Very interesting story Frankie, thanks for sharing...
Norm

frank theriault wrote:
> On 12/6/06, Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>   
>> 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. <snip>
>>     
>
> Not only was it the largest man-made explosion until the atomic bomb,
> it remains the largest non-atomic man-made explosion ever.
>
> My family is from Halifax, and my late grandfather was a 12 year old
> boy, on his way to his first day at work on December 6, 1917.  He was
> late, and was still walking down the street on the south side of
> Halifax when the explosion happened.  Had he been at work, inside,
> it's quite likely that he would have been injured or killed as the
> building collapsed.  As it was, he was uninjured, but he refused to
> talk about that day or the explosion until the day he died.
>
> As the story said, Halifax was hit with a blizzard that night, the
> worst one in some 20 years.  It's estimated that around 2,000 were
> killed by the explosion.  Many more succumbed to exposure that night,
> as they lay injured or trapped in their damaged houses.  Another
> problem was fire, as the explosion either ruptured gas lines or
> knocked over coal stoves and space heaters, causing fires.
>
> Even though it's been some 89 years, the event is still a remembered
> in Halifax, even if it's not a well-known piece of Canadian history
> (you'd be surprised how many otherwise intelligent and educated
> Canadians I relate this story to, who have never heard of it!).
>
> After the explosion rail lines into Halifax were badly damaged, and
> had to be repaired before relief supplies and medical assistance could
> arrive from the rest of Canada.  The first relief arrived by sea from
> Boston.  To this day, the Province of Nova Scotia send the biggest
> Christmas tree they can find to Boston, in thanks and recognition of
> their help all those years ago.  That tree is the one that they light
> in the Boston Common each year.
>
> cheers,
> frank
>
>
>
>
>
>
>   


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