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Related: About this forumHalifax Explosion survivors heard on tapes lost for decades
During a recent move, Rick Howe spotted a cassette tape he hadn't seen in years. When he slid it into his vintage Marantz recorder, the sounds carried him back half a century and the voices took him back more than 100 years.
Howe was a cub reporter when he moved to Halifax in 1978. He was a radio news junkie, so when CJCH host Dave Wright opened his Hotline show to people who'd survived the Halifax Explosion, he started recording.
"It ended up with three hours of riveting historical context. People who were actually there, experiencing it as it happened and telling us what was going on," Howe says.
"And these are just average people. These aren't your fire chiefs, or police chiefs, or your mayors. These are just everyday Nova Scotians who were going about their everyday business when this calamity hit. "
more
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/halifax-explosion-survivors-lost-tapes-1.7058870
Audio included.
An uncle of mine was in the explosion as a young child. He stuttered from that day on.
I wonder if it was more powerful and destructive than the massive explosion in the Port of Beirut, Lebanon a couple of years ago.
Spazito
(53,887 posts)The Halifax one was "the largest human-made explosion at the time. It released the equivalent energy of roughly 2.9 kilotons of TNT (12 TJ)."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halifax_Explosion
Here is a link with some more interesting information from the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic:
https://maritimemuseum.novascotia.ca/what-see-do/halifax-explosion
applegrove
(122,801 posts)when they were building the bomb. Doctors & nurses from Boston arrived to treat all the people who got glass in their eyes (people were drawn to the windows to watch the "fire" in the harbor when the windows blew out) and ended up advancing the science of eye surgery.
Spazito
(53,887 posts)in science, the Halifax Explosion being a great example, imo.