Table
of Contents
Land
of Two Rivers
"All
The Water for All the
Land"
Remaking
Community:
McNary Dam
Making
Way for
John Day
Umatilla
Today and Tomorrow

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The
Umatilla Depot: Community Disaster
On
March 21, 1944 tragedy struck the Umatilla Depot as six civilian workers
were killed when an ammunition storage igloo exploded. The blast, felt
as far away as Lewiston, Idaho, killed five men and one woman. Though
there was no official explanation, community members and depot workers
speculated that a defective bomb, a dropped bomb, or the tines of a forklift
piercing the igloo caused the accident.

Inspecting the remnants
of the igloo explosion. Courtesy of Umatilla Depot Outreach Office
. . . The biggest piece that was found is
over in our parade field. It's a memorial now. We have a plaque on it.
. . Seems like it was the door to one of the trucks that was sitting
outside the igloo, it was down by the river, which is like three miles.
. . The igloos are actually designed so they're thicker at the bottom,
the cement is, like two feet thick, and they eventually get thinner,
up to one foot at the top. So if there is an explosion, everything's
forced up, so it doesn't affect the igloos on the sides. And the front
wall, it's cement, and it falls forward and then the explosion goes
up. Did what it was designed to do. The engineers knew what they were
doing. Donna Fuzi interview, April
1999


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