1924 Nixon Nitration Works disaster

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List: Ammonium nitrate disasters

The 1924 Nixon Nitration Works disaster was an explosion and fire that claimed many lives and destroyed several square miles of New Jersey factories. It began on Saturday morning, March 1, 1924, when an explosion destroyed a building in Nixon, New Jersey used for processing ammonium nitrate.[1] The 11:15 a.m. explosion touched off fires in surrounding buildings in the Nixon Nitration Works that contained other highly flammable materials. [2] The disaster killed twenty persons, destroyed forty buildings,[3] and demolished the “tiny industrial town of Nixon, New Jersey.” [4]


Contents

[edit] The setting

The Nixon Nitration Works, which included a number of plants, covered about twelve square miles on the Raritan River, near New Brunswick, in what was then officially known as Raritan Township, New Jersey and unofficially known as Nixon, New Jersey.[2]

Throughout the Nitration Works, Nixon companies had been manufacturing cellulose nitrate, a precursor to modern plastic. [4] Because of its use of nitrate, the material is highly flammable. At the Works, cellulose nitrate was maintained in large sheets that had been piled in the surrounding buildings. [4]

Within the Works, Nixon leased a building to the Ammonite Company. [1] Ammonite was using the facility to salvage the contents of artillery shells for use as agriculture fertilizer. [4] The building reportedly contained one million gallons of ammonium nitrate in storage and also fifteen tank cars which held 90,000 gallons each of ammonium nitrate which was in a process of crystallization. [1]

[edit] The initial explosion

When the Ammonite building exploded, windows for a mile around the scene were crashed in and in many instances doors were blown from their hinges. [1] The blast shook Staten Island, where business buildings in the Stapleton and St. George neighborhoods of rocked, windows rattled and doors were slammed. [1] It was heard as far away as lower New York City and Brooklyn.[3]

[edit] The disaster spreads

In the other buildings on the site, the flaming debris from the explosion of the Ammonite plant soon set the cellulose nitrate sheets on fire, causing the material to act as a huge blow-torch of blue flames, feeding an even greater conflagration. [4] Fires began to consume other buildings as well, including the offices of the Nitration Works. [5]

Six hours after the explosion, flames were still burning over an area of one square mile.[2] Then, an even greater disaster was avoided. As darkness fell, the winds shifted suddenly and began fanning the flames toward freight cars on a siding and toward the Raritan Arsenal (located across a fence from the site). [5] In the arsenal, 500,000 high explosive shells were stored. [6] Through the efforts of exhausted firefighters, the fire did not reach the arsenal. Although four of the arsenal’s high explosive magazines had been crushed by the explosion and the roofs of two others were blown in, the magazines did not explode.[4]

[edit] The human toll

Two days after the explosion, newspapers reported that eighteen persons were killed, two were missing (and presumed killed), and fifteen others remained hospitalized.[3] The blast injured one hundred persons. [6] The dead included the wife and three children of an employee of the plant who lived one hundred yards from the scene, a stenographer working at the plant, and thirteen workmen who were repairing the roof of the building where the blast occurred.[2]

[edit] The inquiries

Prosecutor John E. Toolan of Middlesex County, N.J. began an inquiry two days after the blast.[3] Among those summoned to appear for the inquiry were Lewis Nixon, president of the Nixon Nitration Works and former New York Public Service Commissioner, his son Stanhope Wood Nixon, and R. Norris Shreve, then president of the Ammonite Co. [6] Secretary of War John W. Weeks also ordered an inquiry, for the more limited purpose of determining whether Raritan Arsenal was in any way responsible for the explosion.[7]

Ammonite was extracting ammonium nitrate from shells from the arsenal, leading to speculation that small quantities of Trinitrotoluene ("TNT") from the shells remained in the ammonium nitrate, and triggered the blast. [6]Lewis Nixon embraced this explanation. [8] Ammonite disputed this theory, asserting that the average content of TNT in the salvaged ammonium nitrate was two-tenths of one percent. [9] Major A.S. Casand, commander of the arsenal, also disagreed that residual TNT was to blame, and believed that the explosion was due to conditions in the plant.[6]

[edit] The aftermath

In the immediate aftermath of the explosion, federal, state and local officials considered whether plants containing explosives should be banned from Middlesex County.[10]

One month after the disaster, Ammonite sued Nixon Nitration Works for $400,000 in damages, alleging that the explosion was due to the Nixon company’s carelessness.[11]

The following month, Nixon Nitration Works was ordered to pay $12,000 to the widow of a victim.[12]

The following year Ammonite pled guilty to charges arising from the explosion and was fined a total of $9,000 (reflecting a $600 fine for 15 employees killed in the blast).[13]

Ammonite dissolved in 1926, for reasons attributed to the explosion. [14] Ammonite owner R. Norris Shreve, already a renowned chemical and industrial engineer, later joined the faculty at Purdue University, where he became a well-respected scholar, author and teacher. [14] A residence hall at Purdue is named in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Shreve.

The Nixon Nitration Works rose again on the site, and returned to the business of cellulose nitrate manufacturing. Lewis Nixon died on September 23, 1940. [15] His son Stanhope Nixon, who assumed control of the business, had few of his father’s qualities, and many vices. [16] After World War II, the plastics industry evolved from nitrate-based products to acetate-based products, and the company failed to make the transition.[16] In 1951, as the company downsized, it gave 48 acres of land, and a dam, to New Brunswick. [17] The site of the Works is now a part of Middlesex County College and Raritan Center Industrial Park.

In 1954, the citizens of Middlesex County's Raritan Township renamed their community by referendum. The name “Edison” was chosen over “Nixon.” However, the “Nixon” name is still used by the local post office and postal district. [16]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Many are Killed in Explosion: Staten Island is Rocked by Terrific Blast,” The Bee (Danville, Virginia), 1924-03-01, p. 1
  2. ^ a b c d "Explosion Kills 30, Rocks New Jersey: Ammonia Plant of the Nixon Nitrate Works Blows up With Roar That Shakes Countryside for 25 Miles; Fire Follows,” Middletown Daily Herald, 1924-03-02, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b c d ’Begin Probe of Explosion: Inquiry into Cause of Blast Which Killed 18 and Destroyed 40 Buildings Begins,” Lowell Sun, 1924-03-03, at 19.
  4. ^ a b c d e f “Blast Levels a Town: TNT, Being Changed to Fertilizer, Blows Up, Killing 18,” The Weekly Kansas City Star, 1924-03-05, at 2.
  5. ^ a b Jack Carberry, “Survivors tell Graphic Stories of Horror Blast,” Ogden Standard-Examiner, 1924-03-02 at 3.
  6. ^ a b c d e ”Investigate Cause Costly Explosion at Nitrate Plant,” Olean Times, 1924-03-03, at 1.
  7. ^ “Explosion Inquiry Ordered by Weeks,” The New York Times, 1924-03-06.
  8. ^ “Lewis Nixon Says Failure to Remove TNT from Shells Probably Caused the Blast,” The New York Times, 1924-03-02.
  9. ^ “Nitrate held TNT, says Plant Head,” The New York Times, 1924-03-04.
  10. ^ “Jersey Protests Explosive Plants,” The New York Times, 1924-03-05; “Talk of Removing Raritan Explosives,” The New York Times, 1924-03-15.
  11. ^ ”Suing for $400,000: Damages sought as a result of explosion at Ammonite Plant,” Kokomo Tribune, 1924-04-04, at 25.
  12. ^ “$12,000 Explosion Award: Nixon Nitration Works Must Pay Woman Whose Husband Was Killed,” The New York Times, 1924-05-13.
  13. ^ “Company Fined $9,000 for Explosion Deaths,” The New York Times, 1925-3-28.
  14. ^ a b N.A. Peppas and R.S. Harland, “Unit Processes Against Unit Operations: The Educational Fights of the Thirties,” reprinted in Nicholas A. Peppas, “One Hundred Years of Chemical Engineering,” p. 128 (1989) ISBN 0792301455.
  15. ^ “Veteran Shipbuilder Dies,” Titusville Herald, 1940-09-24, at p. 1.
  16. ^ a b c Larry Alexander, “Biggest Brother: The Life of Major Dick Winters, The Man who Led the Band of Brothers,” p. 223 (2005) ISBN 0451218396.
  17. ^ Frank Emerson Andrews, “Corporate Giving,” p. 192 (1993) ISBN 1560000228.