Coordinates: 26°11′53″S 28°01′19″E / 26.198°S 28.022°E / -26.198; 28.022

Braamfontein Explosion

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File:NZASM 40 Tonner 0-6-2T no. 5x.jpg
NZASM 40 Tonner locomotive being recovered at Braamfontein after the explosion

The Braamfontein Explosion was an explosion of a freight train carrying dynamite in Braamfontein, a suburb of Johannesburg, in 1896. It was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history.

Explosion

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File:DeelVanDieSpoorlynWaarDieOntploffingPlaasgevindHetTeMaraisburgOp19Februarie1896.jpg
Part of the track where the explosion took place at Braamfontein on 19 February 1896
File:DieGatVeroorsaakDeurDieDinamietOntploffingWestelikeRigtingTeMaraisburg19Februarie1896.jpg
The crater created by the dynamite explosion (looking west) at Braamfontein on 19 February 1896

On 16 February 1896, a freight train with eight trucks of dynamite – 2300 cases of 60lb each, or about 60 tonnes – was put in a siding at Braamfontein railway station. The dynamite was destined for nearby mines, but the mine's stores of dynamite were already full so the train was left in the siding – for days, in very hot weather – until there was somewhere to store the dynamite.[1]

On the afternoon of 19 February, after labourers had started to unload the train, a shunter came to move it to another part of the siding; but after the impact of the shunter, the dynamite exploded. The explosion left a crater 60 metres long, 50 metres wide and 8 metres deep. The explosion was heard up to 200 kilometres away. Herman Eugene Schoch recorded hearing the explosion in Rustenburg, approximately 120 kilometres (75 mi) away.[2]

Suburbs as far away as Fordsburg were seriously damaged, and about 3,000 people lost their homes.[3]

Memorials

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Accounts vary, but it is thought that over 70 people were killed[4] and more than 200 were injured. A memorial at the Braamfontein cemetery reads that 75 "whites and coloured" were killed.[5]

In 2012, artist Eduardo Cachuco created "Explosion, 1896", a complex artwork based on the explosion which was shown at the "looking glass" exhibition.

References

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