https://www.npr.org/2017/12/06/56875...ifax-explosion
This is partial right now at 7:30 am, but I'm sure the whole article will be put up, soon.
In short, a ship willed with 6M TONS of high explosives, the Mont Blanc, was in a shipping accident in Halifax harbor with another ship, the Imo. The collision caused the Mont Blanc to catch fire thanks to many gallons of fuel stored on board, and shortly after that, it exploded.
The largest man-made explosion until 1945, when the nuclear age started.
It devastated Halifax. Horrible.
The reaction made the US and Canada fast friends, as Boston sent huge amounts of support up to Halifax. Huge enough that to this day, Boston gets a thank you every year via a Christmas Tree.
Before this- Canada and the US were hardly friendly. Even as recently as 1911, it was proposed to annex Canada- which didn't exactly go over well up north. And all the great forts built along the border were to protect Canada from the US.
As an interesting side effect- Michigan's first hockey coach was part of the recovery effort. He was in the area recovering from wounds suffered in WWI, and decided to go to medical school as a result of his efforts. That medical school was Michigan, where Joe Barss managed to convince Yost to build an indoor rink before the depression. I have a gut feeling that had a lot to do with Michigan's early success in college hockey.
So this massive explosion that happened 100 years ago today in Halifax had a pretty sizable impact on college hockey.
This is partial right now at 7:30 am, but I'm sure the whole article will be put up, soon.
In short, a ship willed with 6M TONS of high explosives, the Mont Blanc, was in a shipping accident in Halifax harbor with another ship, the Imo. The collision caused the Mont Blanc to catch fire thanks to many gallons of fuel stored on board, and shortly after that, it exploded.
The largest man-made explosion until 1945, when the nuclear age started.
It devastated Halifax. Horrible.
The reaction made the US and Canada fast friends, as Boston sent huge amounts of support up to Halifax. Huge enough that to this day, Boston gets a thank you every year via a Christmas Tree.
Before this- Canada and the US were hardly friendly. Even as recently as 1911, it was proposed to annex Canada- which didn't exactly go over well up north. And all the great forts built along the border were to protect Canada from the US.
As an interesting side effect- Michigan's first hockey coach was part of the recovery effort. He was in the area recovering from wounds suffered in WWI, and decided to go to medical school as a result of his efforts. That medical school was Michigan, where Joe Barss managed to convince Yost to build an indoor rink before the depression. I have a gut feeling that had a lot to do with Michigan's early success in college hockey.
So this massive explosion that happened 100 years ago today in Halifax had a pretty sizable impact on college hockey.
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