The Port Chicago 50: Racism and Review

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • During WWII, Black sailors stationed at Port Chicago, CA, were required to load munitions on ships with inadequate training and under supervision that stressed speed over safety. Longshoremen warned that catastrophe was imminent, and on July 17, 1944 that admonition came true with a cataclysmic series of explosions that instantly killed 320 men (⅔ of them African American) and injured hundreds more.
    A month later, unsafe conditions inspired hundreds of Black servicemen to refuse to load munitions, an act known as the Port Chicago Mutiny. Fifty men‍-‌called the “Port Chicago 50″‍-‌were convicted of mutiny and sentenced in ways that would change their lives.
    Members of the Contra Costa Bar Association’s Port Chicago Task Force and the Federal Bar Association will present a partial reenactment of the Mutiny Trials and discuss how this event, witnessed by Thurgood Marshall, became a catalyst of the modern civil rights movement, and about the ongoing efforts to seek the exoneration of the Port Chicago 50.
    Sponsored by:
    The Ninth Judicial Circuit Historical Society www.njchs.org/
    The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California Historical Society ndhistoricalso...
    The Northern District of California Chapter of the Federal Bar Association www.fedbar.org...
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    To learn more about the NJCHS, visit our website and join our mailing list at www.njchs.org/..., or better yet, become a member at www.njchs.org/....
    The mission of the Ninth Judicial Circuit Historical Society is to preserve and educate about the vibrant legal history of the West, and about the vital importance of an independent judiciary.

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