Part of a series of articles titled Home and Homelands Exhibition: Politics.
Previous: Betty Hardison and the American Dream
Next: Haruko Takahashi
Article
Article written by Nicole Martin, PhD
The night of July 17, 1944 was hot. So hot that all the windows were open in the 800 square foot house thirteen-year-old Nancy Gilliland lived in with her parents and three siblings in Concord, California. Her two younger brothers had even opted to sleep outside in the backyard. Nancy was just getting ready to sleep when a flash of bright light lit up the room.
“[The light] was followed by a tremendous explosion which threw me against the door. I think there was another blast, but my brothers were screaming and I thought a bomb had been dropped in our backyard and they were hurt. My father came running to rescue my brothers.”1For Nancy, a young white girl living in suburban tract housing several miles from the Port Chicago Naval Magazine, the munitions explosion was a scary, visceral experience. For a few brief minutes, she believed her home was being invaded. When she looked back at that night decades later, she described it as “a night to remember.”2 Her personal experience tapped into a significant wartime fear about losing one’s home that many people at the time shared. For the sailors involved and their families, though, it was both a personal and political tragedy. It represented a systemic denial of home – a self-inflicted wound – that reflects America’s historic and ongoing racial inequality.
When Robert Harris walked amongst the gravestones of the Port Chicago disaster victims at Golden Gate National Cemetery in 2018, he was overcome seeing so many of the young men whose hopes and dreams had been cut short. He explained, “[I]t’s like their voices [are] calling out from the grave. For the truth to be told and justice to be done.”3
Harris was visiting the gravesite of his uncle, Eugene Coffee, Jr., who was one of many enlisted African American sailors serving at the naval magazine in a segregated work unit. While working at the largest ammunition transshipment facility on the West Coast, the almost 1,500 African Americans serving at Port Chicago experienced systemic racism, including limited roles despite combat training, unsafe working conditions, and racial slurs and indignities from their white counterparts. Relegated to the role of stevedores under the supervision of white officers, the Navy failed to provide any specialized training on loading the dangerous explosives.4
When two cargo ships exploded on that hot night in 1944, it became the deadliest home front disaster of WWII. The explosion claimed the lives of the 320 and injured hundreds more. The blast registered 3.4 on the Richter scale and was felt more than 450 miles away.5 Nancy’s father, who worked for PG&E, found pieces of shrapnel from the explosion when repairing power lines over a mile away from the munitions depot.6
A majority of those killed in the Port Chicago explosion were young African American sailors, including the twenty-two-year-old Eugene Coffee, Jr. His remains were one of only a few dozen to be identified. Those who survived faced the horror of cleaning up the disaster, doing the “very grim work” of “picking up parts of bodies,” as one man remembered.7
After the explosion, the surviving African American sailors expected the same treatment as white officers: leave and transfers to other duties. However, contrary to the ideals of the nationally recognized Double V Campaign, which advocated for victory over both foreign enemies and domestic discrimination, the Navy transferred these sailors to the nearby Mare Island Naval Shipyard to resume loading ammunition. When 258 sailors refused to return to work, protesting unsafe working conditions and racial discrimination, the Navy placed all the men on a prison barge. Eventually they collectively charged and convicted 50 men – the “Port Chicago 50” – of mutiny in the largest trial of its kind in U.S. Navy history. After decades of organized efforts by the sailors and their families, the Navy exonerated the men on July 17, 2024 – eighty years to the day after the explosion.8
Excerpt from an interview with Robert Harris, whose uncle Eugene Coffee, Jr. died in the munitions explosion at Port Chicago Naval Magazine.
Excerpt from an interview with Robert Harris, whose uncle Eugene Coffee, Jr. died in the munitions explosion at Port Chicago Naval Magazine.
Excerpt from an interview with Robert Harris, whose uncle Eugene Coffee, Jr. died in the munitions explosion at Port Chicago Naval Magazine
Part of a series of articles titled Home and Homelands Exhibition: Politics.
Previous: Betty Hardison and the American Dream
Next: Haruko Takahashi
Last updated: July 26, 2024