The Port Chicago 50:
Disaster, Mutiny, and the
Fight for Civil Rights
by Steve Sheinkin
Middle School Roaring Brook 190 pp.
1/14 978-1-59643-796-8 $19.99 g
e-book ed. 978-1-59643-983-2 $9.99
Sheinkin follows Bomb (rev. 11/12) with an account of another aspect of the Second World War, stemming from an incident that seems small in scope but whose ramifications would go on to profoundly change the armed forces and the freedom of African Americans to serve their country. The Port Chicago 50 was a group of navy recruits at Port Chicago in California doing one of the few service jobs available to black sailors at the beginning of the war: loading bombs and ammunition onto battleships. “All the officers standing on the pier and giving orders were white. All the sailors handling explosives were black.” When, as seems inevitable given the shoddy safety practices, there was an explosion that left more than three hundred dead, fifty men refused to go back to work, occasioning a trial for mutiny. Sheinkin focuses the events through the experience of Joe Small, who led the protest against the dangerous and unequal working conditions, but the narrative loses momentum as it tries to move between Small’s experience and its larger causes and effects. Still, this is an unusual entry point for the study of World War II and the nascent civil rights movement. Photographs are helpful, and documentation is thorough. Picture credits and index not seen.
From the March/April 2014 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
The post Review of The Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny, and the Fight for Civil Rights appeared first on The Horn Book.