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http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/PortChicago.html


                           AMERICA'S DARK SECRET
                       - The Port Chicago Disaster -

  In 1944, the Port Chicago disaster killed hundreds of Americans in a
single blast. Was it an accident, or was it America's first atomic weapons
test?
     ___________________________________

   Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 3, #4 (June-July '96).PO Box 30,
Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Telephone: +61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
   From our web page at: http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/

   Originally found in articles written by Robert L. Allen & Peter Vogel
as published in THE BLACK SCHOLAR, Journal of Black Studies &
Research,Volume 13, Numbers 2 and 3 - Spring 1982
     _________________________________________________________________

   On the night of 17th July 1944, two transport vessels loading
ammunition at the Port Chicago (California) naval base on the Sacramento
River were suddenly engulfed in a gigantic explosion. The incredible blast
wrecked the naval base and heavily damaged the small town of Port Chicago,
located 1.5 miles away. Some 320 American naval personnel were killed
instantly. The two ships and the large loading pier were totally
annihilated. Several hundred people were injured, and millions of dollars
in property damage was caused by the huge blast. Windows were shattered in
towns 20 miles away, and the glare of the explosion could be seen in San
Francisco, some 35 miles away. It was the worst home-front disaster of
World War II. Officially, the world's first atomic test explosion occurred
on 16th July 1945 at Alamogordo, New Mexico; but the Port Chicago blast
may well have been the world's first atomic detonation, whether accidental
or not.

   THE SHIP

The E. A. Bryan, the ship which exploded at Port Chicago, was a 7,212-ton
EC-2 Liberty ship commanded by Captain John L. M. Hendricks of San Pedro,
California, and operated by Oliver J. Olson & Co., San Francisco. It
was built and launched at the Kaiser Steel shipyard in Richmond,
California, in March 1944. She made a maiden voyage to the South Pacific
and then was ordered into the US Navy's Alameda Shipyards where the
five-ton (10,000-pound maximum load) booms and gear on the no. 1 and no. 5
holds were removed and replaced with 10-ton booms and gear. It then docked
at Port Chicago on 13th July 1944. At 8.00 am on 14th July, naval
personnel began loading ammunition.

   The E. A. Bryan had been moored at Port Chicago for four days, taking
on ammunition and explosives night and day. Some 98 men of Division Three
were hard at work loading the Bryan, and by 10.00 pm on 17th July the ship
was loaded with some 4,600 tons of munitions including 1,780 tons of high
explosives.

   The second ship, the Quinalt Victory, was brand new; it was preparing
for its maiden voyage. The Quinalt Victory had moored at Port Chicago at
about 6.00 pm on the evening of 17th July. Some 102 men of the Sixth
Division, many of whom had only recently arrived at Port Chicago, were
busy rigging the ship in preparation for loading of ammunition which was
due to begin by midnight.

   In addition to the enlisted men present, there were nine Navy officers,
67 members of the crews of the two ships along with an Armed Guard detail
of 29 men, five crew members of a Coast Guard fire barge, a Marine sentry
and a number of civilian employees. The pier was congested with men,
equipment, a locomotive, 16 railroad boxcars, and about 430 tons of bombs
and projectiles waiting to be loaded.

   Most of the enlisted men, upon first arriving at Port Chicago, were
quite fearful of the explosives they were expected to handle. But, over
time, many of the men simply accommodated themselves to the work situation
by discounting the risk of an explosion. Most men readily accepted the
officers' assurances that the bombs could not explode because they had no
detonators.

   THE EXPLOSION

Just before 10.20 pm, a massive explosion occurred at the pier. To some
observers it appeared that two explosions, only a few seconds apart,
occurred: a first and smaller blast was felt; this was followed quickly by
a cataclysmic explosion as the E. A. Bryan went off like one gigantic
bomb, sending a column of fire and smoke more than 12,000 feet into the
night sky.

   Everyone on the pier and aboard the two ships was killed instantly-some
320 men, 200 of whom were black enlisted men. Very few intact bodies were
recovered. Another 390 military and civilian personnel were injured,
including 226 black enlisted men. This single, stunning disaster accounted
for almost one-fifth of all black naval casualties during the whole of
World War II. Property damage, military and civilian, was estimated at
more than US$12 million.

   The E. A. Bryan was literally blown to bits. Very little of its
wreckage was ever found. The Quinalt Victory was lifted clear out of the
water by the blast, turned around and broken into pieces. The largest
piece of the Quinalt Victory which remained after the explosion was a
65-foot section of the keel, its propeller attached, which protruded from
the bay at low tide, 1,000 feet from its original position.

   There was at least one 12-ton diesel locomotive operating on the pier
at the time of the explosion. Not a single piece of the locomotive car was
ever identified: the locomotive simply vanished. In the river stream,
several small boats half a mile distant from the pier reported being hit
by a 30-foot wall of water.

   In an interview, one of the men described his experience of the
disaster:

   "I was reading a letter from home. Suddenly there were two explosions.
The first one knocked me clean off... I found myself flying toward the
wall. I just threw up my hands like this, then I hit the wall. Then the
next one came right behind that. Phoom! Knocked me back on the other side.
Men were screaming, the lights went out and glass was flying all over the
place. I got out to the door. Everybody was...that thing had...the whole
building was turned around, caving in. We were a mile and a half away from
the ships. And so the first thing that came to my mind, I said, 'Jesus
Christ, the Japs have hit!' I could have sworn they were out there
pounding us with warships or bombing us or something. But one of the
officers was shouting, 'It's the ships! It's the ships!' So we jumped in
one of the trucks and we said, 'Let's go down there, see if we can help.'
We got halfway down there on the truck and stopped. Guys were shouting at
the driver from the back of the truck, 'Go on down. What the hell are you
staying up here for?' The driver says, 'Can't go no further.' See, there
wasn't no more dock. Wasn't no railroad. Wasn't no ships. And the water
just came right up to...all the way back. The driver couldn't go no
further. Just as calm and peaceful. I didn't even see any smoke."

   Rescue assistance was rushed from nearby towns and other military
bases. The town of Port Chicago was heavily damaged by the explosion but
fortunately none of its citizens was killed, although many suffered
injuries.

   During the night and early morning, the injured were removed to
hospitals and many of the black enlisted men were evacuated to nearby
stations, mainly to Camp Shoemaker in Oakland. Others remained at Port
Chicago to clear away debris and search for what could be found of bodies.

   The search for bodies was grim work. One survivor recalled the
experience:

   "I was there the next morning. We went back to the dock. Man, it was
awful; that was a sight. You'd see a shoe with a foot in it, and then
you'd remember how you'd joked about who was gonna be the first one out of
the hold. You'd see a head floating across the water-just the head-or an
arm. Bodies...just awful."

   Some 200 black enlisted men volunteered to remain at the base and help
with the clean-up operation.

   Three days after the disaster, Captain Merrill T.
Kinne-officer-in-charge of Port Chicago-issued a statement praising the
black enlisted men for their behaviour during the disaster. Stating that
the men acquitted themselves with "great credit", he added, "Under those
emergency conditions, regular members of our complement and volunteers
from Mare Island displayed creditable coolness and bravery."

   THE AFTERMATH

Four days after the Port Chicago disaster, on 21st July 1944 a Naval Court
of Inquiry was convened to "inquire into the circumstances attending the
explosion". The inquiry was to establish the facts of the situation and
the Court was to arrive at an opinion concerning the cause or causes of
the disaster. The inquiry lasted 39 days and some 125 witnesses were
called to testify.

   However, only five black witnesses were called to testify-none from the
group that would later resist returning to work because of unsafe
practices. The Court heard testimony from survivors and eyewitnesses to
the explosion, other Port Chicago personnel, ordnance experts, inspectors
who checked the ships before loading, and others.

   The question of Captain Kinne's tonnage-figures blackboard-and the
competition it encouraged-came up during the proceedings. Kinne attempted
to justify this as simply an extension of the Navy's procedure of
competition in target practice. He contended that it did not negatively
impact on safety, and implied that junior officers who said it did, did
not know what they were talking about.

   The Court also heard testimony concerning the fuelling of the vessels,
possible sabotage, defects in the bombs, problems with the winches and
other equipment, rough handling by the enlisted men, and organisational
problems at Port Chicago.

   But the specific cause of the explosion was never officially
established by the Court of Inquiry. Anyone in a position to have actually
seen what caused the explosion did not live to tell about it.

   Although there was testimony before the Court about competition in
loading, this was not listed by the Court (or the Judge Advocate) as in
any way a cause of the explosion (although the court saw fit to recommend
that, in future, "the loading of explosives should never be a matter of
competition"-a small slap on the hands of the officers).

   Thus, the Court of Inquiry in effect cleared the officers-in- charge of
any responsibility for the disaster, and in so far as any human cause was
invoked, the burden of blame was laid on the shoulders of the black
enlisted men who died in the explosion.

   THE MUTINY

After the explosion, many of the surviving black sailors were transferred
to nearby Camp Shoemaker where they remained until 31st July; then the
Fourth and Eighth Divisions were transferred to naval barracks in Vallejo
near Mare Island. During this period, the men were assigned barracks
duties but no ship-loading was assigned. Another group, the Second
Division, which was also at Camp Shoemaker until 31st July, returned to
Port Chicago to help with the cleaning up and rebuilding of the base.

   Many of the men were in a state of shock, troubled by the vivid memory
of the horrible explosion in which so many of their friends had died. All
were extremely nervous and jumpy. "Everybody was scared," one survivor
recalled. "If somebody dropped a box or slammed a door, people be jumping
around like crazy. Everybody was still nervous."

   There was no psychiatric counselling or medical screening of the men,
except for those who were obviously physically injured. The men's anxiety
was probably made worse by the fact that they did not know what caused the
explosion. Rumour and speculation were rife. Some thought it was caused by
an accident, some suspected sabotage, others did not know what to think.
Apparently the men were not informed that the Navy was conducting an
investigation. Certainly, none of those who would later be involved in the
work stoppage was called to testify at the Court of Inquiry.

   The men talked among themselves. They had not yet been ordered back to
their regular duty and no one knew what would happen next, but many of
them hoped they would be transferred to other stations or to ships.

   Many of the survivors expected to be granted survivors' leaves to visit
their families before being re-assigned to regular duties. But such leaves
were not granted, creating a major grievance. Even men who had been
hospitalised with injuries were not granted leaves.

   The survivors and new personnel expressed their opposition to returning
to loading ammunition, citing the possibility of another explosion. The
first confrontation occurred on 9th August. A ship had come into Mare
Island to be loaded with ammunition, and the Second, Fourth and Eighth
Divisions, 328 men, were ordered out to the loading pier. The great
majority of the men baulked, and eventually 258 men were arrested and
confined for three days on a barge tied to the pier. Officers told the men
they faced serious charges, including mutiny for which they could be
executed. They were also being threatened by guards with being summarily
shot.

   In early September, 50 men were selected as the ring-leaders and
charged with mutiny. On 24th October 1944, after only 80 minutes of
deliberation by a specially-convened military court, all 50 men were found
guilty of mutiny. Ten were sentenced to 15 years in prison, 24 sentenced
to 12 years, 11 sentenced to 10 years, and five sentenced to eight years.
All were to be dishonourably discharged from the Navy.

   After a massive outcry over the next year, in January 1946, 47 of the
Port Chicago men were released from prison and 'exiled' for one year
overseas before returning to their families.

   Of the Navy personnel who died in the blast, most-some 200
ammunition-loaders-were black. Indeed, every man handling ammunition at
Port Chicago was black, and every commissioned officer was white. This was
the standard operating procedure in the segregated Navy at that time.

   DEVELOPMENT OF THE URANIUM BOMB

About 400 to 600 pages of reports and memoranda on Port Chicago are held
at the Los Alamos (Manhattan Project) Laboratories. They were declassified
in 1981. The most substantial record of the accident was prepared by US
Navy Captain William J. Parsons and transmitted to US Rear Admiral W. R.
Purnell, member of the Atomic Bomb Military Policy Committee and Parsons'
superior officer.

   Parsons is credited with designing the ordnance for the first atomic
bomb and bringing it to battle-ready status. He was assigned to Los Alamos
and named Deputy Director under J. Robert Oppenheimer and Division Leader
for the Ordnance Engineering Division established in June 1943. They
developed, designed and constructed the uranium-235 gun-bomb used on
Hiroshima. Immediately after the Port Chicago disaster, Captain Parsons
was elevated to the rank of Commodore, USN. He was subsequently the
bombing officer aboard the B-29, the Enola Gay, which dropped the U-235
bomb on Hiroshima. After Hiroshima, Parsons was elevated to the rank of
Rear Admiral, US Navy.

   Parsons was a member of the LeMay Subcommittee of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff which became the Joint Crossroads Committee in 1946. He was
Assistant Chief of Naval Operations for Special Weapons prior to his
appointment as Chairperson of the Joint Crossroads Committee which planned
the Bikini Atoll tests. He was also Deputy Task Force Commander for
Technical Direction of the Bikini tests. Parsons died in 1952.

   Specifications for the U-235 gun-bomb used at Hiroshima were complete
by February 1944, according to Volume I of the Manhattan District History.
Hardware for at least three uranium-235 guns was ordered at the end of
March 1944. According to the US Department of Energy Oak Ridge records, 74
kilograms of U-235 was available by December 1943, 93 kg by December 1944
and 289 kg by December 1945. The uranium-235 gun-bomb weighed about 9,000
pounds when assembled.

   Effective 1st August 1944, Los Alamos Laboratories were reorganised,
all work on the U-235 gun-bomb was curtailed, and efforts were
concentrated on the plutonium-239 Nagasaki bomb.

   THE GOVERNMENT'S STORY

The US Government claimed that 1,780 tons of high-explosive TNT-equivalent
exploded spontaneously at Port Chicago. (This is in contrast to the two
previous ship explosions, Mont Blanc in Halifax in 1917, and SS Fort
Stikine in Bombay in 1944, which followed shipboard fires.) The government
claimed there was not enough uranium-235 available for a bomb. This is now
known to have been a lie, as noted above. According to the declassified
Oak Ridge documents, 15.5 kilograms of U-235 is needed for a gun-bomb. The
December 1943 inventory was 74 kg of U-235, and in December 1994, six
months after Port Chicago, it was 93 kg. If a nuclear weapon was detonated
at Port Chicago, it is likely to have been one of the U-235 gun-bombs
built after March 1944.

   THE EVIDENCE FOR AN ATOMIC EXPLOSION

The force of the blast was greater than the 1,780 tons of high explosives
could have caused, when one considers the total disintegration of the
ship, the size of the blast crater, the tidal wave, the destruction of the
Quinalt Victory, the 12-ton locomotive, etc.

   Eyewitnesses reported "an enormous blinding incandescent". The Navy
reported "the first flash was brilliant white", such as is now known to be
characteristic of nuclear explosions which achieve several tens of
millions of degrees Centigrade in milliseconds. Conventional explosives
reach a maximum of 5,000&degree;C and do not give off a white flash except
when mixed with magnesium. There was no magnesium on the list of
explosives loaded onto the Bryan. The white flash occurs with atomic bombs
of five kilotons and greater.

   The Port Chicago disaster gave rise to a Wilson condensation cloud like
those at Bikini-now known to be characteristic of atomic bombs detonated
in vapour-laden atmospheres.

   The seismic records show a very rapid detonation not characteristic of
conventional explosions but the signature of atomic explosions. There was
a typical nuclear fire-ball.

   THE FILM

The Navy has a film record of the disaster at its Concord Naval Weapons
Station. After being challenged, the Navy claimed this was a Hollywood
simulation of a miniature explosion. The film shows a typical nuclear
explosion, which would have been hard to simulate. According the the Navy,
the film was created to support their argument to the US Congress sometime
in the 1960s that the remains of the the town of Port Chicago be purchased
by the Navy and incorporated into the Concord Naval Weapons Station as a
buffer zone in the event of another large explosion.

   Significantly, the Navy did not claim the film was a re-creation until
after it was suggested that the film could be the record of a nuclear
detonation. However, Dan Tikalsky, public affairs chief at Concord, told
Peter Vogel, writing for The Black Scholar magazine, that the film was a
nitrate-base film, which would require the film to have been produced
prior to 1950 when nitrate-base film was replaced with non-explosive
cellulose-base film.

   Peter Vogel wrote in the Spring 1982 edition of The Black Scholar:

   "Based on viewing an edited video copy of that film which was made
available to me, I have concluded that the film records, in every detail,
the progression of the actual explosion of July 17, 1944 at Port Chicago.
For example, early frames of the film suggest a record of the expansion of
the Wilson condensation cloud during which the formation of the ball of
fire is obscured. Furthermore, the movements exhibited by several large,
independent fragments of the explosion over time compared to the speed of
the explosion itself are evidence of the very large distances those
fragments travelled during the course of the film sequence.

   "It is obvious, of course, that only an intentional film record of the
blast could have been made since the probability of having, by chance, a
motion picture camera rolling and pointed in the right direction at the
right time at night is exceedingly remote.

   "If the explosion was filmed at the Port Chicago site, it would follow
that the explosion was planned and anticipated."

   The July 1944 blast caused a crater 66 feet deep, 300 feet wide and 700
feet long in the river bottom. A five-kiloton nuclear bomb on the surface
of wet soil creates a crater 53 feet deep and 132 feet in diameter. Some
of the blast was absorbed by the ship's hull, so it may have exceeded five
kilotons.

   Residual radiation exposures in this area are unknown, as Port Chicago
was used also as a decontamination port for ships exposed to nuclear
blasts in the Marshall Islands.

   Los Alamos Laboratories have an inventory of all munitions loaded onto
the Bryan before the disaster. For 18th July 1944, there are two empty
boxcars, DLW44755 and GN46324, listed with an asterisk. The asterisk
refers to a note at the bottom of the page: "Papers showing that these
cars were loaded we destroyed, so cars do not show on attach[ed] list."
These may have been the cars which carried two parts of the uranium-235
gun.

   CONCLUSION

After examination of the historical evidence, the testimonials of
survivors and eyewitnesses, the subsequent investigations as well as the
film record, it is hard not to reach the conclusion that the blast at Port
Chicago was in fact an atomic explosion-which, if so, would make it the
world's first atomic detonation.

   What really needs to be investigated further is whether or not this
device was deliberately detonated by the military, using low-ranking
(black) personnel as guinea pigs to test its effects.

   PRIMARY SOURCES OF HISTORY

There are two primary sources, The Los Alamos Project, Volumes I and II
(distribution, 1961), which contains the official history of the Manhattan
Project, code-name for the atomic bomb program in World War II, and a Los
Alamos declassified document entitled "History of the 10,000-ton Gadget",
which dates from about September 1944.

   Manhattan District History-Project Y: The Los Alamos Project, Volumes I
and II, LAMS-2532, Los Alamos, Paragraph 11:20, refers to work
accomplished at Los Alamos following 1st August 1944 in describing the
process of an atomic explosion. It is almost identical with the Los Alamos
document, "History of the 10,000-ton Gadget", procured by Peter Vogel, a
Santa Fe historian. Both appear to describe an actual nuclear explosion.
Joseph O. Hirschfelder (later of University of Wisconsin at Madison) was
director of the project at Los Alamos. Paragraph 11:20 of the Manhattan
District History (supposedly prepared in November 1944) reads:

   "Much more extensive investigation of the behavior and effects of a
nuclear explosion were made during this period than had been possible
before, tracing the history of the process from the initial expansion of
the active material and tamper [Tuballoy, an inert neutron-reflective
material] through the final stages. These investigations included the
formation of the shock wave in the air, the radiation history of the early
stages of the explosion, the formation of the 'ball of fire', the
attenuation of the blast wave in air at greater distances, and the effects
of blasts and radiations of [sic.] human beings and structures. General
responsibility for this work was given to Group T-7, with the advice and
assistance of [the British Mission consultant] W. G. Penney."

   Los Alamos Laboratories Theoretical Division Group T-7 (Damage) was
formed in November 1944 and had been the former Group O-5 (Calculations)
of the Ordnance Division. As was noted, William Parsons was the Division
Leader for Ordnance. He reported to J. Robert Oppenheimer. Both O-5 and
T-7 were headed by Hirschfelder. The responsibility of G-7 was to complete
the earlier investigations of damage and of the general phenomenology of a
nuclear explosion.

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