The pier at Port Chicago in ruins |
At precisely 10:18 pm on July 17, 1944 an Army Air Force pilot flying at 9,000
feet saw pieces of white hot metal, some as large as a house, fly straight up
past him. The plane was not flying over
a war zone. It was cruising above the San Francisco Bay area directly above Port
Chicago on the southern banks of Suisun
Bay, The plane and its crew narrowly avoided becoming additional casualties
in the worst domestic loss of life
and property in America during World War II. Below them a pier with two ships, a railroad locomotive, and more than 350 men—80% of them Black U.S. Navy ammunition loaders were
virtually vaporized in an explosion equal to the power of 2,000 tons of TNT—the equivalent of a small atomic weapon.
Port Chicago, about 30 miles north of San Francisco, was a busy place. To keep up with munitions demand in the Pacific Theater, it was developed into
a munitions facility when the Naval
Ammunition Depot at Mare Island
could not fully supply the war effort. By the summer of 1944, expansion of the
Port Chicago facility allowed for loading two ships at once around the clock.
Locomotives
brought trainloads of munitions—everything from small arms ammunition, to Naval
ordinance, to air craft bombs of
all sizes—to the dockside, each box car crammed
to capacity with explosives. The trains
waited on sidings separated by concrete blast walls for safety until they were
ready to roll onto the pier. There were
births for two cargo ships, one on each side.
The
box cars were unloaded by hand all-Black gangs of ammunition loaders under the
direct supervision of Black petty
officers and largely inexperienced white
junior officers. Separate gangs
worked transferring the munitions to the two docked ships, hoisted aboard in cargo nets by winch and crane. Loading operations continued in shifts around
the clock. It took an average of four
days labor to fill each ship, but with more ships in the bay awaiting a birth,
the men were driven to speed up operations both by aggressive petty officers
and by offers of rewards in speed loading competition. Corners were cut.
Black labor gangs unloading a box car with heavy bombs at Port Chicago |
The
use of exclusively Black labor gangs for ammunition loading and other dangerous
and unpleasant duties was a product of a culture of rigid segregation in the Navy.
Historically Blacks had served in all enlisted capacities and on
shipboard from the birth of the Navy through World War I. In some eras,
particularly under sail, they often represent up to 25% of personnel on some
ships. Then Jim Crow went to sea. In the
‘20’s Blacks were limited to duties as cooks,
messmates, and stewards. Old time seamen were “allowed” to remain
until retirement, but in fact most were forced out before that by hostile
officers and crews. Then attempts were
made to replace even the cooks and stewards with Filipinos.
After
Pearl Harbor the enormous manpower
needs of the Navy made it reluctantly return to recruiting Blacks. They
used Ships Cook Dorie Miller who won
the Navy Cross for manning a machine gun against attacking Japanese planes that day as a poster
boy for recruitment in Black neighborhoods.
But except for mess duty and
servile functions, they were still generally restricted from sea duty and
confined to general service ashore
in segregated units under white officers.
The
Navy had a system for sorting sailors by fitness ratings based on intelligence tests, education, physical fitness, psychological
evaluation, age, and discipline records. Blacks assigned duty as ammunition
handlers were drawn from a pool of the bottom 60% of recruits and The Navy’s General Classification Test (GCT) results for the enlisted men at
Port Chicago averaged 31, putting them in the lowest twelfth of the Navy. Supervising petty officers there also had
below average ratings on average because the best and most effective ones were
quickly transferred to other duties. The
Navy would later use the excuse that this “substandard” force was incompetent
and irresponsible. Even if true, it begs
the question of why the Navy enforced a system the purposefully selected for
just such men for the dangerous duty.
On
the day of the explosion two ships were docked.
The Liberty ship, SS
E.A. Bryan, after four days of loading, had about 4,600 tons of
ammunition and explosives on board, about 40% of its capacity. A gang of with men 98 was loading her. On the
other side of the dock the Victory ship SS
Quinault Victory preparing its maiden voyage was being rigged to receive
cargo by a 102 man gang, but one which was made up largely of new and
inexperienced men.
The
Bryan already had on board or being
loaded 1,000-pound bombs in No. 3 hold, 40 mm shells in No. 5 hold
and fragmentation cluster bombs in No. 4 hold, 650 lb. Incendiary bombs –live with fuses installed were being
loaded carefully one at a time into No.
1 hold—a hold with a winch brake
that had recently been inoperative and may still have been so. A boxcar delivery containing a new airborne anti-submarine depth charge,
the Mark 47 armed with 252 lb. of torpex
explosives, was being loaded into No. 2
hold. The torpex charges were more sensitive than TNT to external shock and
container dents.
Also
on the dock were on three parallel rail
spurs, were a steam locomotive and sixteen rail cars holding about 430
short tons of explosives.
In
addition to the loading crews a total of 67 officers and crew of the two ships
were at their stations, and various support personnel were present including
the three-man civilian train crew and a Marine
sentry, nine supervising Navy officers, and 29 armed guards watched over
the procedure. A Coast Guard fire barge with a crew of five was docked at the
pier.
Several
ships and boats stood near-by in the harbor and the port facilities teemed with
other men on duty even this late at night.
At
shortly after 10:15 witnesses ashore recalled hearing a “metallic sound and
rending timbers, such as made by a falling boom.” That was followed by an explosion on the pier
and a flash fire. Five to seven seconds
later a huge explosion engulfed the pier.
From an enormous fireball rose a mushroom
shaped cloud that eventually reached 30,000 feet. The shock wave leveled buildings near the
pier and sent a mini-tidal wave 30 feet high rolling across the bay. Concussion from the blast shattered windows in
a radius of several miles and it could be felt in San Francisco. Seismographs
at the University of California at Berkeley recorded the two shock waves
traveling through the ground, determining the second, larger event to be
equivalent to an earthquake measuring
3.4 on the Richter Scale.
Shrapnel
like debris was scattered over a wide area and more that had been blasted high
into the air including large burning parts, continued to fall for some
time. Every boat and ship in the harbor
sustained some damage as did most of the building of the port.
The
E. A. Bryan was virtually vaporized.
Very little of its wreckage was ever found indicating that the explosion centered
on or next to her. The Quinalt Victory was lifted clear out of
the water by the blast, turned around and broken into pieces and the largest
piece which remained 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. The 12 ton locomotive on the
pier was also atomized.
All
320 of the men on duty at the pier died instantly, and 390 civilians and
military personnel were injured, many seriously. Among the dead were all five
Coast Guard personnel posted aboard the fire barge. Blacks accounted 202 dead and 233 injured,
which was 15% of all African-American naval casualties during World War II.
Survivors
ashore, many of them injured themselves and including men from other loading
gangs, rushed to the pier where they struggled to contain the fire and then
began the grim search for bodies. There
were none to be found, at least intact.
One of the Black searchers later recalled:
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.
200
Back sailors volunteered to remain at the base and help with the clean-up
operation. The rest, at least those not
hospitalized, but including many wounded, were temporarily transferred
elsewhere.
Given
the total devastation and lack of surviving witnesses, a Navy investigation could
never determine an exact cause of the disaster, although the possibility of a
faulty boom on the Bryan was
suspected by some. So was careless
handling by the loaders. Investigators
dismissed the possibility that poor training and leadership, speed-ups, and the
notorious speed loading contests could have contributed.
The
Navy asked Congress to give each
victim’s family $5,000. Representative
John E. Rankin (D-Mississippi)
insisted the amount be reduced to $2,000 when he learned most of the dead were
Black.
By
August the surviving Port Chicago ammunition loaders, augmented by new and
largely untrained recruits, were transferred to the large Mares Island facility.
Because of embarrassing publicity, a new system was put in place to
rotating between segregated Black and white gangs for around-the-clock loading
duty. On August 8 when men from the Port
Chicago unit were ordered to the USS
Sangay with naval mines and other munitions 328 men said they were afraid
and that they would not load munitions under the same officers and conditions
as before. The mass work stoppage would have been called a strike if the
workers had been civilians.
But
the Navy had another word for it mutiny.
After
refusing for two days 258 men were arrested and confined to a brig barge designed to accommodate 75. On August 11 they were marched to a field
where they were lectured on their duty by Admiral
Carleton H. Wright, Commander, 12th
Naval District who also threatened them with execution by firing squad for mutiny in time of
war. The men were told to separate themselves
into groups—those who would promise to obey orders, and those who would
not. Led by Seaman First Class Joseph Randolph “Joe” Small a group of 44 refused to obey every order. They were marched back to the brig. The next day six more sailors refused to
report to duty and were also arrested.
During
August all 258 men—those who agreed to obey future orders and those who refused—were
closely interrogated by Navy officers in an attempt to discover the “ring
leaders.” Many men were coerced into
signing statements drafted by the officers that did not correspond to their
actual accounts. Others refused to sign
anything. All 250 were brought before
court martial and convicted of disobeying
orders. They suffered three months
loss of pay, reduction in rank where applicable, and those not held as
witnesses or defendants in the upcoming mutiny trial were split into smaller
groups and shipped out to various places in the Pacific Theater where they were
assigned to menial duties like policing cigarette butts at island bases. When they concluded their tours they were all
given bad conduct discharges which
precluded them from ever receiving veterans’
benefits.
The
fate of the so-called Port Chicago 50 was
worse. A court martial trial for mutiny
and
conspiracy to disobey orders began at the Marine
base at Treasure Island in San Francisco Bay on September 14. All 50 men pled not guilty. A lengthy and acrimonious trial attracted
national attention. Thurgood Marshall, chief
counsel for the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP),
sat in on the proceedings, interviewed the defendants, and consulted with
defense lawyers. In well publicized
press conferences he insisted that the men had been improperly charged with
mutiny and conspiracy when at most each might be guilty of individual insubordination, and then broadly attacked the Navy’s
system of segregated job assignments and the shoddy training and safety
procedures of the service.
On
October 24, Admiral Osterhaus and
the other six members of the court deliberated for 80 minutes and found all 50
defendants guilty of mutiny. Each man was reduced in rank to Seaman Apprentice and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor to be followed
by dishonorable discharge. The men
were held under guard while their sentences were passed to Admiral Wright for
review. On November 15, Wright reduced the sentences for 40 of the men: 24 were
given 12 years, 11 were given 10 years and the five youngest sailors were given
eight-year sentences. The full 15-year sentences remained in place for ten of
the men including Joe Small and another alleged “ring leader” Ollie Green. In late November, the 50 men were transferred
to the Federal Correctional Institution
on Terminal Island in San Pedro Bay near the Port of Los
Angeles.
The
convictions and harsh sentences caused an uproar in the Black community. Naval enlistments plummeted. Marshall and the NAACP planed a massive
public campaign in support of an appeal effort.
Petitions began to circulate, collecting thousands of names of citizens
who demanded a reversal of the mutiny verdict. Protest meetings were held and
powerful people in sympathy to the cause were asked to bring pressure to bear,
not the least of who was Eleanor
Roosevelt who sent Navy Secretary James
Forrestal a copy of NAACPs Mutiny pamphlet in April 1945,
asking him to take special care in this case.
The Secretary ordered Admiral Wright to reconvene the court martial with
instructions to disregard the hearsay testimony. Admiral Osterhaus once again
called the court to session for deliberation and on June 12 the court
reaffirmed each of the mutiny convictions and sentences. Admiral Wright stuck
by his reduced sentences.
After
the War ended in August, the Navy Department reduced each man’s sentence by one
year. This did not appease continued
public outcry. In an October report to
the Secretary Captain Harold Stassen,
future Governor of Minnesota and perennial
Republican presidential candidate, recommended
that the Navy reduce the sentences
to just two years for men with good conduct records and three years for the
rest, with credit for time served.
Ob
January 6, 1946 the Navy announced that 47 of the 50 men were being released. They
were paroled to active duty aboard Navy vessels in the Pacific Theater, where
the men were assigned menial duties associated with post-war base detail. Two
of the 50 prisoners remained in the prison hospital for additional months
recuperating from injuries, and one was not released because of a bad conduct
record.
But
the bitter after taste lingered. The
Navy suffered a string of embarrassing incidents caused by its segregationist
policies and poor treatment of Black sailor including. It finally pushed the Navy into reluctantly
ending segregation in units and by assignment.
It took years, well into the post-war years, before the new policy was
fully implemented.
As
for Port Chicago, it was rebuilt and returned to service. Atomic weapons were shipped from there for post-war testing in the
South Pacific. It shipped tons of
munitions to Korea, Vietnam, Persian
Gulf, Iraq, and Afghanistan Wars.
Since the Vietnam War the railroad
lines leading to the docks have been the frequent site of protests and civil
disobedience. In response the Navy
has annexed much of the City of Port
Chicago and built a virtual fortress with high walls that literally severed
a major costal highway.
And,
if you are ever allowed to visit, somewhere near ground zero of the explosion is
the Port Chicago Naval Magazine National
Memorial was dedicated in 1994 to the lives lost in the explosion.
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