Hope amid the rubble: How the disastrous Halifax Explosion sparked reform
HALIFAX — Experts are gathering Wednesday for discussions that include a little-known after-effect of the disastrous Halifax Explosion — it sparked a burst of health reforms that saved many hundreds of lives.
Historian David Sutherland said Halifax saw a flurry of activity to reduce infant mortality, eradicate tuberculosis and bring basic sanitation in “an initial euphoria that we are going to re-invent the city.”
He is among the panellists gathering at Dalhousie University to discuss the social changes brought about by the eruption of a burning munitions ship that flattened much of the city’s north end and killed or injured close to a fifth of its population on Dec. 6, 1917.
Sutherland’s new book, We Harbor No Evil Design (University of Toronto Press), describes the array of relief efforts in the city after the Explosion.


