Think Like a Historian: Introduction to the Halifax Explosion

A heavy blue bathrobe was blown completely off and she didn’t see it after. She says she saw the church collapse before she herself was knocked out but I have no recollection of anything beyond the one big crash. When we got some clothes for Bid and I saw she was alive, I went as fast as I could to Daddy. You see I knew where he went and I crawled over things and got to the ruins. The barn was flat. The mill was in the same state. 14 I don’t know where things were but everything had collapsed. I couldn’t hear a sound and called frantically but go[t] no answer. I thought that he might be stunned and pinned down so he couldn’t move so I began to move boxes and things and when I looked down his body was right at my feet and everything was quiet. Oh, I can’t tell you how I felt. It was all so dreadful and the moans and crys [sic] that rent the air will ring in my ears for ages. 15 Something, we don’t know just what, struck Daddy on the head, making a very deep cut and causing instant death. His head was bleeding terribly and we could do nothing. The heart action was completely stopped and his head from the concussion and loss of blood was even then cold. Bid came and we lifted a couple of things off but the crys of the living 16 who needed help were so insistent that we simply had to leave and help them. Fires started as soon as the explosion came 17 and we were forced to act quickly. Our house did not catch immediately. Killams were calling. Mr. K. was in bed – diphtheria – and the kiddies were out here at Seymour St with Theakstons. Mrs Killam was in the cellar at the time and thought she had done something amiss with the furnace and it had blown up 18 She had a very hard job getting out and strained herself badly. Mr K. was blown out of bed and could not do much to help himself. The whole back of their house was slid around and the upper floor was blown down on a slant so Bid and I guided him 19 as he slid down in his night clothes. We got him on to a mattress Mrs K threw down and covered him with blankets while Mrs K got some clothes for him: We left them and went over the field to the parsonage 20 not expecting to see one of them alive. Mr Swetnam was out and trying to get little Dorothy out. Mrs Swetnam and Carmen both were killed. Little Dorothy was unhurt but she was in a little hole where it seemed impossible to get her out. Her father got down [in the] cellar and got an old saw and tried to saw through the big sill but he would saw a bit and then thrown down the saw in despair. She was sort of in a triangle made by the east wall falling up the hill and was so pinned in her head could not get out through the whole[sic]. The poor child had whooping cough 21 too and had a spell while in her prison. 22 14. After the Explosion, Ethel and Bertha ran straight to the mill to check on their father. 15. Ethel relays the auditory memories of the aftermath —not hearing anything at first, but then the air filling with moaning and crying. 16. Ethel and Bid prioritized those crying out for help over those who had already died. 17. Wood- and coal-fired ovens in houses were knocked over by the blast, spreading fires in many wood-frame homes in Halifax. 18. People couldn’t make sense of the blast and what could have caused it. 19. Ethel describes a common experience after the explosion: helping friends and neighbours, and being helped by them. 20. The parsonage at the Kaye Street Methodist Church was just behind Ethel Bond’s house. We can infer from her description of the property that the Bonds’ neighbourhood was more suburban. 21. Whooping cough — a bacterial respiratory infection also known as pertussis — was common in the early 20th century. Before vaccinations were introduced in the 1930s, whooping cough posed a serious health risk and claimed the lives of many children. 22. Note the metaphor Ethel uses to describe the space where the child was trapped – a prison. Ethel also refers to the coughing fit, or spell, that the child had whilst trapped. Bold passages indicate annotations for context . Underlined passages indicate annotations for inference .

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