Skip to main content
Contra Costa County Header
File #: RES 2025-231    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Consent Resolution Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 6/26/2025 In control: BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
On agenda: 7/8/2025 Final action:
Title: ADOPT Resolution No. 2025-231 recognizing July 17, 2025 as Port Chicago Remembrance Day, as recommended by Supervisor Scales-Preston.
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultTallyAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
No records to display.
To: Board of Supervisors
From: Shanelle Scales-Preston, District V Supervisor
Report Title: ADOPT Resolution to recognize July 17th as Port Chicago Remembrance Day, as recommended by Supervisor Scales-Preston.
?Recommendation of the County Administrator ? Recommendation of Board Committee


RECOMMENDATIONS:

ADOPT Resolution to recognize July 17th as Port Chicago Remembrance Day, as recommended by Supervisor Scales-Preston.

FISCAL IMPACT:

None

BACKGROUND:

The Port Chicago Naval Magazine, located in Contra Costa County, was a critical hub for the U.S. Navy's Pacific operations during World War II, where thousands of African American Sailors were exclusively assigned to the dangerous task of loading explosives onto cargo ships; and on the night of July 17, 1944, a catastrophic explosion resulted in the deadliest home front disaster of the war, killing 320 people and injuring 390 others, and inflicting widespread damage on the nearby town of Port Chicago, California.

CONSEQUENCE OF NEGATIVE ACTION:

None










The Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County, California
body

IN THE MATTER OF recognizing July 17th as Port Chicago Remembrance Day

WHEREAS, the Port Chicago Naval Magazine, located in Contra Costa County, was a critical hub for the U.S. Navy's Pacific operations during World War II, where thousands of African American Sailors were exclusively assigned to the dangerous task of loading explosives onto cargo ships; and on the night of July 17, 1944, a catastrophic explosion resulted in the deadliest home front disaster of the war, killing 320 people and injuring 390 others, and inflicting widespread damage on the nearby town of Port Chicago, California; and
WHEREAS, 258 surviving African American Sailors, citing unaddressed safety concerns, protested the order to resume loading ammunition, drawing national attention to racial discrimination and hazardous working conditions in the military, and fifty of those Sailors, known as the Port Chicago 50...

Click here for full text