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Bay Area leaders react after Navy clears Black sailors convicted in World War II Port Chicago explosion

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Hundreds of Black sailors charged with mutiny and disobeying wartime orders in the wake of a deadly explosion at Contra Costa County’s Port Chicago in 1944 have been fully exonerated, Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro announced Wednesday.

The decision comes 80 years after the blast that killed 320 sailors and civilians; almost two-thirds of the victims were Black. It clears the names of 258 Black servicemen who were court-martialed, jailed and threatened for refusing to return to work loading munitions in the disaster’s aftermath — citing the dangerous conditions, lack of proper training and segregation of Black sailors who were given hazardous assignments on the naval base, which is tucked along the shores of Suisun Bay.

“The Port Chicago 50, and the hundreds who stood with them, may not be with us today, but their story lives on, a testament to the enduring power of courage and the unwavering pursuit of justice,” Del Toro said in a statement. “They stand as a beacon of hope, forever reminding us that even in the face of overwhelming odds, the fight for what’s right can and will prevail.”

For several community leaders who have pushed for exoneration for decades, the Navy’s decision addresses a historic injustice by restoring equity to the treatment of these men — both on the naval base and in the courtroom.

Yulie Padmore, executive director of the Port Chicago Alliance who helped organize the upcoming Port Chicago Weekend celebration, said Wednesday’s exoneration is the answer to decades-long prayer.

“This illustrates the importance of revisiting just how much things have changed, in regards to the enhancement of our society,” Padmore said in an interview, choked up with emotion. “The hardest part is knowing what their families have gone through. Exoneration is our country coming together in a sense, amending and correcting past wrongs.”

The Secretary of the Navy announced July 17 the full exoneration of the remaining 256 defendants of the 1944 Port Chicago general and summary courts-martial.
The Secretary of the Navy announced July 17 the full exoneration of the remaining 256 defendants of the 1944 Port Chicago general and summary courts-martial. 



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