The regional park will be the first in Contra Costa County named after a Black person.
And it will feature a visitor center with information about the Port Chicago explosion in 1944 that killed 320 Navy sailors and servicemen — mostly Black men, because the military was segregated. The men were loading munitions onto a cargo vessel when they detonated.
“It’s horrifying what happened, and it’s horrifying that it’s not more broadly known,” Elizabeth Echols, a board member, said at Tuesday’s meeting. “And I think it’s so important to have this name the courage of these men who risked their lives to protest an unjust and racist system.”from local groups and agencies, including Black labor collectives and chapters of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, as well as the Concord City Council.
Port Chicago, built on the banks of Suisun Bay in Contra Costa County, was decommissioned in the late 1960s. The Navyin 2019 and plans to transfer thousands more acres to the city of Concord for development of a large housing community. Echols said at the meeting that despite growing up in the Bay Area, she “never once” was taught in school or told about the Port Chicago disaster.
Alexander Wills, a board member with the local group Citizens for Historical Equity, said Marshall created and distributed pamphlets that called attention to the Port Chicago explosion and unjust treatment of workers that followed — an important example of how to keep people informed.
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