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Halifax Explosion 100th Anniversary

A Look Back 100 Years

2017 09 12 St. Josephs damage Halifax explosion 1917 Box 4 File 18 no. 35 600x400On the morning of Dec. 6, 1917, the outgoing Norwegian relief vessel Imo collided with the incoming munitions vessel the Mont-Blanc in the Halifax harbour. The Mont-Blanc, with its cargo of benzol, picric acid, TNT and gun cotton, caught fire. After burning for 20 minutes, the volatile cargo exploded, causing a blast unsurpassed in human history until the bombing of Hiroshima in 1945.

Halifax was devastated. Approximately 2000 people were killed in the explosion or died shortly thereafter from their injuries. About 9000 people sustained injuries. Partial or total loss of sight was widespread, as the windows to which people had been drawn to watch the fire blew inward, sending shards of glass into faces and eyes. The records of St. Joseph’s Orphanage show a sharp increase in admissions and hundreds of children were left completely orphaned or with only one living parent. Many Archdiocesan properties were affected, including St. Joseph’s Church, which was destroyed. St. Mary’s Cathedral, further away from the explosion, fared better, though a bell was cracked and the stained glass windows shattered.

As we mark the 100th Anniversary of the Explosion, we present a few items of interest, drawn from the Archival holdings of the Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth, and other sources.

 KoC Doak ChildrenPic      List of damagesPg3   Very Rev. Charles McManus 72 

Knights of Columbus Halifax Council 1097 and Dec 6, 1917 Explosion (pdf)

Knight Ervin John Doak was kind enough to share some of the results of his research into the involvement of the Knights of Columbus in recovery efforts following with the explosion. Many thanks to Mr. Doak! 

   

†McCarthy-Damages list (pdf)

This list, in Archbishop McCarthy’s handwriting, shows the estimated dollar value of the damage to Archdiocesan properties. According to an online inflation calculator (in Canadian dollars) $1000 in 1917 would equal roughly $15,700 today. The damages in 1917 totalled over $2,300,000. That amount would total over $36,134,939.76 today.

 
 

Sermon (pdf)

What follows is the homily preached at the funeral of Msgr. Charles McManus, at St. Mary’s Cathedral on January 18, 1940 by Rev. Dr. Charles Curran.  Rector of St. Mary’s Cathedral when he died, Fr. McManus had been the pastor of St. Joseph’s Church on the day of the Halifax Explosion.  He worked tirelessly to minister to the dying and injured in the immediate wake of the explosion, and to his devastated congregation in the weeks, and months that followed.  This homily speaks of that experience. 

 

December 6 marks the 100th Anniversary of the Halifax Explosion. To honour and remember this tragic event in Halifax’s history, Archbishop Anthony Mancini will offer a Memorial Mass at 12:15pm at Saint Mary’s Cathedral Basilica. All are invited to this Mass of Remembrance.

Next week Halifax commemorates the 100th Anniversary of the Halifax Explosion on December 6. The Catholic community in Halifax in 1917 was among the many groups deeply affected by this great tragedy. In the Archdiocese we are honouring those lost in the Halifax Explosion and recalling the devastation of that day in a variety of ways.

Halifax, Feb 7th, 1918
Edward, by the Grace of God and favor of the
Apostolic See, Archbishop of Halifax:
To the Clergy, Religious Orders and Laity of the
Archdiocese:health and Benediction in the Lord

Dearly Beloved:
Amid the calamities which of late have befallen our people there has been little need or occasion for words. Ruin tells its own story, desolation has left its visible record. Sorrow has come upon us, to be felt and shared but not to be described. The suffering of each is the suffering of all, and the general affliction has become a personal grief. In time of rejoicing we may go on our separate ways; but now we tread the same path; adversity brings us together.


Halifax Explosion pictures

Here is some pictures to remember the victims of the Halifax Explosion in the year of the 100th Anniversary.