Cause of Beirut explosion same as Texas City disaster of 1947

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Wednesday, August 5, 2020
Texas City hit with ammonium nitrate explosion in 1947
The Texas City blast of 1947 was certainly felt by those living near it, but how was it seen? Click or tap play in the video to see the moment as captured in this rare footage.

TEXAS CITY, Texas (KTRK) -- Officials believe more than 2,700 tons of ammonium nitrate ignited, causing a massive explosion in Beirut, Lebanon, on Tuesday, killing scores and injuring hundreds.

Ammonium nitrate was also the cause of the massive explosion that killed more than 500 people in Texas City in 1947, and 15 people in an explosion at a fertilizer plant in West, Texas in 2013.

In Beirut, the ammonium nitrate had been stored in a warehouse. In the Texas City explosion, the ammonium nitrate, which is used for fertilizer, was stored in the S.S. Grandcamp, a French cargo ship.

The compound has also been used by terrorists to make explosives. Timothy McVeigh used two tons of ammonium nitrate mixed with fuel oil to blow up the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995, killing 168 people.

It was on April 16, 1947 that one of the largest non-nuclear explosions to have ever occurred rocked the Texas City port, killing hundreds of people, including 28 members of the Texas City Fire Department.

It all started shortly after 8 a.m. that day when longshoremen noticed smoke in the hold of the S.S. Grandcamp. The Grandcamp was a French cargo ship which had arrived to pick up a load of ammonium nitrate fertilizer. The ship already had fuel oil and ammunition in its cargo hold.

The Texas City Volunteer Fire Department was called but the fire continued to grow, and the hold of the ship continued to get hotter. According to the Texas City Library, the ship's captain tried to extinguish the fire by forcing steam into the cargo holds, but the steam vapors probably liquefied the ammonium nitrate to produce nitrous oxide, an extremely volatile substance.

Recently restored film from the ABC archive, shows the 15th anniversary of the Texas City explosion, on April 16, 1962.

The fire sent billowing smoke across the city. A crowd gathered at the docks to watch firefighters battle the huge blaze.

At 9:12 a.m., the ammonium nitrate detonated, sending a massive fireball hundreds of feet into the air. The explosion caused a 15-foot wave that crashed onto the docks and flooded surrounding areas. Windows shattered as far away as Houston, and vibrations from the blast registered on a seismograph in Denver, Colorado. A barge anchored in port was blown out of the water and landed 110 feet away.

Everyone standing nearby, including almost the entire Texas City Volunteer Fire Department, was killed instantly. Buildings near the blast were flattened and the neighboring Monsanto plant was destroyed.

Flaming debris triggered fires at nearby chemical plants and refineries.

The call for help was put out across the country and rescue workers from all over responded to the disaster.

The fire continued to burn into the next day, and at 1:10 a.m. on April 17, ammonium nitrate on a second ship exploded. That blast killed two more people and destroyed a nearby ship.

According to the Texas City Library, the high school gym was converted into a temporary morgue and a local auto mechanic's garage was used as an embalming room.

The exact number of dead was never determined. Estimates are that between 500 and 600 people died in the explosion. The exact number of dead was difficult to determine, because of the condition of many of the bodies and the fact that there were a number of visiting seamen and laborers, according to the Texas City Library. Thousands were wounded.

A memorial service was held for those killed in the blast and several months later, another service was held for those who were unidentified. According to the Texas City Library, the local newspaper, the Texas City Sun, ran an editorial describing all affected by the event as having been "bound together by a great and common tragedy for which there is no ready word of solace."

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