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The Great Halifax Explosion: A World War I Story of Treachery, Tragedy, and Extraordinary Heroism by
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Tom Mathews
is on page 168 of 418
When the cloud released its contents, it created what witnesses described as “dark rain.” But anyone caught underneath the fallout could tell you it wasn’t water coming down but a thick, black precipitation of hot oil and soot, like liquid tar, mixed with heavy, scalding shrapnel that cut, burned, and blackened everything in its path.
— Sep 22, 2025 10:37AM
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Tom Mathews
is on page 167 of 418
Mont-Blanc disintegrated, leaving only two recognizable parts: the anchor shank, which weighed half a ton and was found 4 miles away in the woods of the Northwest Arm; and an iron deck cannon, intended to protect the ship from U-boats, which landed 3 miles away in Little Albro Lake behind Dartmouth, with its barrel drooping like a warm candle.
— Sep 22, 2025 10:20AM
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Tom Mathews
is on page 14 of 418
The great-grandson of Canada’s greatest privateer, Joseph Barss Jr., who had captured, burned, or sunk dozens of American ships in the War of 1812, Ernest had inherited more than a little anti-American sentiment. But in 1917 that was true of most Canadians, who resented the Americans’ persistent threats to annex their land from the time the United States was born to as recently as 1911.
— Sep 05, 2025 10:39AM
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