Nuclear Museum Logo
Nuclear Museum Logo

National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Edward Norris

InventorHanford, WA

Columbia University
EngineerManhattan Project Veteran

Edward Norris, an English interior decorator, played a surprising and significant role in the quest to make the gaseous diffusion process a reality.

Frustrated by the inferiority of paint spray guns, Norris developed his own spray gun and centrifugal painting machine. His most innovative development was a very fine, metal mesh.

By 1942 he had developed two sample materials better than what formally trained engineers were producing. He worked extensively with Edward Adler and eventually devised a promising method to separate uranium isotopes. While their electroplated nickel design was rejected in favor of the powered nickel design of Johnson at Kellex Corporation, it is clear Norris contributed greatly to the difficult gaseous diffusion project at a critical hour.

Edward Norris’s Timeline
19421945 Worked on the Manhattan Project in Manhattan.

Related Profiles

Joe A. Coffey

Los Alamos, NM

H.T. Simpson

Hanford, WA

Lyle E. Seeman

Los Alamos, NM

General Lyle Edward “Skip” Seeman was a United States Army Corps of Engineers Officer. He was also a Manhattan Engineering District Special Assistant to General Groves at Los Alamos On May 3, 1945 Col Seeman was appointed by General Leslie Groves to be his Corps of Engineers liaison at Los Alamos.

Ruth P. Rhoades

Chicago, IL

Ruth Rhoades was an associate biologist at the Metallurgical Laboratory in Chicago during the Manhattan Project.