American Reacts: Halifax Explosion of 1917. May We Neve Forget!

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  • Опубліковано 20 сер 2024
  • This Short documentary about the Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada explosion of WWI by Fascinating Horror is a must see. Here is a link to the original content: • The Halifax Explosion ...
    Link to my Channel / @johnf-americanreacts1287
    #halifazexplosion
    #canadianhistory
    #JohnFAmericanReactsuk,au,ca,nz

КОМЕНТАРІ • 382

  • @crowflight719
    @crowflight719 Рік тому +10

    I was born in Halifax. My grandmother was a young woman when it happened. She always told us to have a "soft spot" and an attitude of gratefulness to the city of Boston. When she met and married my grandfather she said he was a huge fan and supporter of the Boston Bruins. Roughly half the population of Nova Scotia share his sentiment still to this day. So from one Halifax descendent of the disaster, I would like to say to Boston descendants who gave aid.....Thank you so much for your help during that time. Thanks.

    • @user-fh9bf7uv4l
      @user-fh9bf7uv4l 7 місяців тому +1

      My husband, who grew up in Nova Scotia, also had ancestors that perished that day. Horrific!

  • @canadianicedragon2412
    @canadianicedragon2412 Рік тому +36

    Every time I hear that message from Vince Coleman... I get goosebumps and have to pause and stop whatever is going on in my head to come to terms with it.
    Such an act.

    • @emilyh1439
      @emilyh1439 Рік тому +5

      This is the second American reacts to the Halifax explosion I have seen, I was going to get seriously upset that Vince Coleman was not in this one either.. thank goodness I watched to the end ❤ he’s a huge part of our history.

  • @johnt8636
    @johnt8636 Рік тому +75

    I've been a tour guide in Halifax for more than 20 years. The explosion is a big part of my job.
    The blast works out to 2.9 kilotons.
    The anti-sub nets weren't lowered, they were opened. There were 'gate ships' (tugboats) that would pull back a portion of the net and open a gate.
    Benzol was used in the making of aircraft fuel.
    The people on the Dartmouth could here the crew of the Mont Blanc plainly enough, but there were speaking French. It wasn't until one sailor snatched a small child from its mothers arms and started running, which of course caused the crowd to chase him.
    @18:39 Yes, that's the Imo on the Dartmouth shore, post-blast. She was refloated and continued to sail until running aground in the Falkland Island in 1921. her wreck is still there.
    Fun Fact: The system we used to identify the dead was the same system we used to identify Titanic's dead.
    Thanks for your sincere interest, John.

    • @grahamkemble3917
      @grahamkemble3917 Рік тому +5

      I’ve been on a tour of Halifax. The guide gave very effective description of the explosion. Very sobering!

    • @johnt8636
      @johnt8636 Рік тому +3

      @@grahamkemble3917
      Heh, I may have been your guide.

  • @dorisbetts3012
    @dorisbetts3012 Рік тому +38

    Thank you for treating this horrific event in our Nova Scotia history with such respect.

  • @darcymartin7608
    @darcymartin7608 Рік тому +34

    I agree with you when you commented about Canada & the U.S. helping each other in times of need. The Halifax Explosion and 9/11 were 2 times. A 3rd time was in 1997 in North Dakota and Manitoba. Granted, it wasn't on the scale of the 1st 2 disasters mentioned, but it was bad enough. In the Spring of 1997 the Red River which starts in the U.S. and flows North into Manitoba flooded badly. Winnipeg, Manitoba has the Red River floodway which diverts excess water from damaging the city but Grand Forks, N.D. doesn't have (or at least it didn't have in 1997). Manitoba was flooding badly but North Dakota had it worse. At one point Grand Forks citizens were told to "get out of town". I remember watching a news channel from Grand Forks and they stopped all regularly scheduled programming to direct people to go elsewhere. For Americans who didn't have passports, or papers for their pets, they were by-passed and allowed to cross the border. Several hundred Americans came up to Manitoba. Some people met the Americans in a small town about 1/2 way between Winnipeg and Grand Forks. Manitoban's were phoning the U.S. TV station and giving their names and addresses and if they had cribs/high chairs. If people had small children they could go and stay with these Manitobans. We're neighbours. That's what we do.

  • @tonypreston1426
    @tonypreston1426 Рік тому +30

    Thanks for doing this. My grandmother used to tell us about this when we were kids. She and her sister were survivors of this event which made it more personal for us. She said they were lucky to survive, they were late for school and still in the house when it happened so they were protected from the onslaught, she was 9 years old at the time.

  • @pamdawkins13
    @pamdawkins13 Рік тому +63

    Thank-you for reacting to this, especially with the level of respect that you did. The Halifax Explosion is a major event in Canadian history. It's one of those things that I don't remember learning about for the first time because it's so embedded in the Canadian psyche. There's actually a Heritage Minutes video about Vince Coleman. (Heritage minutes is a series of short videos about Canadian history that played during commercials. They were a regular part of growing up in Canada for years.)
    Side note, I think it's cool you're going to tell your daughter about the Boston Christmas tree.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +16

      Thanks so much for this thoughtful comment. I’ll have to check out the Heritage Minutes. It’s such a powerful story.

    • @FfejNS
      @FfejNS Рік тому

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 ua-cam.com/video/rw-FbwmzPKo/v-deo.html

  • @DanFloodCanada
    @DanFloodCanada Рік тому +13

    I admire the level of respect you show our country. As a Canadian who grew up watching American ( WUTV Buffalo 29 ) television and learning American history this is really great.

  • @glennaembrett610
    @glennaembrett610 Рік тому +2

    My great Grandmother worked at the Halifax Dockyard and was thrown from a two story bldg.
    She survived, but for almost two weeks, couldn’t be found.
    She was eventually found on the grounds of the Halifax Commons.
    She was in a make shift hospital, in army tents, in the middle of Winter.
    The day after the Explosion, there was a blizzard, and the frigid temperatures helped heal my great grandmothers infection.
    It is a miracle she survived, and her story along with so many other victims, is an amazing piece of our NS history and heritage.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +2

      Wow! Thanks for sharing this personal story. It brings it home for me and all those who read the comments. Much appreciated. Peace.

  • @susieq9801
    @susieq9801 Рік тому +35

    Your reaction was genuine and heartfelt. Many went to their windows to see the fire and were blinded by glass when the explosion occurred. My great grand mother died that day and I first read about this horror when I looked up her obituary for my genealogy many years ago. The story was on the same page. It told of a child just sitting at her kitchen table but she had been decapitated by glass. The disaster was downplayed so as to not further destroy morale during the war. This was 5 years after many of the Titanic victims were brought to Halifax for burial. Relics retrieved at the time of the sinking are also in the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.
    The good in people always rises to the surface in desperate time.

    • @pamdawkins13
      @pamdawkins13 Рік тому +2

      I got to go to Halifax a number of years ago, and it really struck me how you could still see the impact on the city almost a century later.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +5

      Wow, thanks for this comment. It’s a powerful story and I understand why it is so important to remember.

    • @kyle381000
      @kyle381000 Рік тому +2

      I knew that many were injured by broken glass because they had been watching the burning ship.
      I wonder how many people in Beirut suffered the same fate.

    • @mccullochmike
      @mccullochmike Рік тому +2

      What an amazing part of Canadian history. Good often comes from bad. The birth of the CNIB and the evolution of the Red Cross were great outcomes of this tragic event. From adopting a dog to running 5 km for charity, the word hero can be thrown around quite casually nowadays. Vincent Coleman was a hero. Married father of 4 who saved hundreds of lives. Many folks who are alive today wouldn't be if it had not been for this man. Courageous and extremely honourable.

  • @carolmurphy7572
    @carolmurphy7572 Рік тому +8

    25:49 You speak of the Christmas tree given to the people of Boston from the people of Halifax annually. I just read that this year's tree was cut down (with great ceremony) on November 16th at Christmas Island, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia! It's on its way to Boston now. The 81st Annual Tree-Lighting Ceremony at Boston Common will take place on Thursday, December 1st at 6:00-8:00 p.m. Merry Christmas, Boston, from a grateful City of Halifax!

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +4

      Thank you Carol. I did a reaction about that very event. Here is the link of you haven’t seen it yet: Celebrating Nova Scotia’s Annual Christmas Tree - A Gift to Boston
      ua-cam.com/video/JAJNCqvsucY/v-deo.html

    • @carolmurphy7572
      @carolmurphy7572 Рік тому +4

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 How thoughtful of you to reply to my comment, and to provide me the link! Yes, I had actually seen that wonderful reaction video, which you posted the day after my comment to you. I'm glad to know that Sir David of Tor and so many others are showing such interest in your videos, and I hope that encourages you to keep them coming! I'm thoroughly enjoying them, too! I'm a couple of days late, but I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving celebration with those who are dear to you
      Cheers!

  • @gerryhatrick6678
    @gerryhatrick6678 Рік тому +10

    Vince Coleman, he has his own heritage minute shown on TV,

  • @hunterg24
    @hunterg24 Рік тому +5

    With regards to what went through Mr. Coleman's head, I can answer at least part of it. As a train dispatcher, especially during those days with no ability to track trains except through time sheets and the telegraph system, he'd have the schedule of every train memorized down to the very minute. At first, when the sailor told them of the impending disaster, Mr Coleman wouldn't have had much time to think. There would have been a massive shot of adrenaline run through his body as the fight or flight instinct kicks in and he naturally books it. But as your running, your brain starts to catch up. The part of his brain that keeps track of the train schedule and the time would have remembered the next train due.
    As to how he was able to make the choice to stop and turn around to his certain death is something I can't explain. I know I don't have the depth of character nor the moral courage to make such a sacrifice.
    It really hits me too, the fact that this wasn't a split second decision that ended his life in the next second. He would have had time to contemplate his own mortality in the minutes and seconds he had left. He would have known he was trading his life, potentially decades, for the lives of strangers.
    I'm not ashamed to admit I cried.

  • @ShaggySolidCore
    @ShaggySolidCore Рік тому +24

    As a Nova Scotian, I greatly appreciate you reacting to this, and I'd like to also let you know that the christmas tree is hand picked every year, not just from from government property but some are donated from private property of citizens of nova scotia, and is one of our proudest traditions. We learn about this incident from a young age and there's even a TV commercial series called Heritage Minutes, one of which highlights Colemans efforts to save the train.

    • @ShaggySolidCore
      @ShaggySolidCore Рік тому +1

      Here is the link to that commercial here on youtube: ua-cam.com/video/rw-FbwmzPKo/v-deo.html

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +2

      Thanks for this. It’s great

    • @ShaggySolidCore
      @ShaggySolidCore Рік тому +1

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 not a problem, love the content, keep up the good work John

  • @Jeremynicholson
    @Jeremynicholson Рік тому +5

    I've always heard about the Coleman story, never heard those exact last words however... Heartbreaking.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +2

      Yeah, reading his telegraph message was powerful and really brings his sacrifice home. It makes if very personal.

  • @ManitoulinGirl537
    @ManitoulinGirl537 Рік тому +3

    I shouldn’t be watching this at 2 in the morning with earphones on. I live on an island in Northern Ontario, so basically in the bush, but as I’m watching this I hear two dogs barking,and then sirens…. I think something is going on here, but when I take my earphones out it all goes quiet. So I rewind,this a bit so I can listen to what I have missed of your story, only to hear the dogs barking again and the sirens.……
    But on a more serious note…. You coverage of this was excellent, you always have such compassion. That Halifax Explosion was Canada’s worst disaster. What a heart wrenching time for the people of Halifax.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +1

      Ha, sorry for the dogs and sirens. Dogs usual sound in my yard, not the sirens. Don’t know what was going on. Thanks for watching and for your comment.

  • @WaiferThyme
    @WaiferThyme Рік тому +4

    Halifax girl here. Thank you for doing this video. When i was growing up, we were taught a rhyme in school. Remember, remember the 6th of December. For many people here, the explosion still remains fresh in our minds. We can recall stories of family members who survived and those who died. My own Great Grandmother lived about 95km (60 miles) outside the city and when the ship blew, her windows shattered.

  • @jasonlittle6542
    @jasonlittle6542 Рік тому +2

    During the Manhattan project, scientists studied the Halifax explosion. They calculated that the destruction was greater than it should have been.
    They figured out that the shock wave traveled to the harbour floor and reflected to increase the yield of the shockwave. This taught them to detonate the nuclear bomb in the air, increasing the damage.

  • @d_ruggs
    @d_ruggs Рік тому +3

    As a halifax resident, its hard to really understand how much was completely flattened until your there. I know it was for me. the harbour is at the bottom of a steep hill that the city sits on, and basically the entire side of the hill that the modern city sits was vaporized.

  • @thissonicobsession
    @thissonicobsession Рік тому +5

    Thank you for this episode John. I live in Halifax and there are imprints of the Explosion all over the city. A friend of mine up the street from us lives in the same house his grandmother grew up in. When the Mt. Blanc exploded into shrapnel, a large chunk of iron crashed through the roof of his grandmother’s three-level home, carried on through the main floor, and came to rest in the basement. That chunk is on display in my friend’s house to this day. Coleman’s grave and the graves of firemen killed trying to put out the ship are not far away.

  • @iangraham6887
    @iangraham6887 Рік тому +12

    The Halifax explosion to this day still remains the largest accidental non-nuclear explosion to date. To put it into perspective, watch the Beirut explosion of 2020, it’s blast was estimated at around 4 terra joules of energy. Now imagine it at 3x that size, the Halifax explosion produced around 12 terra joules of energy.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому

      Wow! You can see that from the pictures. I didn’t say it because I was processing what I was looking at but later I thought that it reminded me of the pictures of Nagasaki or Hiroshima.

    • @iangraham6887
      @iangraham6887 Рік тому +1

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 another crazy fact not told in the video you saw was that the blast was so powerful, it momentarily exposed the harbour floor with the sheer amount of water it displaced and turned into a tsunami. Also, there are some places in and around halifax where you can visit and see where major pieces of the ship landed such as anchor pieces and parts of the gun battery the ship was equipped with.

    • @seaking2290
      @seaking2290 Рік тому +4

      When that warehouse in Beirut blew apart, a lot of speculation online immediately went to terrorism. A good number of people from Canada (in my feed, at least) looked at that cloud and said “Halifax.” Something about it just resonated.

    • @bmxriderforlife1234
      @bmxriderforlife1234 6 місяців тому

      ​@seaking2290 my buddies grandfather was saying that and they're from nova Scotia originally. First words out if his mouth were Halifax the second.

  • @pontiuspilot9301
    @pontiuspilot9301 Рік тому +4

    Growing up in Ontario in the 50s, we had at school the book, Barometer Rising, Hugh Maclennan 1941, that told of the Halifax Explosion! It was embedded in a fictional romance , but nothing of the truth was left out! That event has been embedded in my mind, and revisited often in my 75 years! Thank you for your video! Peace and Love from Canada

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +3

      What I love about doing this is since I did this reaction, I reacted to a Tragically Hip song, Courage for Hugh MacLennan, so people told me in the comments who he was and I read up about him so now I have a reference point for your comment. It all connects. Loving it.

  • @kayecastleman6353
    @kayecastleman6353 Рік тому +4

    Thanks for this reaction, and, may I say... tastefully done.

  • @user-vx6pz2qd8s
    @user-vx6pz2qd8s Рік тому

    Thank you for watching. My grandmother was 7 years old at the time of the explosion and lived in the north end. I still live here to this day. She used to deliver milk to an older lady in a wheel chair. Those days they were in bottles. This day she dropped the bottle on the woman's knee and she screamed in pain. This scared my grandmother and she ran home to hide under the bed as she thought she was in big trouble. Thats when the explosion happened. Her hiding under the bed saved her life and why I'm here today.

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk 8 місяців тому

    John, I watched this again in the first week of December of 2023. I can't thank you enough for covering this impactful story. My maternal grandfather was born in Yarmouth NS. I'm sure he would have remembered this story. He died in 1955, a year after I was born, so sadly I was never able to hear his stories...

  • @aaron31967
    @aaron31967 10 місяців тому +1

    First came the explosion, then 18 meter high (60 feet) tsunami caused by the explosion, then the town caught fire. The next day a blizzard dumping up to 40cm (15 inches) of snow and winds gusting up to 90km/hr (50mph) with windchill of -15C (5F), hit Halifax while rescuers were still frantically searching for survivors and dealing with the aftermath of the explosion.

  • @korivex742
    @korivex742 Рік тому +9

    My grandparents lived close enough to have the aftershock blow out every window of their house. There are parts of ships that have been left in the spot they landed during the explosion as a memorial of the day and are still there today. There are houses in Halifax that have been remodeled to be very modern but have left uncovered the large parts of walls that were knocked down during the explosion, many have writings on them with the description of the explosion and history of that part of the building. It is quite interesting to see a beautiful modern home with an ugly, patchy clay like wall that looks like it is a hundred years old (because it is) The history of the explosion is all throughout Halifax and Dartmouth.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +4

      Thanks for the interesting info. It’s clear the people of Halifax are taking care to keep tangible reminders all about.

  • @deborahhennessey5183
    @deborahhennessey5183 Рік тому +5

    I'm so glad I came across your video. It is the first of yours I have watched. I was a child of the late 1960's and grew up hearing about The Halifax Explosion from my grandmother, who was born in 1897 and was a young, engaged to my grandfather lady at work that morning in a building near the waterfront. I will share my story with you in hopes you'll learn a bit more about that day. She was decades ahead of her time in terms of being a working woman, but she was a Para-Legal (as I became) working with her back to the window when the explosion occurred. She would tell us how the stairs caught fire as she escaped only by sliding down the banisters with glass and other burning shrapnel in her back. Most or all of the buildings were made of wood, with oil or coal open stoves to heat. My grandfather, whom she was engaged to, was already working for the CNR (Canadian National Railway) and would later become the Head TimeKeeper until his retirement. She then survived the Spanish Flu. She was a trooper, and as I think about it, my mom, and her only sister, and our family wouldn't have been born had she not survived. I remember her telling me tales of making hot soup and housing as many as she could in the Allen Family home at the time. Interestingly, her daughter (my aunt) married an RCAF pilot who fought overseas all of Canada's Involvement in WW11 and I spent a lot of my life in Halifax, visiting my family who remained there. He would often tell me stories of finding German U-Boats in the Northwest Arm, and Halifax Harbour, and into the St. Lawrence Seaway. I was shown photos of the time taken by my grandfather, who loved cameras and photography and had his own dark-room at home. I remember the story of the Halifax explosion being told often, and in a matter of fact way. Winters there are brutal, and that snowfall the following day wasn't unusual, just unfortunate. I watched a good Documentary about The Halifax Explosion a few years back. I think it was CBC Docs. (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). If you're curious to learn more, there is more information out there. I've subscribed, and I must thank you for so intelligently and with empathy, learning about what is still the greatest tragedy in Canadian history.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +2

      Thanks so much for all this great and personal information. I’m loving seeing these stories of real people. I especially love the story of a strong working woman ahead of her time. I have a strong professional wife and four amazing daughters. I want the world to be an even playing field for them and we have always shined the light on the women of the past whose struggles made things better for the women of today.

  • @cherylsemrau7100
    @cherylsemrau7100 Рік тому +7

    Thank you for your emotions. You should watch Heritage Minutes. There was also a dramatization of this that was on CBC. Also Boston had a deadly explosion and Halifax was the first city to help Boston.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +1

      That I didn’t know. I’ll have to look into that. Thanks for the comment and info.

    • @MultiKswift
      @MultiKswift Рік тому +3

      Are you talking about the molasses explosion?

  • @christopherkane2842
    @christopherkane2842 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for covering this story.
    I did see that fascinating horror stories last year & was so blown away by the irrational behaviours of the ships involved but the last part you so notably remarked of the telegraph hero was impacting on me as well.

  • @marklittle8805
    @marklittle8805 Рік тому +9

    I have been fascinated by this disaster for years. This was a big a loss of life as 9/11 was and it was just swept under the carpet to an extent. It wasn't talked about for long past the horrors of war and as a Canadian, I didn't learn about it in school. I can't imagine an American not knowing about Pearl Harbor or 9/11.
    I was in Halifax this summer. I have seen parts of the Mont Blanc in the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. When you see steel parts weighing hundreds of pounds twisted like pretzels you wonder about the level of force and violence that did that. The largest non nuclear explosion in history.....it is amazing there wasn't twice as many dead.
    Vince Coleman has some part to play in that. I do know that this message was true Canadian grit......

  • @Pinkgirl13
    @Pinkgirl13 Рік тому +1

    Wow I even learn a lot from people who respond to this. It’s wonderful we don’t forget these stories! And again thank you for your videos! Love you!❤❤❤❤

  • @daphneporter856
    @daphneporter856 Рік тому +9

    Love the respect for him right off the start, brings a tear to my eye when I think of him.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +3

      Thanks so much for the comment. This was truly an impactful story. I’m so glad I learned about it and was able to give it the attention it deserved rather than being a footnote to a larger Great War study.

  • @dpcnreactions7062
    @dpcnreactions7062 Рік тому +9

    As someone from just outside the Halifax area, I heard stories about the Halifax Explosion, I knew a few elderly people who were there and I often visited sites related to it and locals have always been thankful to the people of Boston for their help. Good to see others around the world learning about this tragic event.

    • @loritalbot3063
      @loritalbot3063 Рік тому +1

      My dads family lived in the area, luckily not close enough to suffer any immediate effects . They moved out of the area after ww2 looking for work. I have onlly been there once myself though I would love to return.

  • @hellhoundactual8201
    @hellhoundactual8201 Рік тому +4

    As a Nova Scotian, Thank you for covering this and bringing more attention to this senseless tragedy.
    the H.E was used as a Reference for the Nuclear bomb tests during Trinity Testing.
    Where I grew up, I was less than half a mile from where a 1184lbs part of Mont Blancs Anchor landed 2 1/2 miles inland.

  • @philipberthiaume2314
    @philipberthiaume2314 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you, Boston... 🇨🇦🇺🇲

  • @SpiderRiderKya
    @SpiderRiderKya Рік тому +2

    Despite the name, Fascinating Horror is very tasteful and respectful in how he presents things. Also, if you ever get the chance, there is a Canadian Heritage Minute (basically one minute shorts about people/events/things in Canadian History) about Vince Coleman you should check out as well.

  • @jod4343
    @jod4343 Рік тому +1

    John, take a look at the rail disaster in Lac Mégantic, Quebec which occurred July 6 th 2013. . Firefighters from Farmington, Maine rushed over to assist in combating the enormous blaze. Our countries have certainly been there for each other at times of crisis.

  • @blanewilliams5960
    @blanewilliams5960 Рік тому +2

    I have watched a number of videos by Fascinating Horror and have always found them to be well done and tasteful. I learned a little about Patrick Vince Coleman from Heritage Minutes, there is no telling how many lives he helped to save besides those on the train. Thank you, John!

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +1

      Thank you Blane. This video had a lasting impact on me. Whenever any of my friends ask me about the channel and what of interest Ive learned, I always tell them the Halifax explosion.

  • @danielgallant9794
    @danielgallant9794 Рік тому +3

    I've read a historical personal journal once from a person living in Caraquet new Brunswick (northern New Brunswick), AND on day of this explosion, people in Caraquet heard the explosion as described in this personal journal.

  • @TheYukonnahanni
    @TheYukonnahanni Рік тому +5

    This is Such a TOUGH ONE to Judge ~~Perhaps not Ours ..!! But to Learn from.. My Great-Great Grandfather, A Wonderful, CANADIAN Navel OFFICER, WROKE in his Log Book, SPOKE ABOUT part of THIS IN HIS LOG BOOKS.. Was written Up in the Archives of Canadiana..
    Thank-you for the Interest In Canada's History. ~~.We are North Americans & share so much together ..

  • @jod4343
    @jod4343 9 місяців тому +1

    Firecrews from Maine came to assist battling the blaze in Lac Mégantic, Quebec on July 06th 2013 when the train derailment engulfed my small hometown into an inferno. For this I will forever be grateful.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  8 місяців тому

      I followed this year’s wild fires. We were with you guys. I hope we did enough. I know many nation’s firefighters came to help. Those stories give me hope.

  • @thisisjeff9845
    @thisisjeff9845 Рік тому +1

    Today is the 105th anniversary of the explosion. One of my grandmothers was born in Halifax, her house was destroyed and they spent time in refugee housing in their own city. I found the address of her house that was destroyed a couple of years ago.

  • @user-yk6od1cr5w
    @user-yk6od1cr5w Місяць тому

    The annual Christmas tree to thank Boston is a Christmas tradition for Nova Scotians. Residents are proud to have the special tree chosen from their private property. There is a small ceremony to celebrate the beginning of the tree’s voyage to Boston on a flat bed truck.
    We are fortunate to have neighbours who continue to come to our aid in times of need and natural disasters.

  • @thumpyloudfoot864
    @thumpyloudfoot864 Рік тому +2

    Just as a reference to scale... the M.O.A.B is a conventional non-nuclear ordinance bomb, 9 meters in length or 30ft or 6 washing machines laid end to end... The SS MONT-BLANC was a conventional non-nuclear bomb the size of a 30 story building...

  • @Shaneodell35
    @Shaneodell35 Рік тому +9

    I have no idea how I stumbled across your channel a few weeks ago, but I'm sure glad I did. I have learned so much. Thank you for being you!!

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +2

      😊. You’re making me blush. I’m just so glad people are talking. It’s why I’m doing this. And I’m blown away by all the amazing people I have had the privilege of interacting with here.

  • @user-pq2ue3is9z
    @user-pq2ue3is9z 2 місяці тому

    This is why I contribute to CNIB, monthly, Canadian Institute for the Blind, and sponser seeing eye dogs.
    I knew about this event, vaguely, your video inspired me to make an ongoing monthly contribution to CNIB.
    Thank you
    CNIB started because of this event

  • @laurabailey1054
    @laurabailey1054 Рік тому +1

    You should look up the Spring Hill mine disaster that took place in Nova Scotia in 1958 where 75 coal miners died. Anne Murray a well known Canadian singer did a song about it called Spring Hill Mine Disaster. Another thing you should look up is a choir of Nova Scotia coal miners called Men of the Deeps. In order to be in the choir you have to have worked in the coal mines. It is very emotional to hear them perform the song about the Spring Hill Mine Disaster. I have seen this choir in concert twice, the first time on the worst day of my life, the day my mum died. During intermission when the choir were meeting the audience one of them noticed me fighting back tears and asked me what was wrong. I told him I was supposed to be there with my mum but she had passed away. The next thing I knew I was being hugged by the coal miner and many others from the choir came over and hugged me too. The second time I saw them I had been given tickets because I had wanted to thank them for their kindness to me when my mum had died. The day of the concert I was hit by a car, but I was given the ok to still go. The miners remembered me and the one to hug me first that night years earlier asked me how I was doing. My friend told him of my adventures earlier that day. The miner looked at me and told me “ I was a tough little girl” which made me laugh and he gave me another hug. They also dedicated a song to me that night.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +1

      Wow. That’s intriguing and heartbreaking. We had a lot of coal mine disasters here too. I’ll check it out. Thanks my friend.

  • @rkw2917
    @rkw2917 Рік тому +3

    When push comes to shove Americans and Canadians will always stand side by side
    This has been true for over 200 years and remains true today

  • @denisegreene8441
    @denisegreene8441 Рік тому +4

    I was born and raised in Dartmouth. My father was in the CDN Navy and my siblings and I were all raised on the base in Dartmouth. This piece of history is very important yet it is glossed over in our education system everywhere except N.S. As school kids we are all taken to the citadel and shown / taught the devastion that happened that day. I remember stories from my parents friends parents ( honorary grandparents) about this and how horrifying it truly was. I was so disgusted when my own children ( raised on the other side of Canada in B. C.) Were litterly given a half page blurp in their history books regarding this. I marched down to their school and told their principle to get better books because it deserved more than half a page. My father proceeded to tell my kids about the disaster so they could appreciate the sacrifice that members of their family had made and why it was so important to know more than the date and the why. History should be never forgotten or glossed over. To forget is to make the same mistake. Lord help us all .

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +1

      Truer words have never been spoken. Thanks so much. peace form NY.

    • @karenburrows9184
      @karenburrows9184 Рік тому +2

      Denise, not all of us grew up not knowing about the Halifax Explosion. I learned about it in school (Quebec) and my father told me the whole story at home at that time. Including that hero, Vince Coleman, whom I have never forgotten. On one of my trips to Nova Scotia (down home) I promised my father I would visit Pier 6 and the MMOA, which I did. When I came back to Montreal, I gave him some things which I had bought at the museum. It became a great bond between us. I know there are many like me who are aware of this tragedy. I often wonder what happened to his family.

    • @karenburrows9184
      @karenburrows9184 Рік тому

      @@jennifermarlow. Thanks! How could I not? That's what it is. Be well.

  • @davenoppe5405
    @davenoppe5405 4 місяці тому

    Vince Coleman is a true Canadian hero. he's immortalized in a Heritage Minute so many of us learned about what he did when we were kids.

  • @jackori6685
    @jackori6685 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for reviewing this story. It was and is incredibly impactful. I was fortunate to live in Nova Scotia as a young teen, late 1969 & 1970. There are still structures in place that were damaged in the blast or shockwave. It's truly a disaster, and yet a testament to the fortitude, resilience and strength of the people to come out the other side and still find joy in life. The sacrifice made by that young train station operator will never be forgotten.
    The christmas tree that is given to Boston each year is a deeply felt and generational gratitude for their help in Nova Scotia's darkest moments.
    Bless you, your family and your people.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  4 місяці тому

      Hi Jack,
      My oldest daughter lives in Boston where she goes to University. Last Christmas I went with her to see the Nova Scotia tree in Boston Common. It was beautiful and had plaques showing pictures and describing the explosion and that the tree is an annual gift of friendship and appreciation from Nova Scotia. I did a vlog about it in case you’re interested. ua-cam.com/video/GFXy0cMJYjg/v-deo.htmlsi=VFtfU1LsKzo4o29g

  • @davepowell3293
    @davepowell3293 Рік тому +3

    My grandfather was in school when it happened, his sister had a scar, on her face,from flying glass. It is also the reason the CBIB,Canadian National Institute for the Blind was formed...

  • @donnabaker6252
    @donnabaker6252 Рік тому

    My father's uncle was Captain Horatio Brannen who was Captain of the Stella Maris was attempting to tow the Mont Blanc away from the pier. The explosion occurred and severly damaged the Stella Maris 19 men were killed including my father's uncle. His son Walter Brannen was standing beside him and survived the explosion along with four other crew. He was only 45 and the father of seven children. Walter was 21 years old at the time.

  • @susannemackenzie8469
    @susannemackenzie8469 Рік тому +3

    Thank you so much for reacting to this and for the respect you gave it. My great great grandmother Mary Alice Corkum was one of the many who were killed because of the explosion. She died in her home due to a fire. I've heard the story of the Explosion and that of Vince Coleman numerous times and I still get emotional and choked up.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +3

      Out of all the reactions I’ve done so far, I’ve thought about this one the most. I knew it happened but had no idea the magnitude. Thanks for telling me about your ancestor Mary Alice Corkum. It’s good to put names to the people that died there. It’s more humanizing.

  • @freakyflow
    @freakyflow Рік тому +1

    In 2019 We for the 3rd time from Toronto set out for Quebec for a 2 week unplanned hoiday ...with a twist I never told her I was only stopping for food And gas Or told her we loaded the tent Just the cooler And some other items .........we were set for the east coast..Halifax being on the most important part for me
    Grandfather was one of 1 million men that got on a Liberty ship that was bound for England I wanted to walk the same path And I did cry with a smile Standing on the exact spot of him at 20 years old standing in uniform at the entrance of a tunnel that go's under the railroad towards the shipping docks And pier pictured 1943 with his hat tilted sideways
    What i did not expect was to learn of the explosion Or touch a fragment of the ship that was pulled out of a tree in 1985 that broke the teeth of a chainsaw Having a beer at a pub a old man told me about the explosion His father come to Halifax from Cape Breton for work on the rail system after the explosion And bought some of the land Which had the trees ..The story explained ...He left quietly And 10 mins later showed up at the bar again with the metal the size a bit bigger than a fist And said Alot of people talk But some can back it up There is the chain marks This metal was logged in the tree Me and my father cut down This tree is 2.1kms/1.3 miles from the explosion

  • @LaSenioraKittehz
    @LaSenioraKittehz Рік тому +2

    my 2nd great grandfather after immigrating to Halifax from Abruzzo at age 13 and worked as a train engineer after learning English from my 2nd great grandmother ; based on employee records I found he was placed on leave / removed from his position a week or so before the explosion due to an accident in downtown Halifax where his train poured excessive amounts of smoke in a heavily populated area. Given my great grandfathers date of birth its evident I probably wouldn't exist had it not been for that simple workplace incident.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому +1

      The would haves a could haves of history. Amazing story. But the way, my grandmother’s parents were immigrants to New York from Abruzzo in the 1880s.

  • @6060don
    @6060don Рік тому +1

    Hello John I live in Alberta Canada. In WWI Canada was only fifty years old. There were roughly eight million people living here. The Halifax Explosion was only one of the many challenges our new Dominion faced. Just prior to WWI Canada was in a railway building boom. There were three transcontinental railways that had been or were nearing completion. When the war broke out Canada along with its Commonwealth cousins in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa were at war supporting Great Britain. There was no choice. Our first Division was trained and shipped to Europe in late 1914 and early 1915. The 1st Canadian Division entered the trench's in the spring of 1915. They were quickly joined in battle at Ypres, Belgium in the first poison gas attack. ( Ever hear the poem in Flanders Fields it was written during this battle by a Canadian doctor) The 1st Divisions legend was cemented in this battle. At a memorial at Frezenberg one of the plaques reads on May 8th 1915 the originals of the Princess Patricias Canadian Light Infantry lead by their founder Major Hamilton Gault held firm and counted not the cost. With the 1st Canadian Division were shipped to Europe the were joined with a Railway battalion. The soldiers came from the railway building boom before the war. These young men of the railway battalions would become incredibly important to the success of the Canadian Expeditionary Forces. The Railway Battalions little known efforts helped bring about the Armistice during the last 100 days of WWI. Have a look at CEF Canadian Corps during 1917 to the end of the war. The Corps never lost a battle. A good read would be about Sir Arthur Currie. Your coverage of the Halifax Explosion is very well done and put's some light on the roots of two cities wonderful Christmas relationship. Lest we forget.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому

      Thanks for all this great information. I have read the poem In Flanders Fields and I know that this is how the poppy became a symbol of remembrance. I plan on doing something for Remembrance Day very soon.

  • @user-fh9bf7uv4l
    @user-fh9bf7uv4l 7 місяців тому

    Your reactions are always so genuine and heartfelt! Thank you!

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Рік тому +1

    My, my, my. You are a remarkable and rare blend of equal parts mind and heart. I truly appreciate how you are able to display each with such passion...
    With regard to Vince Colman, perhaps he ran back because he probably realized that he would die anyway down on the harbour, so he should spend his final minutes in service to others.
    Pier 6 in Halifax is Canada's major port and it's very likely where my father's parents first docked; one from Poland and one from Ukraine. I have often thought about visiting the Maritime museum there.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому

      Equal parts mind and heart may be one of the best compliments I’ve ever had. Thanks so much. ☺️. Thanks also for all the great info. Peace my friend.

    • @catherinemelnyk
      @catherinemelnyk Рік тому

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 God bless you and your family. Canada is open and welcoming to all...

    • @catherinemelnyk
      @catherinemelnyk Рік тому

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 I don't know if you've done a video yet of people from the Titanic who are buried in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Something to consider...

  • @shredderhater
    @shredderhater Рік тому +1

    The ferry that transports people across the harbour is called “ the Vincent Coleman “

  • @mikebrown3356
    @mikebrown3356 5 місяців тому

    Hello, I live in Dartmouth thanks for reviewing this tragedy, at the end of my street lies the cannon from the Mont Blanc , it has now been transformed into a yearly memorial.

  • @freedomthroughspirit
    @freedomthroughspirit Рік тому +1

    I just watched that video on this tonight and was shocked by it. Wow. Will be reading a book about it next called The Great Halifax Explosion as soon as my library says it's available.

  • @user-ll2jz1kb4z
    @user-ll2jz1kb4z 11 місяців тому +1

    From Halifax thanks for sharing

  • @kevindowdell8394
    @kevindowdell8394 Рік тому +3

    Thank you John. Your emotions mirror my own.
    I first learned of this tragedy in grade school, including Patrick Vince Colmans selfless act.
    Ever wonder if the people on the train he saved, and others, descendants perhaps, have made an incredible Mark as well?

  • @3333bongman
    @3333bongman Рік тому +2

    It's wonderful to see all these nice reaction videos from our friends in the south, having a few friends in Texas I always end up getting joked about, I'm really glad to see you approach these from an educated and open minded view. Being from (and currently living in) Halifax there are reminders of this event everywhere, there are canons and anchors in parks that remain exactly where they landed miles from where the explosion took place. My shop foreman's father lost both eyes (complete enucleation at age 3) and still became a licenced mechanic with the City of Halifax from 1954 or 55 until 1980, there's a great book about him written by his daughter called ' The Blind Mechanic' if you're a reader I would definitely recommend it.

  • @syx3s
    @syx3s Рік тому +1

    fascinating horror is i think the only channel of the type that i watch. he does a fantastic job of being very thoughtful and tasteful when putting together videos on some of the worst events in modern history. it's important to know about these things, and it's also important to approach the subjects properly and with the respect deserved.

    • @syx3s
      @syx3s Рік тому

      i typed that before i saw our hosts comment just as i noticed what video was being reacted to. respect to john f. as well.

    • @syx3s
      @syx3s Рік тому

      for context, i've watched dozens and dozens of FH's videos.

  • @sgtcrab2569
    @sgtcrab2569 Рік тому +1

    My late Father was 6 at the time and 200KM away and remembered hearing a loud BOOM!

  • @lifefordummies
    @lifefordummies 4 місяці тому

    My great grandfathers brother had just returned home from the war and was in Halifax waiting to return to his home country of Newfoundland (we weren't part of Canada yet back then) He was thrown quite a distance by the explosion, but survived it. He lived to almost 100 years old and always wore sunglasses, even indoors because of damage done to his eyes from glass from the explosion. Thanks for sharing this video! And hello, from Newfoundland! Now a part of Canada (Technically... :p)

  • @alexanderfarrell8957
    @alexanderfarrell8957 Рік тому

    I am Halifax born and grew up in the Hydrostone District, then known as Richmond, and watch the Boston tree lighting each year.

  • @emerybonner7973
    @emerybonner7973 Рік тому +3

    Interesting fact. There is a ship called the CSS (Canadian Surveying Ship) Acadia that is at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. She was serving as a guard ship on the day of the explosion and although only 1 mile from the blast site, she sustained very little damage. They only had to do a bit of repainting but otherwise she was fine. As for her crew, I believe they were all inside her when the explosion happened

  • @gordonbezanson4710
    @gordonbezanson4710 8 місяців тому

    Im from there live there . My grandmother was 7yrs old .Her father rode a horse n buggy and picked up the dead. The lived in the south end and had minor damage all the glass mostly. Nova scotians are hard core people.✊

  • @gabriellesullivan4772
    @gabriellesullivan4772 10 місяців тому

    I'm from Halifax, i remember meeting a lady by the moniker Ashpan Annie as she was referred to, she was a baby at the time and she was found in the ashpan of the kitchen stove , she relatively unharmed but carried black marks in her skin from the stove The original Camp Hill Hospital for veterans was new , and not openned, but was pressed into service, and now torn down, so many stories.

  • @lauriea2971
    @lauriea2971 Рік тому +1

    Hi John
    I want to say thank you for ur videos. God bless u. I grow up in Halifax/Dartmouth from 1975 to 1981 as a child. I visited that museum a lot. It’s a great place to visit. U should take a vacation to Atlantic Canada and visit all the Atlantic provinces. U would love it there. Love from Canada 🇨🇦

  • @macfady2181
    @macfady2181 10 місяців тому

    My great grandmother was born in 1898, she lived 300 km away as the crow flies on Prince Edward Island. I remember asking her about it as a kid and she said she remembered plates being knocked off the shelves, it was days before anyone there knew what happened.

  • @katrinakauer1847
    @katrinakauer1847 Рік тому +1

    Next time you're in Halifax check out Anchor Drive. It has the resting place of the anchor of the Mont Blanc. You can see how far the explosion sent the anchor!

  • @kendramahoney6814
    @kendramahoney6814 Рік тому

    both of my paternal grandparents survived the explosion. my grandfather was on his way to school and was blown off the sidewalk. my grandmother was a toddler, and her windows blew in and shrapnel cut her head.

  • @wendylerue8217
    @wendylerue8217 Рік тому

    Dear sir I live not more then 6 miles from where this happened and met several people who survived this disaster. Their stories where chilling and amazing

  • @susanpallister8037
    @susanpallister8037 Рік тому +1

    Watch the documentary "As If They Were Angels" about the grounding of the S.S. Pollux and the S.S. Truxton during WWII in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland. The town's people of Lawn and St. Lawrence worked, during horrible icy weather to rescue, house and heal the sailors from those two ships. The documentary records the reunion between the rescued and rescuers.

    • @pontiuspilot9301
      @pontiuspilot9301 Рік тому

      The story of Lanier Phillips, a black survivor of the Truxton is also worth noting! The Newfoundlanders changed his life!

  • @ThisTrainIsLost
    @ThisTrainIsLost Рік тому +1

    As this is a condensed telling of the tale some interesting details are not included though their absence doesn't alter the chain of events. The devastating tsunami caused by the explosion is a major event that is included in the documentary but the its "trigger" is not, which is that the explosion moved so much water that the floor of the basin was momentarily visible and when the water rushed back in, the collision of the walls of water created the tsunami. Again, not a necessary detail of the story but it is further reinforcement of the power of the blast.

  • @sharonannrees2824
    @sharonannrees2824 Рік тому

    I saw a story once about a telegraph operator who, seeing the disaster about to happen, signalled an incoming train to stop and not come near the Halifax area. He died but saved everyone aboard the train.

  • @caralynne2809
    @caralynne2809 Рік тому +1

    I am still surprised that the captain of the Clara wasn't also brought up on charges.

  • @Trimtank
    @Trimtank Рік тому +1

    John @10:29 you asked if that was a picture of the fire. No that was a picture taken miles away from Halifax Harbour from another ship at sea. That is the picture of the fireball/explosion cloud after the blast occurred. It is referenced in many books of the explosion.

  • @mrg99999
    @mrg99999 Рік тому

    Thanks John, we as North American family appreciate your heartfelt reactions and yes, please watch the Heritage Minute on him ;)

  • @paulhodgson6200
    @paulhodgson6200 Рік тому +1

    Your comments and feelings resurrect my upbringing of Americans of time gone by. There are still people in your country that still have a strong belief in humanity even with all the hate around the world today. Keep finding out and relaying to us all of heroism and knowledge.

    • @MultiKswift
      @MultiKswift Рік тому

      You know that's kind of rude, right? You essentially just said most Americans suck but you are one of the good ones.

  • @stupidfurball
    @stupidfurball Рік тому

    My grandmother was 17 at the time and living in Parrsboro, NS. She told me her windows rattled!

  • @Barnes466
    @Barnes466 Рік тому +1

    I drive past a piece of one of the cannons that was launched very far from that explosion almost everyday on Albro Lake Road in Dartmouth! Thanks for the video! Cheers from Ochterloney street in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia :)

  • @hilarysmith9210
    @hilarysmith9210 Рік тому

    Thank you for covering this story. My great grandmother was a survivor of the Halifax Explosion. She had to evacuate her office by the waterfront. Luckily her families home was still standing after but I remember her telling us that they had to put their mattresses up against the windows to keep the snow out and sleep on the floor.

  • @SM-sy5cd
    @SM-sy5cd Рік тому +1

    You really should watch Canadian Heritage minutes that are played on our Canadian tv stations. The Halifax explosion and Vince Coleman is a major hero mentioned in it. They played during commercials an reminded Canadians of their history as well.

  • @sheenadawnmccaughey7482
    @sheenadawnmccaughey7482 Рік тому +1

    As someone who grew up in Dartmouth, there is a monument in the location where the Cannon had flew 5km, I grew up 200m from its location. I learned about the explosion at a very early age. You can still see the damage it caused on heritage properties. To all who survived it was horrendous living conditions.

  • @cindyhayward1224
    @cindyhayward1224 Рік тому

    My children went to one of the Christmas tree cuttings for the Boston tree. The tree is selected from different areas of the province and was from a family close to their school that year.

  • @shannondawn44
    @shannondawn44 Рік тому

    Boston USA came to Halifax's aid very quickly , and every year Nova Scotia still sends a big beautiful tree to Boston every Christmas in thanks . We watch Boston receive their tree every year :)

  • @denisebarlow9719
    @denisebarlow9719 Рік тому

    Thank you very much for your amazing respect for Canada. ❤ from Victoria, BC 🇨🇦🇨🇦

  • @everettscott4835
    @everettscott4835 Рік тому

    My wife went to the 100th anniversary of the explosion ceremony where Vince Coleman grandson from Calgary spoke at the ceremony in 2017.

  • @mitchellgreene867
    @mitchellgreene867 3 дні тому

    I’d heard about that disaster before, but never knew the magnitude of it… Vince Coleman should be on a Canadian $50 bill or something❤

  • @endeavourist5287
    @endeavourist5287 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for doing this video. I'm Canadian but never knew the story of Vince Coleman.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Рік тому

      I’m glad we could learn about him together. Amazing and sad.

    • @gryph01
      @gryph01 Рік тому

      I knew about what Vince did. But couldn't remember his name.

  • @SpurrBlack
    @SpurrBlack Рік тому

    perfect analogy- Canada- shockwave faster than the speed of sound, or sorta maybe. in all seriousness i love your historical deep dives

  • @trevorfillmore698
    @trevorfillmore698 Рік тому

    My cousins own a trucking company they have hauled that Christmas tree a few times and it's always an honor for them to do so.

  • @Michael-rm8xl
    @Michael-rm8xl Рік тому

    I just recently discovered your channel and am glad I did! As a proud Canadian your respect to our culture and people is heart-warming…we are all brothers and sisters together…and the Halifax explosion is a piece of this history. Well done!!!🇨🇦🇨🇦

  • @ERC641
    @ERC641 4 місяці тому

    Funny they never mentioned Vincent Coleman, he was a telegrapher. After realizing the munitions ship Mont-Blanc was going to blow, Coleman sent frantic messages trying to stop a train full of passengers headed for the city. Moments later came word the message was received, but by then it was too late for Coleman to flee the blast.just an ordinary giy who wouldn't leave his post 🇨🇦🙏❤️
    Atb from Yellowknife NT 🇨🇦