The Halifax Explosion

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The Halifax Explosion By Maria Lazar, Dorothea Kefer, Christynna Costa

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The Halifax Explosion. By Maria Lazar, Dorothea Kefer, Christynna Costa. Halifax before the Explosion. Halifax was changing and growing very quickly into a solid province. It was the chief transport link between Canada and Europe. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Halifax Explosion

Page 1: The Halifax Explosion

The Halifax ExplosionBy Maria Lazar, Dorothea Kefer, Christynna Costa

Page 2: The Halifax Explosion

Halifax before the Explosion

• Halifax was changing and growing very quickly into a solid province.

• It was the chief transport link between Canada and Europe.

• Ships from all over the world came to Halifax to transport goods to the war zone.

Page 3: The Halifax Explosion

IMO

• The IMO was a Norwegian ship originally used as a livestock carrier, but in 1912 it was registered as a supply ship for the South Pacific whaling company.

• The captain of the IMO was Haakon From, he controlled a crew of 39 people .

Page 4: The Halifax Explosion

The Mont Blanc• The Mont Blanc was a cargo

ammunition ship owned by the French.

• The ship had a depth of 15.3 feet, a width of 44.8 feet and 320 feet long.

• The captain of The Mont Blanc was Aime Le Medec, who controlled 41 French sailors.

• As a safety warning, crew weren't allowed to smoke, bring matches, or liquor on the ship because of the many explosives that they carried

Page 5: The Halifax Explosion

Before The Collision

• The Mont Blanc left her anchorage outside the mouth of the harbor to join a convoy gathering in Bedford Basin.

• The Mont Blanc was carrying 2300 tons of wet and dry picric acid, 200 tons of TNT, 10 tons of gun cotton, and 35 tons of Benzol.

• The IMO was behind schedule time so it had to hurry out of the Bedford basin.

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The Collision

• At approximately 8:45am the

two boats were at the slimmest part of the Halifax harbor , that’s where they collided

• It wasn't big collision but the friction of the two boats erupted into a fire rapidly.

• When people saw the collision , some came down to the harbor to view, while others looked out windows whether they were at work, at home or at school.

Page 7: The Halifax Explosion

The Explosion

• For 20 minutes the ship was burning and drifted closer to the harbor, where people formed crowds, not knowing the danger they were putting themselves into.

• At approximately 9:05am, the ship exploded with a roar heard from 320Km away and a force that devastated the city

• A huge tidal wave was sent to the harbor and raging fire occurred over the whole city.

Page 8: The Halifax Explosion

The Effects Of The Explosion

• Churches, houses, schools, factories, docks, and other ships in the harbour got demolished

• 1,600 people were killed, and 1,630 homes were completely demolished.

• Another 6,000 people were left without shelter.

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Aftermath & Recovery

• Within 2 days, ships from Boston arrived with $300,000 worth of relief supplies.

• Millions of dollars were donated from around the world to help relief the devastation of Halifax.

Page 10: The Halifax Explosion

Remembering Halifax

• The Halifax explosion was the greatest man made explosion since the Atomic bomb(1945).

• To this day on December 6th, a memorial bell is rung at 9am in memory of this tragic event.

• Every Christmas, Halifax sends a big Christmas tree to Boston to thank them for their support and relief.