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Investigations
 
Is this shell from a devastating act of foreign sabotage on American soil?
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Weighing Evidence

WEIGHING EVIDENCE

(Dur: 8.10)

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WATCH SEASON 7 HIGHLIGHTS .

(Dur: 4.31)

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BLACK TOM SHELL

AIRED: Season 6, Episode 7
AIRING: Season 7, Episode 10
THE DETECTIVE: Gwen Wright
THE PLACE: Maryland and New Jersey

THE CASE:

A woman in Whitehouse Station, NJ has an explosive artifact in her possession: a large, intact artillery shell, along with a note in her mother's handwriting which reads “Black Tom Explosion of 1914.”

Elaine's mother's record-keeping is off; it was not 1914, but July 30, 1916 when a German spy ring carried out a well-planned set of synchronized explosions on Black Tom Island in New York's harbor, using the United States' own cache of munitions produced to aid Britain and France in World War I.

Two million pounds of exploding ammunition rocked the country as far away as Philadelphia, blew the windows out of nearly every high rise in lower Manhattan, injuring hundreds.

History Detectives determines whether this shell was involved in one of the earliest foreign terrorist attacks on American soil.

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Feature: Wartime Acts of Sabotage
During wartime, one of the most effective weapons in any country’s arsenal is sabotage: attacking the war engine itself by crippling its arteries.

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