Every Place Has a Story

SS Greenhill Park: A Vancouver Tragedy

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Just before noon on March 6, 1945, the SS Greenhill Park blew up, killing six longshoremen and two seamen. Twenty-six others, including seven firefighters were injured in the explosion.

Greenhill Park
Vancouver Archives, March 6, 1945

On March 6, 1945, nearly 100 men were either loading or getting the SS Greenhill Park ready for its voyage to Australia from CPR’s Pier B-C (now Canada Place). They were loading a mixed cargo of mostly lumber, newsprint, and tin plate. But there were also pickles, sunglasses, lightbulbs, books and knitting needles. What would prove most problematic though, was the 94 tonnes of explosive sodium chlorate (for bleaching wood pulp), seven-and-a-half tonnes of signal flares and several barrels of overproof whisky.

Greenhill Park Pier B C
Pier B-C became the Canadian government’s pavilion during Expo ’86, and now it’s our Canada Place and cruise terminal which was constructed on some of the original pilings. 1930s Photo: CVA 260-1815

The whisky was hard to resist, and some of the workers were filling up bottles of the stuff to take home in their lunch boxes. It was dark in the hold, and at a minute before noon, one of the men lit a match.

And, boom.

Greenhill Park
Vancouver Archives, March 6, 1945
Explosions rock Vancouver:

Flames shot up more than 30 metres in the air, and the ensuing explosions took out most of the large plate glass windows along automobile row on West Georgia. Thousands of windows in downtown office buildings smashed, and the blasts blew out 10 heavy corrugated iron doors inside of Pier B.

Greenhill Park explosion
The Province. VPL 45866, March 6, 1945

Many on the ground thought the Japanese were attacking, and tried to reach air-raid shelters.

Greenhill Park
Vancouver Archives, March 6, 1945

Frank Wright, the 25-year-old captain of an army supply ship called the Sutherland Brown was docked at the foot of Cardero. He and his skeleton crew were the first to reach the 10,000 ton freighter and managed to get a tow line onto the ship. With the help of an army tug they tried to beach the ship on the North Shore, but the tide was too strong and it drifted out the first narrows and went aground near Siwash Rock.

Greenhill Park
Greenhill interior after the explosion. Vancouver Archives, March 6, 1945
In memory of those who were killed:

Donald Bell, 34

Joseph Brooks, 51

Julius Kern, 41

William Lewis, 46

Merton McGrath, 46

Donald Munn, 54

Montague Munn, 57

Walter Peterson, 56

Sources: The Greenhill Park Disaster by the BC Labour Heritage Centre; The Montreal Gazette, March 7, 1945; Vancouver Sun November 29, 2008.

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