Nuclear Museum Logo
Nuclear Museum Logo

National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Hyman Goldsmith

PhysicistChicago, IL

Manhattan Project VeteranScientist

Hyman H. Goldsmith (1907-1949) was an American physicist.

In 1943, Goldsmith became coordinator of information for the Metallurgical Lab in Chicago. After Hiroshima, when the existence of the atomic bomb became public knowledge, Goldsmith was one of many atomic scientists who advocated for control nuclear weapons. After the war, he helped establish the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists with John Simpson and Eugene Rabinowitch. He served as a co-editor with Rabinowitch until his death. While he never wrote an article for the Bulletin, he was a vigilant editor and worked long-hours to perfect others’ works. He also worked as chief of the information and publications division at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York after the war.

On August 7, 1949, Hyman died tragically at the age of 42 after being swept over a waterfall while swimming in the West River in Vermont.

Related Profiles

David P. Rudolph

Los Alamos, NM

Parke N. Miller

Tinian Island

Parke N. Miller served in the 320th Troop Carrier Squadron.

Lillie Allred

Y-12 Plant

Allred worked as a chemical operator at the Y-12 plant at Oak Ridge during the Manhattan Project. While at Oak Ridge, she was nominated as a contestant in the “Miss Atomic Bomb” beauty pageant.

Wallace Reynolds

Tinian Island

Before the war, Reynolds worked closely with Ernest Lawrence planning and developing the cyclotrons at the University of California at Berkeley, as well as working in the radiation lab at there.