Stuff You Should Know - The Texas City Disaster of 1947
Episode Date: March 18, 2021In 1947 the port town of Texas City, Texas became the site of the largest industrial disaster in American history. An enormous explosion blew ships out of the water, created a tidal wave that flooded ...the town, and killed hundreds of people instantly. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and there's
Jerry over there and this is Stuff You Should Know.
I was about to say natural disaster edition, but unnatural disaster edition.
Industrial disaster is what they call these. Yeah, human caused.
In fact, from what I saw, what we're going to talk about today, the main thing we're talking
about today is the largest industrial disaster in United States history still.
Oh, still, huh? Yes, almost 75 years on.
Man, sad. This is a big one. Yeah, everything about this was really big, but in basically all
the wrong ways. Right. We're going to talk today about a disaster called the Texas City Explosion.
And sadly, you might say, which one? Because there's been multiple massive explosions in Texas
City. One of the reasons why is because Texas City has made a name for itself as one of the
premier petrochemical ports in the United States and indeed possibly the world. I think it was
up until World War II. It was like the fourth largest port in Texas, but I think since World
War II, it's grown even more. And I know for a little while there, BP had a refinery that was
its most profitable oil refinery in the world, which is really saying something. I mean, that's
a big deal. BP's an enormous company with multiple refineries. So for the biggest one,
the most profitable one to be in Texas City, it kind of put Texas City on the map in some circles.
Yeah, so Texas City is above the Gulf of Mexico. And like you said, it's a port town
founded in the late 1800s by some Minnesota hunters. And they said, you know what,
I think we can set up shop here. I think we can dig up a canal, set up a rail line.
We've got some really good deep water and we could be a good shipping port.
I want to know what conversation led to that? What hunting trip ends up in you basically
building a port town in a city that's about as far away from your home as you can get in the same
country? Yeah, I mean, there were some real go-getters, I guess. Yeah, I guess so. They couldn't
just relax and kill animals. Right. God. So that's what happened to Texas City. I mean,
that's how it was kind of founded. And it was like, think refineries, think warehouses and
chemical plants. World War II comes around. And the military, of course, says, well, we'll be sort
of controlling this area for a while because it's a pretty valuable port for us. And we're going to
ship munitions in and out of here. World War II comes and goes. And then after the war, about a
year and a half after the war, it is run by civilians again. And let's just say that it was
a little more of a relaxed scene than it was when the military was running the show.
Yeah, the military ran it like a tight ship, basically. And yeah, there's just a big difference
between when the military is running a port and when a port's run by just a whole bunch of different
private companies. You know what I'm saying? Minnesota Hunters. Exactly. So that's not to say
it was just some loosey-goosey place or anything like that, but just comparatively speaking.
And one of the other things that Texas City had going against it on the morning of April 16,
1947, is that there weren't really a lot of standards and regulations for handling chemicals.
And then we didn't have an enormous grasp on just how chemicals worked at that time.
And so all of these things kind of came together. This kind of slightly lax oversight and just kind
of lack much more relaxed attitude toward cargo. And then a lack of awareness about just what kind
of dangers different cargoes posed just kind of set things up for to take a bad turn.
Yeah. So on the morning of April 16, there were three ships docked in the port. There was
most notably the SS Grand Camp, which was, it was a military ship at one point,
but I think we gave it to France as like, hey, sorry, Europe is kind of destroyed.
Why don't you take this ship and just use it for whatever you want to do? And it was converted to
a cargo ship, which is, which it was on the day of April 16th. And it was beside the SS Highflyer.
And that was beside the third one named after somebody. What was that one?
The Robert Keane or the William Keane? Oh, wait a minute. Which one was it?
Well, it was the Wilson B Keane, even better. Right. The Billy Keane, as they called it.
Yeah. And I believe all three of those were Liberty ships, right?
Yeah. They were World War II ships. And they were, I think the SS Highflyer was being fixed
at the time, but was still loaded down with stuff as was the Grand Camp. And we'll sort of detail
what was in the cargo because it's all very, very key.
Yeah. It's really important. So for the five days leading up to April 16th, Steve Doors,
I think that's how you say it, but basically dock hands. I don't know why you wouldn't
just say dock hands, you know? But Steve Doors, man, I hope I'm saying that correctly, Chuck,
they had loaded up the Grand Camp with 2,300 tons of ammonium nitrate fertilizer.
And these were in 100 pound paper sacks akin to the kind of sacks that you would buy like
Portland cement in these days, right? Yeah. There were some other cargo, Cicel twine,
peanuts. There was some machinery. There was some cotton. There were 16 cases of ammunition,
I think like for small arms ammunition. But for the most part, it was a lot of ammonium nitrate.
And the same went for the SS Highflyer too, which as you said was in the next birth. It was loaded
with 1,000 tons of ammonium nitrate. And then also very crucially, 2,000 tons of sulfur. And
all of these were also in those same 100 pound paper bags. So at the time, like I was saying,
people didn't realize like this is, this is a big deal that there was that much ammonium nitrate
just sitting around in this port at that time. Yeah. It's a crystal like solid. It's white.
A lot of times it's used for nitrogen, for agricultural fertilizer. But if you combine
it with fuel oils, it can be very explosive and actually used for that for like mining and construction
and stuff like that. But it's not like, you know, if you tap the side of the bag, it's going to
explode. It's pretty safe as long as it's all in the up and up and it's being stored properly.
But if it starts to absorb moisture, then it's sort of like Portland cement again. It's just
going to harden to a block. Right. And then if that thing is in a solid block, it's going to be
just a little bit more volatile and a little bit more dangerous if ignited.
Yeah. And I mean, like it's not even considered flammable as far as I know. And certainly in
1947, it wasn't considered flammable because if you walked up to some of this, this ammonium nitrate,
these pellets and just held the lighter to them, they wouldn't catch fire. That's not really what
they do. What they do is they oxidize things. They basically create free radicals like we talked
about in the free radical episode, which sets off like a chain reaction. And because they oxidize,
they concentrate and condense and produce basically oxygen where it wasn't otherwise present.
When that is combined with a fire, it makes a big time fire. So that's bad enough. Right. Like if
you set them off, like it'll combust or it'll help something else combust more efficiently
and more at a higher temperature. But the problem, the big problem with ammonium nitrate is there
is a point where it can reach a high enough heat that it itself decays and degrades. And when that
happens, it splits into two gases, nitrous oxide and water vapor, which you're like, well, that's
great. You just get super duper high off of one and the other one just makes you a little moist.
Maybe so, maybe so in small enough amounts. But when this happens in a large enough amount,
especially when the ammonium nitrate is in one big melted block, the chain reaction can happen
much more efficiently. And when those gases are produced, when the thing decays and separates,
they expand really quickly and that produces an explosion. And the force is the energy that's
released from an explosion of ammonium nitrate decaying and converting into nitrous oxide and
water vapor is monumental. Like compared to atomic bomb blasts, basically, if you have enough of it,
say 2,300 tons and 1,000 tons and a couple of ships just sitting in port.
All right. That's a great place for cliffhanger, I think. I think so, too.
All right. We'll be right back after this.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because
I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that, Michael. And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life step by step. Not another one. Kids, relationships, life in
general can get messy. You may be thinking, this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so,
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I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses,
Major League Baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. The situation
doesn't look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change, too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. So this stuff, the cargo arrived by train to Texas City. And it was probably
already heating up a little bit on this train. And maybe already getting to the point where it was
a little, I don't know about unstable, but volatile at least. And it gets transferred
to the ship. It continues to sort of heat up. And the crew and everything, like you said,
there wasn't a lot of awareness about kind of anything like this at the time. So to them,
it was just another cargo hold. They might have said, be careful with this stuff, guys,
or maybe not even that. But they definitely didn't know heat bad for this stuff.
Yeah, they said, you owe me two bucks from lunch yesterday. That's what they said when
they were loading this up. So around 8am in the morning, these workers there started noticing
that there was smoke and vapors coming out of the ship. So there was some kind of a fire going on.
No one knew how it started or what happened. There are some people anecdotally to say it was a
cigarette that was not in the could have been that wasn't in the official report, which also
wouldn't be surprising. Well, what I saw later on, Chuck, that the fact that these things were in
those paper sacks, that if they were heating up, they were just going to continue to heat up being
packed tightly in the hold of this unventilated ship. They were just going to get warmer and warmer.
And it's possible that the ammonium nitrate caused the paper sack to combust, catch fire,
spread to other paper sacks. And then you had a positive feedback loop where it just kept getting,
the fire kept getting bigger and bigger and crucially very important, hotter and hotter.
Right. So the captain sees this happening. There are people kind of pouring in and looking around
at what's going on. The captain says, batten down these hatches, pull these tarps over them,
and start pumping steam in there, which apparently was a method at the time to put out a fire on
a ship when you didn't want to ruin the cargo, as opposed to just blasting it with a fire hose,
which would cause all this stuff to just brick up like Portland cement. He starts pumping steam in
there. And that just started heating. You know, everyone knows steam is going to heat stuff up.
So that just started and the moisture made a bad situation a lot worse really quickly.
Yeah. I get the impression that had the captain, his name was Captain Charles de Guillabon.
He made the decision to just go ahead and let the cargo be ruined and have the fire put out
with fire hoses. This all might never have happened. I mean, I understand where he was
coming from. He didn't want to ruin the cargo if he didn't have to, because steaming out a fire
or aboard a ship was an accepted firefighting technique. It works and it could conceivably
save a lot of the cargo. So it's not like he just made this ridiculous stupid mistake. It's
just in hindsight, it was probably the decision that led to this catastrophe.
Yeah. I mean, I think more than anything, it's like you said, it was the time when
there was not much regulation and sort of in the dawning of the chemical age,
people just didn't know. Right. And plus also at the time, Texas City had a volunteer fire
department, which I would guess wouldn't have quite as much jurisdiction and could be told by
a captain like, no, no, no, just go away. I'm going to handle this myself rather than being like,
no, we're going to put the fire out on your ship. Yeah. That's a good point. So the steam is making
things worse. It pumped into the holds and everything's heating up. Everything's getting
moist. And like we said, moisture is no good for this stuff. And it did. It started to convert to
these solid masses and there's going to be gas releasing and it's building up all this pressure
because they had batten down the hatches and covered them with tarps. And it blew so much
so that it blew these hatch covers off at about 8.30 in the morning. That's crazy. Just that alone
would have been spectacular and I'm sure it was. But when those hatches blew off, all the smoke
that had been kind of stuck in the hole inside the ship started billowing out. And the thing
apparently about ammonium nitrate burning is it produces really kind of mesmerizing colored smoke
from one of the witnesses. It was apparently salmon, orange and purple. Oh, wow. And so the
smoke coming out of it started to attract people like onlookers who were like, what's going on?
I want to go see this giant weird fire that's going on down at the port. And something like 300
people, including entire families, kids from the local school came over. All sorts of people just
kind of stopped what they were doing and came to watch this weird fire at the port. And apparently
KGBC out of Galveston, which is just 10 miles down the coast out in the Gulf of Mexico,
they were warning people to stay away. But apparently that just alerted more people
that there was something going on who went down to go check it out themselves.
Yeah. So they knew that there was a big problem at this point. They did call the firefighters in
and the tugboat to maybe try and get that thing out of there. And at this point, like you said,
the heat was just so great that even a fire hose isn't going to do much. It's kind of just vaporizing
when it hits it because of the massive amounts of heat. And then this whole thing started at 8.
At 8.30 is when the hatches blew. And then at 9.12, the thing exploded. And we're going to kind of
list through a pretty horrifying list of impacts from like distances, like a seismograph in Denver,
Colorado picked up this explosion. Yeah. And this is, again, in the southernmost part of Texas,
right? Yeah, like they felt it in Louisiana, you know, like 3000 foot firebombs and cargo
flying up in the air. So yeah, the enormous amount of energy that I was talking about,
that was released by this 2,300 tons of ammonium nitrate. In retrospect, I think it's been,
I saw it compared to a 2.7 kiloton blast, which would put this blast
of this ship blowing up at somewhere on the order of about one third, no, I'm sorry, one fifth of
the Hiroshima nuclear bomb, which just completely leveled that city. This was about a fifth that
size. So it was still a really substantial, enormous blast. And one of the first effects
it had is that it blew this Liberty ship, this huge World War II era cargo ship a couple thousand
feet into the air in multiple pieces to just shower out downward as hot metal shrapnel
onto the surrounding city. And that's not accounting for the shrapnel that immediately blew outward
as those gases expanded right into all of those onlookers and the people who are fighting the
fire around the port. Yeah, there was they had a couple of two ton anchors. One of those
went about a mile and a half away in the air. Like we said, you could feel it in Louisiana.
There was a Monsanto and a Union carbide, two different chemical plants kind of right beside it.
They were just flattened, basically just not even there anymore. Yeah, I saw that one of the
warehouses warehouse zero at the port, which was I think the one that was closest to the ship.
This historian from Houston, I think said that it just disappeared, like it was just gone,
like it wasn't there any longer. Like the word disintegrate works in a lot of the instances
when you're describing what happened to a lot of the structures and people who were around this
this blast. Well, yeah, I mean, that's the obvious thing. You know, there were hundreds of onlookers.
There were people that work there. There were all 28 members of the fire department.
They were all killed basically instantly. Anyone within that zone was killed instantly. Some people,
like you said, just just not even able to recover enough body parts to identify humans at that
point. Yeah, that proved to be a real problem. So like, first of all, the fact that the entire
fire department apparently one, there was one survivor from the fire department, but he was
out of town at the time. That's why he survived. But the whole fire department and all of their
equipment was immediately wiped out. One of the problems was with an explosion like this,
in a place like this is that it ruptures lines and pipes and all of those petrochemicals that
are being refined suddenly catch fire. So now you have these out of control fires in the buildings
and structures that are left standing. And you no longer have a fire department or any fire
equipment to put it out for a little while. So the immediate impact outside of the blast was
also the fires that were lit just right after this too. Well, I mean, you've got, you know,
you've got the metal shrapnel, but then you've also remember there were peanuts and twine and cotton
and all this stuff. So that's, these are like fireballs being launched basically starting fires
all over the place. It wasn't just in the immediate area. And like you said, because the fire
department was then out of commission, that's real trouble. Yeah. So it took a little while for more
aid to show up, but apparently this explosion was so bad and the catastrophe was so great.
The Army, Navy, Coast Guard, Marines, Texas National Guard, and then firefighters from
surrounding cities all came out to help. And this wasn't just like putting this chemical fire out,
but also like trying to, you know, rescue people from rubble. Like there's really a lot
that we could sit here and say, but if you have a computer in front of you, like just look up
pictures from the Texas city explosion of 1947. It's just unreal what happened to like enormous
steel buildings just turned into like twisted metal. And this is like, you know, the middle of a
work day. So there were people trapped all over the place in this debris. So there was a huge
rescue operation that had to start, but it was delayed because most of the people who were
tasked with that kind of thing had all been killed in the initial blast. Yeah. So remember earlier,
we said that there were three ships there. This one blows up. And obviously, you know,
it's a it's a full on like 9 11 scene at this point with just how chaotic it is.
People are not noticing that right next door, the SS high flyer also remember was loaded with this
stuff and also with sulfur, which makes it become unstable. And this thing had been
enlarged. I mean, I'm surprised it's just the integrity of these ships is the only reason
that those weren't just blown to bits to like it was kind of right next to it. And it was
still intact, at least. And it was blown from its mooring, so and drifted over and kind of
attached itself to the Wilson be keen, which was again in the slip next to it. And I think there
were some crew members aboard in there that I guess were just protected by that thick steel,
right? Yeah, from what I understand. And they were kind of still doing their thing for a little
while. And they were finally because the high flyer caught fire as well. They were finally
forced out by the smoke because this is some noxious, noxious smoke. This isn't I mean,
this isn't just like wood burning smoke. This is some really bad chemical smoke that can mess
you up. It's crazy that the sailors stayed aboard for an hour. They're finally forced off a ship.
But they tell people like, Hey, this is this is on fire. Everybody's like,
Have you seen the other problems we have over here? And the fire department just got
basically vaporized. So the fire was allowed to continue on the high flyer for hours,
hours and hours. Like that blast happened at 9 12am. And it wasn't until the afternoon that
somebody else rediscovered the fire aboard the high flyer and started to kind of like raise the
alarm about this. Still, this is such a chaotic scene that there wasn't anything immediately
done about it. And it wasn't until 11pm that they're finally like, Oh, this is a really,
this is a bad jam because not only do we have 1000 tons, tons of ammonium nitrate aboard the
high flyer, there's that sulfur you mentioned, Chuck. And like you said, it makes it even more
unstable in that, you know how ammonium nitrate oxidizes things? Yeah, sulfur is like food to
that stuff. It oxidizes sulfur. It's just like piling on this oxidizing fuel to make the blast
even more energetic. So it would be a really big problem if the high flyer blew up. So they
brought in some tugboats and a fireboat, I think from Galveston and started to try to take it out
of the berth to tug it out to sea to let it like burn out or blow up or whatever it was going to do.
But I guess it was stuck so fast that that they couldn't get it out.
Yeah, I mean, I guess, you know, this thing was not, I guess just sort of wedged in there from
that first explosion. And I think they worked on it for a couple of hours. They started at about
11pm. And then it looks like by 1am, they had stopped that process. And at 110, and this is now
on April 17th, you know, early next morning, the high flyer exploded as well. And this was
even more violent. The only, I mean, it's not a saving grace at all, because everything was
already leveled. But the only reason it didn't cause more death and more destruction, sadly,
is because everything was already destroyed and most people were already dead.
Yeah. And plus also, they knew enough by this time that they needed to clear the area, that there
wasn't anything they could do. So everybody who was working in the rescue operation was told to
leave. So there, I don't know if there were any more deaths from the high flyer blowing up,
but the problem was is that any fires that might have been put out were relit. And other structures
that may have been spared from the initial blast were now leveled or caught fire or both.
So it was a big problem that the high flyer blew up as well.
I think it sunk the Wilson Keen too, didn't it? It did. It sunk it. And it was, yeah, I can only
imagine too, also, if you survived that first one to have another blast like that, even when you
were away from and you knew was coming, would just do something to the nerves that would be really
difficult to recover from. Yeah, for sure. You want to take a break? Yeah, we'll take a little break
and we'll talk about sort of the results of the devastation and a couple of other incidents right
after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing
can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the
road. Ah, okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance
Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right
place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't
have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey,
that's me. Yep, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide
you through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye. Listen
to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to
podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment
I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get second hand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if
you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But
just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, so Chuck, one thing that we didn't say was that the initial explosion by the Grand Camp
created a 15-foot tidal wave that washed inland. And people died almost in creative ways in this
disaster. And one of those ways was those petrochemicals. I think there was a molasses
refinery that started to get mixed in that kept the petrochemicals burning in the water
when it mixed with them. When this tidal wave blew out, when it blew in, I'm sorry, it was on fire.
So it actually caught people on fire. It caught people on fire on the way back out to sea.
And people who'd survived the initial blast were actually swept out and drowned from this too.
There were people who died in airplanes that had come around to kind of circle the area.
They were blown out of the sky. There were people who died in buildings that collapsed.
There were people who died from shrapnel falling out of the sky and killing them,
even though they were miles away. There was so much death and destruction that it's really
difficult to get across what happened to this poor little port city that hadn't done anything to
anybody that just suddenly blew up. Yeah, in the end, the official death toll was close to 600,
581 people, 113 of which were just vaporized. No trace was ever found of 113 people.
Casualties up to 5,000. The numbers kind of vary, but anywhere from 3,500 to 5,000.
And Texas City was not a very big place. It was about 16,000 strong. So this was just
devastating to the city and to the region. It took about a week to put out all these fires.
And I think a full month plus to recover whatever bodies they could recover at that point.
Yeah, the final body wasn't found until mid-May. There were people who were never,
like you said, accounted for. The converse of that was true too. There were parts of
people that were never identified. And one of the accounts that I read was, like I was saying,
was written by, I think, a University of Houston historian named Cheryl Lowers-Dorff-Ross
in the Journal of Houston History. But she recounts somebody mentioning a woman who was
trying to identify her husband who is lost in the disaster. And she had to sort through hands.
They had a collection of hands that this woman was trying to figure out which one belonged to
her husband. And like, that's just nuts to hear. But if you can even begin to put yourself into
that woman's shoes. Yeah, the reality of that. Yes, of being in that room of like looking at
different hands and then also not just the horror of that, of like having to look through body parts
that may or may not be your husband's. But then the self-doubt, like, is that my husband's hand?
Like, I don't remember what it looked like. You know, like that just your mind messing with you
on top of the horrific experience that you're already undergoing. But she was one of many,
because something like 61 people, I believe, were interred without being identified. But their
remains were kind of assembled and put together in a memorial service that was attended by something
like thousands of people, I believe. So Chuck, so if there was 16,000 people and that many people
were hurt or killed by this blast, you can imagine how quickly this little town was overwhelmed with
all these casualties. And so they were getting people like every which way, trucking them over
to Galveston, like getting them wherever they could, whatever hospital they could find. But
very quickly, the high school gym was taken over to serve as a field hospital. And then shortly
after that, the morgue. And one of the stories that stuck out to me was the Boy Scouts were
pressed into service to basically help out however they could. And these poor little like,
like teenage and preteen scouts are like working in this makeshift morgue in their high school
gym. Like imagine the impression that had on them the rest of their life, you know?
Geez. I know. Isn't that crazy? Like every aspect of this story is just nuts.
That's very sad. Yeah. And of course, the financial loss was huge. About a hundred million dollars
in property loss, 500 million in lost petroleum products. And that's about 700 million and 3.5
billion in today dollars. I think there is sort of buried beneath the berms there as a memorial
park where 63 unidentified victims are buried. Yeah. That's what I was talking about.
Yeah. And there's that anchor that we talked about. I don't know if it was the one that
actually blew the mile and a half away, but at least one of the anchors is a monument at the
park along with a scarred propeller from the high flier at the entrance to the port there at Texas
City. Yeah. So that funeral procession that they had that attracted, I think something like 5,000
mourners was a real like community effort. There were something like 50 plus funeral homes from
28 different cities that all participated. And each of these 63 unidentified people where there
remains, I should say, were put in their own individual caskets and buried in the memorial
park, which is still, you know, there. That park is still there with the anchor and everything.
But it's such an enormous weird catastrophe and just such a devastating thing, especially looking
back 70 years to read about. But when you do read about it, if you can just kind of put yourself
in mind of what that was like of trying to recover from that, it's astounding that Texas
City did recover. A lot of people moved and just said, not only do I think the city is never
going to come back from this, I don't know if I can come back from this, but the city actually did
come back and they did build back from what I understand even bigger than before, which is how
that BP refinery that ended up blowing up that became the most profitable in BP's entire company
because the city built back even better than before.
That's great. It is great. I mean, not great that it exploded again in 2005, obviously, but
great that they had to stick to it and has to come back as a city. So, you know, obviously,
following something like this, there's going to be a lot more regulation going on. The US is going
to step up federally and say, hey, wait a minute, we really need to take a look at how we're handling
these chemicals, how we're storing these things, how we're shipping these things. And a lot of
changes were made here and around the world. But it's not to say that that completely prevented
this from happening again because in Beirut just last year, in August of 2020, there was another
big cargo of ammonium nitrate that had been sitting in a warehouse for seven years. It's
known exactly sure why it ignited this time, but there was a dock worker that said that there were
fireworks stored nearby and they did find thousands of kilograms of fireworks recovered
from a warehouse at that port. And this explosion was, you know, it was a crater about 460 feet wide
and, you know, it was about as big as the Texas City blast. So, I saw both. I saw that it was
about as big and I saw that it was about a half the size, but I mean... But even a half, you know.
But so, yeah, go look at video of that. What's astounding about that Beirut blast is there
happens to be people who are filming when it happened because there was a fire right before.
When it happened, yeah. So, you've seen that white cloud. That's that water vapor expanding,
right? And you can't see it, but there's nitrous oxide gas in there as well.
So, imagine twice that size. That would probably be about the size of that first Texas City blast
in 1947. Yeah. I mean, I remember seeing it on the news and I don't remember if they mentioned
Texas City, but yeah. I mean, this is stuff that was just stored down there for like seven years,
soaking up that warm kind of moist Mediterranean breeze. Right. Not the way you should handle
and store this stuff. No. And like the story behind is kind of interesting. Like it was
started in Georgia, not our Georgia, but the Republic of Georgia on route to Mozambique. And
the apparently the owners were like, we're not making enough money on this trip. So, we're going to
divert over to Beirut and pick up some more freight. And the crew said, no, we're not going to do that.
It's going to make the weight dangerous. So, they balked, port fees started racking up,
and the owners apparently just decided to abandon the crew, the ship, and the cargo. The cargo,
once it was impounded, should have been sold off, but it wasn't. Instead, it just, like you said,
sat there, stored incorrectly for six years until something caused it to blow up, which is,
I mean, just the, the idea that it was just negligence that led to that catastrophe is,
it's even worse. I think that's something that's missing from the Texas city disaster.
There, there wasn't really any negligent act, maybe a mistake or a bad choice, but no one
was particularly negligent about it. So, I think that's, it kind of makes the Beirut Blast even
worse that people were supposed to be doing stuff that they didn't do. And a lot of people died as
a result. Yeah, I think the BP refinery in 2005, they had to pay out about 50 million bucks for
that one. After they did a little safety audit, and in that safety audit, they found, and this was
before the blast, actually, they did a safety audit, and they found that a lot of people that
worked at this plant, it says, came to work with, quote, an exceptional degree of fear of catastrophic
incidences, incidents, end quote. That's a little bit of an ocean nightmare. Everything that I've
read about that was that, that was the direct result of BP cutting safety in favor of higher
profit margins. That that's what happened. That's what allowed this plant to deteriorate,
and the machinery just didn't work, but they traced this explosion. This is a oil refinery
explosion. It had nothing to do with ammonium nitrate, but the, I think whatever, whatever
chemical they put in gas to boost the octane level, they turned a machine on that does that,
and somehow like all these components to the, to gasoline started vaporizing out into the air.
It started shooting out of this tower because the pressure was overloaded, and there was so much
gas vapor in the air that somebody had a pickup truck running nearby, and it got sucked up into
the air intake, and the engine started revving, and that's actually what ignited the whole thing,
all of this gas vapor, this pickup truck, sucking in gas molecules that were just vaporized in the
air around it. Crazy. In Texas City, again. It's crazy. So you got anything else? I got nothing
else. Well, if you want to know more about the Texas City disaster, you can go look that up.
I would strongly recommend reading Cheryl Lauer's Dorf Ross's changing lives in a heartbeat journal
article, and also big shout out to fireengineering.com. They had a good one. And then the local
1259, the Texas City Firefighters Union, has a really comprehensive overview of the Texas
City disaster too, so maybe check those out for even more details. And since I said that,
it's time for listener mail. Yeah, I'm going to call this, well, I'm going to call it where Ryan
called it. Well, I'm dumb, but I'm over it. Hey, guys, long time first time. I thought I'd tell you
you had me duped for a long time when I first started listening to the shows a few years ago,
and probably for a year after that first episode, I honestly thought there was a list of key words
that Josh referred to toward the end of the episode whenever he says, well, since I said,
blank, it's time for listener mail. For an embarrassed, this is very cute, for an embarrassingly
long time. I really thought that the blank word was from a predetermined master list,
and that you had revealed that list of words to the audience in an early episode. Wow.
I guess like the magic word in Peewee's Playhouse. Yeah, was that what it was?
Yeah, this guy was to really love Peewee's Playhouse. I started listening to increasingly
older episodes in hopes that I would hear that list or catch a trend toward the words used.
Yeah. Josh's transition with that statement at the end of every episode is just so smooth. Hey,
there you go. Thanks, man. It wasn't until one episode when Josh's word was so mundane, so common,
it's probably the or if or something along those lines that I finally realized there is no list.
I had been fooled. The scales just fell from his eyes and he was free, finally. Well, since you
said scales, those random words are just that random. I actually felt a bit disappointed when I
realized this, but it actually took some of the mystery out of the show, but I'm over it now.
Whether or not it's good to admit I had been fooled by this for a long time is up for debate,
but I've been meaning to tell you about this for a while. I hope you think of me every time
Josh transitions to listener mail from now on. I totally will. Yeah. Take care and keep doing
what you're doing because it's a fantastic show. And since I said show, dot, dot, dot.
What? That's great. That is from Ryan Pechel. Thanks, Ryan. Thanks for getting in our heads
like that. Apparently we got in your heads too, so it's only fair. Don't you think, Chuck? Yeah.
And just right then, I didn't think we had a listener mail and then the quit pops up. Ryan
Pechel saves the day again and only Ryan knows what I'm talking about and just ruined his life
again. He's back in the game. If you want to get in touch with us and try to get in our heads
like Ryan did, so we have to think of you every time we say something about listener mail or
what have you, you can write to us. Send us an email to stuffpodcast.iheartradio.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. Do you
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