Nuclear Museum Logo
Nuclear Museum Logo

National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Irwin P. Sharpe was born in 1921 and died just short of his 100th birthday in 2021. He was recruited for the Manhattan Project by his employer, General Electric, after he graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in engineering in 1942. His work took place in the Woolworth Building in Manhattan, where he played a key role in developing pumps and seals that were used in the K-25 gaseous diffusion plant at Oak Ridge. He and his team encountered several challenges posed by the highly corrosive uranium hexafluoride gas. He made several trips to Oak Ridge to test their inventions. Sharpe was part of the Kellex Corporation which was instrumental to the success of the Manhattan Project. 

Irwin P. Sharpe

Kellex Award Ceremony Program, Page 1

Kellex Award Ceremony Program, Page 2

Kellex Award Ceremony Program, Page 3

Kellex Award Ceremony Program, Page 4

Newspaper articles on Manhattan Project work in Manhattan

Related Profiles

William L. “Bud” Uanna

Oak Ridge, TN

William Lewis "Bud" Uanna played a critical role in maintaining security of the atomic bomb project.

R. W. Lutz

Research & Development/300 Area

Lutz worked in the 300 Area at Hanford during the Manhattan Project.

Francis Bell III

Tinian Island

Francis Bell III served in the 393rd Bombardment Squadron.

Anna B. Adolphson

Chicago, IL

Anna B. Adolphson was a laboratory technician in the Health Division at the Metallurgical Laboratory in Chicago during the Manhattan Project.