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National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Manhattan Project Scientists & Leaders

Key Document
Rotblat Account
October 26, 2015
From Leaving the Bomb Project by Joseph Rotblat In March 1944, I experienced a disagreeable shock. At that time I was living with the Chadwicks in their house on the Mesa, before moving later to the “Big House,” the quarters for single scientists. General Leslie Groves, when visiting Los Alamos, frequently came to the Chadwicks […]
Key Document
Tibbets on Hiroshima
From Operational History of the 509th Bombardment At 0245 Tinian time on Monday, 6 August 1945, Col Tibbets and crew took off in the Enola Gay. The crew consisted of the following people: SSgt George R. Caron, tail gunner; Sgt Joe S. Stiborik, radar operator; SSgt Wyatt E. Duzenbury, flight engineer; PFC Richard H. Nelson, […]
Key Document
Stimson on the Bomb
From “The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb” by Henry Stimson In recent months there has been much comment about the decision to use atomic bombs in attacks on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This decision was one of the gravest made by our government in recent years, and it is entirely proper […]
Key Document
Gillespie Letter
October 15, 1945 Dear Mr. Gillespie, This letter is to acknowledge your contribution to the development of the atomic bomb. The striking success of this project was made possible by the work and sacrifices of the military personnel. According to your group leader, you are to be especially commended for seven months’ work on one […]
Key Document
Agnew on Gen. Groves
By Harold Agnew On the mission to Hiroshima, I was assigned to the instrument plane, The Great Artiste, which was with equipped with scientific instruments to measure the yield. I had a movie camera and after we completed our measurements, I filmed the Hiroshima cloud with black-and-white film. For the Nagasaki mission, I equipped the […]
Key Document
Cowan: Nuclear Legacy
By George Cowan A major legacy of the “Manhattan Project” is that its name and its formula for success have become synonymous with achieving seemingly impossible national objectives. What were the essential elements of the Manhattan Project? I’ve thought about this question often over the years. One thing was clear. A prerequisite for any such […]
Key Document
Bohr Letter to UN
October 21, 2015
I address myself to the organization, founded for the purpose to further co-operation between nations on all problems of common concern, with some considerations regarding the adjustment of international relations required by modern development of science and technology. At the same time as this development holds out such great promises for the improvement of human […]
Key Document
Oppenheimer’s Farewell Speech
I think there are issues which are quite simple and quite deep, and which involve us as a group of scientists—involve us more, perhaps than any other group in the world. I think that it can only help to look a little at what our situation is—at what has happened to us—and that this must […]
Key Document
Stimson Press Release
WAR DEPARTMENT.  Washington, D.C. IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 6, 1945 STATEMENT OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR The recent use of the atomic bomb over Japan, which was today made known by the President, is the culmination of years of herculean effort on the part of science and industry working in cooperation with the military authorities. This […]
Key Document
Truman Statement on Hiroshima
THE WHITE HOUSE Washington, D.C. IMMEDIATE RELEASE —August 6, 1945 STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES Sixteen hours ago an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima, an important Japanese Army base. That bomb had more power than 20,000 tons of T.N.T. It had more than two thousand times the blast power of […]