Nuclear Museum Logo
Nuclear Museum Logo

National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Jean Tatlock

Communist Party MemberUniversity of California, Berkeley

Family Member of Manhattan Project VeteranWoman Scientist

Jean Tatlock (1914-1944) was an American psychiatrist and Communist Party member.

Tatlock’s father was an English professor at the University of California, Berkeley. From him, she inherited a great love of English literature, particularly the poet John Donne. Tatlock met J. Robert Oppenheimer in 1936 while she was studying at the Stanford University Medical School. By this point, she was already an active member of the Bay Area’s Communist community. She is credited with introducing Oppenheimer to this community, initiating his connections to radical politics that would eventually lead to the revocation of his security clearance almost twenty years later.

Tatlock and Oppenheimer maintained an intense relationship for several years, and according to Oppenheimer, twice came close to getting married. Tatlock broke off the relationship in 1939, but Oppenheimer visited her in San Francisco as late as 1943. Tatlock, who suffered from depression, was found dead on January 5, 1944. Some have suggested foul play was the cause, but most historians have concluded that she most likely committed suicide.

One of Dunne’s sonnets, “Trinity,” shares the same name as the nuclear test conducted by the Manhattan Project on July 16, 1945. Many historians believe it was named as a tribute to Tatlock.

Jean Tatlock's Timeline
1914 Feb 21st Born in Ann Arbor, MI.
1936 Began dating J. Robert Oppenheimer.
1941 Graduated from the Stanford University Medical School.
1944 Jan 5th Committed suicide in San Francisco, CA.

Related Profiles

Marjorie Hall Bradner

Los Alamos, NM

Marjorie Hall Bradner was a secretary at Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project. She was also the wife of Los Alamos physicist Hugh Bradner.

Kenneth May

University of California, Berkeley

Kenneth May was an American mathematician. May was an ardent Communist in Berkeley who was also part of the intellectual community formed by many of the left-leaning physics students at the Radiation Lab at the University of California, Berkeley.

Gordon N. Steele

Oak Ridge, TN

In 1942 Gordon joined the Radiation Laboratory at the Berkeley campus. He worked at the Davis campus as well.

Samuel Isaac Weissman

Los Alamos, NM

Sam Weissman (1912-2007) was an American chemist. Weissman was born in South Bend, Indiana. He received a B.