When Germany attacked New Jersey | Black Tom explosion
It’s History2 Helmi 2021

When Germany attacked New Jersey | Black Tom explosion

The FBI recalls, It was still dark in Manhattan on a Sunday morning, July 30, 1916, when the sky suddenly exploded with an unnatural brilliance. Two million tons of war materials packed into train cars had blown up in the Black Tom railroad yard on what is now a part of Liberty State Park. Thousands of windows shattered in lower Manhattan and Jersey City. Shrapnel pock-marked the Statue of Liberty. Three men and a baby were killed by the explosive energy that erupted from this act of sabotage. The culprits? German agents who were determined to prevent American munitions shippers from supplying its English enemy during the First World War. Never mind that the U.S. was officially neutral in the conflict at this point. How to respond? With difficulty. With few national security laws and no real intelligence community to thwart German agents, America was vulnerable. The Secret Service, by presidential order, was able to investigate some German attacks and intrigues. The Bureau of Investigation—the FBI's predecessor—likewise did what it could, but it was held back by its small size (260 employees in a handful of offices) and lack of jurisdiction. The most successful and experienced anti-sabotage investigators turned out to be the detectives of the New York Police Department's Bomb Squad—even so, the German agents who blew up Black Tom were not identified at the time. Congress addressed the vulnerability. The Black Tom explosion wasn't the only provocation. When Germany proposed to Mexico that it ally itself with the Kaiser against America...and when it resumed unrestricted submarine warfare on any enemy or neutral ship crossing the Atlantic...America declared war. Congress immediately passed the Espionage Act, which outlawed a variety of crimes associated with German agents; passed several other wartime laws; then the following year passed the Sabotage Act. And the Bureau exercised primary jurisdiction over all of these laws as it pursued a wide variety of national security investigations. How successful were they? Very. German intrigues on American soil essentially evaporated. Were the saboteurs ever identified? Yes, the Bureau and other agencies doggedly pursued the case after the war until the saboteurs were identified and, ultimately, reparations were paid for German attacks against our neutral country. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jaksot(563)

Why Cheyenne Mountain is Totally Forbidden

Why Cheyenne Mountain is Totally Forbidden

Carved deep into the granite of Colorado’s Front Range lies the Cheyenne Mountain Complex, one of America’s most secretive Cold War creations. Built to survive nuclear war, this underground fortress h...

22 Maalis 19min

What's Below Chicago's Bean? The Lost Railyard

What's Below Chicago's Bean? The Lost Railyard

Beneath Chicago’s Cloud Gate lies the city’s dramatic transformation. This episode traces Grant Park's evolution from marshland and post–Great Fire landfill to a bustling urban landmark, exploring Dan...

21 Maalis 34min

Why Dark Entry Forest is Totally Forbidden

Why Dark Entry Forest is Totally Forbidden

Hidden deep within the forests of Connecticut lies the ruins of Dudleytown, a vanished colonial village that mysteriously disappeared, leaving behind only stone foundations and enduring legends. This ...

20 Maalis 16min

Why This Massive Asylum Was Left to Rot | The Story of Fairfield Hills Hospital

Why This Massive Asylum Was Left to Rot | The Story of Fairfield Hills Hospital

Hidden in Newtown, Connecticut, Fairfield Hills Hospital stands as one of America's eeriest relics of mental health history. This vast psychiatric complex, known for its extensive underground tunnels,...

19 Maalis 20min

What Happened to Chicago’s Lost Lake Bridge?

What Happened to Chicago’s Lost Lake Bridge?

In the mid-1800s, Chicago faced the challenge of battling Lake Michigan's storms that eroded its shoreline. Engineers constructed a bold trestle bridge over the lake, with the Illinois Central’s woode...

18 Maalis 14min

Why America Abandoned Blockbuster & What Remains

Why America Abandoned Blockbuster & What Remains

Before streaming changed everything, Blockbuster Video was a dominant force in the American weekend, operating over 9,000 stores worldwide by the 1990s and renting 100 million tapes weekly. This episo...

17 Maalis 11min

The Dangerous Mills That Changed America Forever

The Dangerous Mills That Changed America Forever

In the early 1800s, Lowell, Massachusetts, emerged as the birthplace of America's Industrial Revolution. The city was characterized by red-brick mills and roaring turbines that reshaped the nation's e...

16 Maalis 17min

Why was Bonwit Teller lost to Trump Tower?

Why was Bonwit Teller lost to Trump Tower?

Before Trump Tower was built on Fifth Avenue, the Bonwit Teller Building, an architectural treasure designed in 1929 by Warren & Wetmore, occupied the site. This elegant structure featured a limestone...

15 Maalis 26min

Suosittua kategoriassa Historia

olipa-kerran-otsikko
gogin-ja-janin-maailmanhistoria
mayday-fi
huijarit
mystista
rss-ikiuni
tsunami
konginkangas
totuus-vai-salaliitto
rouva-diktaattori
sotaa-ja-historiaa-podi
rss-kirkon-ihmeellisimmat-tarinat
rss-sattuu-sita-suomessakin
rss-subjektiivinen-todistaja
rss-peter-peter
rss-i-dont-like-mondays-2
historiaa-suomeksi
apinan-vuosi
maailmanpuu
tiedetta-ja-sirkushuveja-vanhojen-aikojen-podcast