You ready to history?
PHIL: Ready.
You’re ready?
Okay.
Alright.
I’m Coleman Lowndes.
PHIL: I’m Phil Edwards.
And this is History Club, where Phil and I
tell each other a story from history that
ideally the other one doesn’t know anything
about.
So today is my turn.
And it’s a story of sabotage, deception,
and spies, culminating in a major attack on
US soil in 1916.
PHIL: Alright.
Right here on Black Tom Island.
So Black Tom was a munitions depot during
World War I.
And one summer night in 1916, German spies
blew it to pieces.
And they almost got away with it.
Okay so a really important thing to know about
this whole story is that the US government
badly wanted to remain neutral when World
War I broke out in Europe.
And for the first few years of the war, they
were.
They saw the war as a sort of “Old World”
problem thousands of miles away, and US President
Woodrow Wilson promised to keep the people
out of it.
PHIL: Yeah, staying out of World War I was
kind of one of the cornerstones of his reelection
campaign.
Yes.
But that didn’t mean they couldn’t profit
from it.
The sale and shipment of munitions to Europe
became a major industry in the United States,
and brought the country out of an economic
downturn.
I mean they were pumping this sh*t out.
So I could send you a map but you know Europe.
You know what Europe looks like.
PHIL: Yeah.
So now imagine Europe.
PHIL: Lots of lines, shapes.
This industry mainly benefited the Entente
Allies, led by Great Britain, France, and
Russia.
And the Central Powers, led by Germany and
Austria-Hungary, could technically also buy
American bombs, but they were excluded because
of a really effective blockade the British
navy imposed at the beginning of the war.
Getting munitions into Germany was basically
impossible, so Germans turned to the next
best thing: sabotage.
I’m gonna do the short version of this,
but the go-to source for the bigger story
is this book.
Starting in 1914 and up until the US entered
the war in 1917, Imperial Germany operated
a sophisticated network of spies and saboteurs
inside the US, secretly wreaking havoc on
the munitions industry.
Ships and factories were catching fire, and
suspicion landed on Germans and German-Americans.
And there were a lot of Germans here, including
sailors, who, because of the British blockade,
were sort of stranded in neutral US ports.
And that is where they were being recruited
to blow up factories.
PHIL: And was the appeal just one of nationalism?
These people were from Germany and they should
help the German effort?
Yeah, they saw it as attacks on the English.
Because the English and the Russians were
buying these bombs, so it’s like “these
are being sent straight to people who are
going to use them on Germans.
You can’t fight the war because you’re
stuck here.
Do you want to do this instead?”
One of my favorite parts of this whole thing
is this guy von Bernstorff.
I’m going to send you a picture of him.
Germany’s ambassador to Washington was secretly
overseeing this entire spy network while trying
to maintain good relations with the US.
At first, the plan was to buy up all the munitions
before the Allies could, but the sheer scope
of US production was overwhelming.
German agent Franz von Rintelen remarked that:
So he started setting fire to Europe-bound
ships loaded with weapons using a very special
device.
And I wanted to go into how it works, but
it’s too long.
But basically, it could be timed to go off
after several days.
So by the time is far out to sea, a massive
flame would ignite in the hold, and it burned
so hot that it would melt the casing of the
bomb so there was no trace of it.
Which is an ideal weapon if you want the fire
to look like an accident.
So Americans were suspicious of German sabotage,
but they couldn’t prove it.
And that’s because at this time, there was
no infrastructure of domestic intelligence
agencies in the US.
No Department of Homeland Security, no FBI,
no CIA.
Pre-WWI America saw itself as isolated and
safe, protected from foreign attacks by thousands
of miles of ocean.
Which explains why they left Black Tom their
biggest prize virtually unguarded.
75% of the US’ booming munitions industry
centered around New York and New Jersey, and
most of them were shipped from Black Tom.
The night of July 30th, the warehouses and
train cars there were packed to the brim with
over two million pounds of munitions, making
it possibly the largest arsenal in the world
outside of the war zone.
And at 2:08 in the morning, it blew up.
Glass windows shattered all across Jersey
City, Lower Manhattan, and Brooklyn.
The massive Brooklyn Bridge shuddered.
And people as far away as Philadelphia and
Maryland felt the blast, which would have
registered as a moderate earthquake on the
Richter scale.
The Statue of Liberty was struck too.
And its damaged torch has been closed to visitors
ever since the attack.
So you used to be able to actually go to the
very top of the torch, but it’s been closed
since 1916.
PHIL: Wow.
I never knew that.
Yeah.
PHIL: So the torch was damaged that way?
Yeah, it was damaged by shrapnel from bombs.
All told, there were only 5 confirmed deaths,
and around $20 million in property damage.
Which is about half a billion today.
PHIL: Wow.
Yeah.
Black Tom itself was obliterated, and the
US had no idea how it happened.
PHIL: And so when did the United States recognize
that it was German spies who had been responsible
for Black Tom?
It took years.
At first, there wasn’t much suspicion of
sabotage at all .
Black Tom was seen as an act of gross negligence,
and two guys were initially arrested for manslaughter.
The next prevailing theory was mosquitos.
For a long time, the accepted sequence of
events was that the fire started after the
handful of guards working that night lit “smudge
pots,” which are these things that use smoke
to keep away mosquitos.
PHIL: Okay.
I was wondering, I was imagining mosquitos
wearing little robber masks sneaking in or
something.
PHIL: “For Bavaria!”
It’s either mosquitos or it’s negligence
and manslaughter.
But all the investigating parties initially
agreed that it definitely wasn’t sabotage.
The year after Black Tom, the US cut diplomatic
ties with Germany and entered World War I.
It wasn’t until 1939 that the US declared
Germany responsible for blowing up Black Tom,
along with other acts of sabotage.
They just weren’t equipped to handle an
investigation like this, nothing like it had
ever happened before.
And I want to read you one more quote.
From the Washington Evening Star in 1919.
The German sabotage campaign set the stage
for the passage of the Espionage Act in 1917
and the eventual establishment of domestic
intelligence agencies.
PHIL: So what attracted you to this story?
Black Tom is the signature attack of this
campaign, but the spy ring I think is what
gets me the most.
Just this amazing spy network that these German
diplomats had set up and were operating for
years inside the US.
And just think about an America that isn’t
what it is today where we record everything,
and keep tabs on everyone, you know?
It was just like.... this could have only
happened pre-global America.
