Nuclear Museum Logo
Nuclear Museum Logo

National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Ardes Shea (née Memmott) worked in a DuPont office at Hanford, WA during the Manhattan Project.

Ardes was born in Scipio, Utah in December of 1922. She was a college student in Logan, Utah studying science at the time of the Pearl Harbor attacks. This event, and the subsequent entrance of the U.S. into World War II, redirected her plans away from a college degree and toward the U.S. war effort.

She left school and became a supervisor at a DuPont defense facility in Salt Lake City, before eventually accepting a classified position in the office that managed the construction of a plutonium production reactor in Hanford, Washington. She lived in the women’s barracks at Hanford. Ardes said that not until the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima did she realize what her contribution to the war effort entailed.

After her contract for the Hanford Project expired, she chose to move back to Salt Lake City, where she found employment at a supply depot. There, she met Jim Shea at Coconut Grove Ballroom and the two married on V-J Day 1945. In 2016, Ardes published “It’s Classified!”, a brief memoir recounting her experience at Hanford. In it, she recalls her thoughts and emotions as she maneuvered through the maze of bureaucratic paperwork at the site, found friends in a new and challenging environment, and managed her work successfully despite the barriers of secrecy.

Ardes Shea passed away on May 24, 2016 at the age of 93.

Information courtesy of Peter Shea, Ardes Shea’s son, and Robert B. Smith.

Guarded entrance to the women’s barracks area, very likely where Ardes lived for the year there. 

High aerial view NNW of whole site and beyond.  Columbia River on the right meandering North and then West in the distance.

The main administration and office building.  Women’s barracks area behind to the upper left.  Possibly where Ardes worked.  The buildings to the right are described as the hospital area.

View due West over the Admin. Building and beyond to large “Trailer Tent & Camper Area” for workers who have relatives on site.

Related Profiles

John E. Mahoney

Los Alamos, NM

Harold J. Smith

Los Alamos, NM

Bonnie Rogers

Oak Ridge, TN

Bonnie Pauline Hardwick Rogers worked at the Y-12 Plant, operating the machinery separating the uranium isotope U-235 from it's heavier counterpart U-238.

Louis H. Hempelmann

Los Alamos, NM

Louis Henry Hempelmann (1914-1993) was Director of the Health Group at the Los Alamos site of the Manhattan Project.