of the Lieutenant Governor, Lieutenant Eric Grant, on leave from France, said that the sights were worse than anything he had seen in the trenches". (Kitz, 1989, page 60).

Trevor Tasker, (November 1997).

REFERENCES

BIRD,M, (1995), THE TOWN THAT DIED. a chronicle of the Halifax Disaster, Nimbus Publishing Ltd, Halifax, N.S.

HALPERN, P., (1994) A NAVAL HISTORY OF WORLD WAR ONE, UCLPress Ltd.,London

KITZ, J., (1989) SHATTERED CITY: The Halifax Explosion, Nimbus Publishing,Halifax, N.S.

MONNON, M., (1977) MIRACLES AND MYSTERIES: The Halifax Explosion, Lancelot Press Limited, Nova Scotia.

SAINSBURY, F., (1977) "Largest Wartime Explosion: Silvertown, London, 1917"*, After the Battle, No 18, (pp. 30-34).

SPRINKETT, A., (1996), " Boy First-Class Alfred Sprinket", in The True Glory, (Ed. M.Arthur), Hodder & Staughton, (pp. 93-96).

* This title does not take the Halifax explosion into account
7 posted on 08/07/2003 9:13:29 AM PDT by robowombat
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To: robowombat
http://info.lib.uh.edu/sca/collections/faids/html/txcity.html

Check out this from Texas City1947, a tanker filled w/ Amonium Nitrate Expolded at the dock.

Homes one mile from explosion

8 posted on 08/07/2003 9:30:15 AM PDT by OXENinFLA
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To: robowombat
This was the greatest explosion of the Great war, and the largest man-made explosion until the dropping of the bomb at Hiroshima in 1945.

Wow. I wonder how the explosive power of that blast compares to that of the Grandcamp (Texas City, 1947)?

French ships should be banned.

9 posted on 08/07/2003 9:32:08 AM PDT by Physicist
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To: Loyalist; robowombat
Halifax was not only the site of the earlier explosion, but also where they brought the Titanic victims. We took a cruise to Nova Scotia and the cruise boat docked in that harbor and my husband and I walked to the museum. There were pictures and other artifacts of the earlier explosion and of the Titanic. That first explosion was just horrible.
10 posted on 08/07/2003 9:37:09 AM PDT by AUsome Joy (Yahoo!! Moving out of Jersey, heading South!!! War Eagle!!!)
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To: NYFriend; Radix
I was fortunate to spend 2 1/2 years in Halifax in the '80s on a work assignment. I second your sentiments; the people are great, though the winters can be brutal . . .

The best time to be there is in the summer, around Natal day or during the Buskers Festival.
11 posted on 08/07/2003 10:22:58 AM PDT by BraveMan
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To: AUsome Joy
#10..We were there last year.

Ferried to Yarmouth, and car trip to Lunenburg, then Halifax.

Saw the same museum you did.....quite impressive.

Then we visited the cemetary with the Titanic victims.

12 posted on 08/07/2003 10:36:28 AM PDT by Guenevere (..., ..Press on!)
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To: Radix
I hope that noone was hurt.

Gee, Herman's Hermits weren't that bad. ;-)

13 posted on 08/07/2003 10:42:23 AM PDT by Denver Ditdat
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To: Radix
When/what was the other explosion?? We're heading there in September...have they discovered the causes of these?
14 posted on 08/07/2003 12:09:40 PM PDT by ellery
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To: ellery
The Halifax explosion. was a very famous tragedy which happened in 1917.
 
http://www.region.halifax.ns.ca/community/explode.html

15 posted on 08/07/2003 12:29:14 PM PDT by Radix
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To: robowombat
Great post. When I visited Halifax, I was informed that due the number of eye injuries which resulted from the blast that Halifax became world reknowned for schools for the blind.
16 posted on 08/07/2003 12:33:33 PM PDT by Radix
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To: ellery
I forgot to mention in my other post a few suggestions.

The Citadel is a very impressive site, and should not be missed. There are three cemetaries which have (some still unidentified) remains of victims of the Titantic. There are a lot of nice restaurants in Halifax, and just about everyone there speaks French.

You will have a great time. There are a lot of Lighthouses there in NS as well. It is a terrific place to visit. I am envious of you.

Regards, Radix.
17 posted on 08/07/2003 12:39:33 PM PDT by Radix
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To: Radix
Radix, thank you so much! We're spending two nights in Halifax, and a week biking from village to village along the south coast of Nova Scotia. There's a half-day of kayaking in there, as well -- we're so excited! We'll make sure to see the Citadel and the cemetaries. Thanks again.
18 posted on 08/07/2003 1:01:47 PM PDT by ellery
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To: Loyalist; Great Dane; liliana; Alberta's Child; Entropy Squared; Rightwing Canuck; canuckwest; ...
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19 posted on 08/07/2003 1:47:01 PM PDT by Clive
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To: ellery
I work in an elevator. Grain dust can be very explosive if they let it build up, in confined spaces especially. Usually there are secondary blasts within seconds of the original blast that do the most damage. The first blasts shakes loose a lot of dust and that dust then in turn explodes. Those explosions can blow the heck out of concrete elevators! Usually that is what they are from when they explode!
20 posted on 08/07/2003 2:26:05 PM PDT by curlewbird
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