National Museum of Nuclear Science & History
E. B. Wallace worked for the Tennessee Eastman Corporation at the Y-12 Plant.
Julian Schwinger (1918-1994) was an American theoretical physicist and the 1965 Nobel Prize winner. During the summer of 1943, Schwinger briefly worked on the development of the atomic bomb at the University of Chicago’s Metallurgical Laboratory.
August “Gus” Knuth was a millwright and carpenter who helped construct Chicago Pile-1. He was present on December 2, 1942 when the pile went critical in the first self-sustaining chain reaction in history.
Car worked at the 200 West Area at Hanford during the Manhattan Project.