National Museum of Nuclear Science & History
J. A. Lane worked for the Roane-Anderson Company.
Treadwell worked at the 100-B and 100-D Areas at Hanford during the Manhattan Project.
Solomon “Sol” Wexler (1919-1996) was an American chemist. Wexler was born in Milwaukee and received a B.
Mary Lou Curtis joined the Manhattan Project in Dayton, Ohio in 1943. Mrs. Curtis worked in the Counting Room at Monsanto’s Unit III facility, where she developed new methods to measure and analyze radioactive materials, such as polonium, which was used as the trigger for the atomic bombs.