Today In History: The Black Tom Explosion Rocked NY Harbor

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So, yesterday was the 30th anniversary of the first Son of Sam killings and today is another sad day in local history (*cough* Jersey *cough*). On July 31, 1916 Black Tom island, which was next to Liberty Island, literally blew up and off the map (what was left of the island is now part of the mainland in Liberty State Park). The island was a major munitions depot. And by major we mean "2,000 tons of munitions parked in freight cars and pierside barges." After midnight small fires started on some of the piers and then began to grow. Around 2:08 a.m. the munitions started to explode.

And explode is barely the word: The shock-waves from Black Tom shattered windows up to 25 miles away. It stopped the clocktower of the Jersey Journal at 2:12 AM. It rattled the Statue of Liberty so badly that the torch, which had been open to the public for thirty years, had to be closed (and, uh, still is). Immigrants waiting to be processed on Ellis Island were rushed to Manhattan. It is estimated that the Black Tom explosions would have measured a 5.5 on the Richter Scale (the WTC's north tower registered a 2.3 when it collapsed). Smaller explosions continued for hours injuring hundreds, though with only seven fatalities.

Though initially smudge pots lit to keep mosquitoes at bay were blamed for the explosion, it quickly became clear that Germany was behind the boom-boom (the munitions were headed to the Allies). Though sponsored by another nation you can argue that Black Tom was the first major terrorist attack on the US.

Anybody know if they still keep huge stockpiles off munitions in or near the City? Cause after reading up on this, we'd like to not live near there.

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1916 photograph of the Aftermath of the Black Tom Explosion from Liberty State Park. Map from Google Maps

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My grandfather was 7 at the time of the Black Tom explosion and living in Hoboken. He always claimed that it knocked him out of bed.

heavy weapons are unloaded (going in the NY port) and loaded (leaving the NY port) at Earl Weapons Base long peir in Bedford, NJ. There stored in buried tunnels about ten or so miles inland and moved via a rail. Its all pretty ease to see and follow from the sandy hook bay on Google Earth.

Did the Statue of Liberty torch really get closed permanently because of this? I think some fact-checking is needed...

It's really amazing that some of the most incredible disasters (Hurricanes, explosions, shipwrecks, fires) in the US and Canada are now almost totally forgotten. If they are not followed by a war (The Alamo, The Maine, The Lusitania, Pearl Harbor) they might as well not have existed.

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Observer, looks correct from a bit of Googling. The explosion cause $100,000 of structural damaged to the statue and the torch has been officially closed since.

Here's more information on Naval Weapons Station Earle, if you wanted to know.

Munitions would be strategic targets, so I don't think sabotaging them counts as a "terrorist attack," even if the sabotage is in such a violent, shocking manner. Terrorist acts are violence done against targets of a primarily non-strategic nature, and are designed to weaken an opponent's political or moral will to fight, rather than his material ability to do so.

But a neat bit of history, nonetheless!

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I had heard a story (completely unsubstantiated mind you) that the FBI kept a large store of munitions in the old 7WTC because it was their headquarters or something in the city. Has anyone else ever heard anything along those lines?

excellent post to gothamist -- keep it up, this was fascinating and informative.

who owned the mill and what were their names?

Who owned the mill and what were their names?


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