1916 Black Tom blast anniversary observed
The Statue of Liberty, less than a mile away, was damaged by a rain of red-hot shards of steel. Frightened immigrants on Ellis Island were hastily evacuated to Manhattan.
The epicenter of the blast — a small island called Black Tom — all but disappeared in what was then the largest explosion ever in the U.S., on Sunday, July 30, 1916 at 2:08 a.m.
It destroyed about 2,000 tons of munitions parked in freight cars and pierside barges, awaiting transfer to ships and ultimately destined for the World War I battlefields of France.
Evidence pointed to German sabotage, and some historians regard it as the first major terrorist attack on the United States by a foreign party — 85 years before the 9/11 attacks.
Marked today by a plaque in New Jersey's Liberty State Park, the blast site lies less than two miles from lower Manhattan and within sight of where the World Trade Center towers stood.