Paul Tibbets and the B-29 Enola Gay, 1945Ĭourtesy National Archives (NWDNS-208-LU-13H-5)Ītomic bomb mushroom cloud over Hiroshima, August 6, 1945Ītomic bomb aftermath, Hiroshima, Japan, 1945 military planners argued that the Japanese surrender on August 10 (signed September 2) averted one million additional civilian and combatant deaths that could have resulted from an Allied invasion of the Japanese Home Islands.Ĭol. Notwithstanding the fearsome novelty of atomic power, the cumulative total of B-29 raids over Tokyo and other Japanese cities with conventional incendiary bombs was far deadlier. The only wartime uses of nuclear weapons to date (1999) claimed more than 100,000 lives and injured or sickened tens of thousands more. … In other words, so terrible is this weapon that man’s first instinct must be NOT to rush into wars but to prevent wars” ( Seattle Star, August 7, 1945).Īfter Japan's failure to surrender immediately, a second B-29, named Bock's Car, was dispatched on August 9 to drop a second atomic bomb, dubbed "Fat Boy," on the city of Nagasaki. It forces this evolution for a plan of peace which must endure or result in the eclipse of man. There is a new premium placed on good sense and understanding between men.
"Thus it becomes necessary that nations must take steps to re-educate mankind, not in technology or mechanics – he’s all but gone too far there – but in psychology and sociology. A tiny nation like Switzerland, if it had the scientists, and prepared itself, might conceivably destroy a nation many times its own size.
The atomic bomb is so powerful, so tremendous in its effect that man might eventually eliminate himself. talk of war, something that MUST be avoided. "This discovery makes it imperative that nations learn to get along with one another, makes. Note well the president’s warning words – ‘We must consider the establishment of an appropriate commission to control the production and use of atomic power within the United States.’ It is one of the greatest scientific advances in the history of man, if not the greatest. "The secret now unveiled is overwhelming. Following is an excerpt: “The best kept secret of the war! That was Hanford, the story of the making of the ‘atomic bomb.’ It is almost inconceivable that so many people could work on a project, so many people figure in making the bombs themselves and not one word leak out as to what actually was being manufactured there. The next day, on August 7 the Seattle Star wrote an editorial on the atomic bomb. An area of four square miles was vaporized. Of the 76,000 buildings in the city, 70,000 were destroyed or damaged. Radiation killed thousands more in the months and years to follow. The number of deaths that day was incomprehensible. at 31,000 feet elevation, the destination was reached and the bomb released.įorty-three seconds later the atom bomb exploded at 1,850 feet over the city of Hiroshima, where 343,000 people resided. During the 6 1/2 hour flight the colonel described to the rest of the crew the 10 1/2 foot long, 9,700 pound bomb, dubbed "Little Boy." As the planes approached Japan, the two B-29 escorts pulled out and the Enola Gay continued alone. (1915-2007) and a few technicians knew that the plane was carrying the atom bomb. The Superfortress was a warplane designed by the Boeing Airplane Company, built by Martin at Omaha, and specially modified by Boeing at Wichtita, Kansas.Īt liftoff from Tinian Island, Enola Gay pilot Colonel Paul W. At that time a B-29 Superfortress named Enola Gay lifted off with two escort B-29s from a small island in the Marianas and flew the 1,500 mile trip to Japan. The mission to bomb Hiroshima began at 2:45 a.m. At Richland, where residents worked exclusively on producing the atom bomb, the town increased in population from next to none to several thousand in two years. The first atomic bombs were produced and constructed at three main sites: Oak Ridge near Knoxville, Tennessee Richland, Washington and near Santa Fe, New Mexico. If they do not now accept our terms, they may expect a rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this earth" ( Seattle Star, p 5). The president said: "The force from which the sun draws its power has been loosed against those who brought war to the Far East. That day, President Harry Truman (1884-1972) announced that the United States had dropped the bomb. The planes fly 1,500 miles to Japan and the Enola Gay drops the bomb. local time, on August 6, 1945, a B-29 Superfortress called Enola Gay, a warplane designed by the Boeing Airplane Company and modified at the company's Wichita, Kansas, plant, lifts off with two escort B-29s from Tinian, a small island in the Marianas. On August 6, 1945, the United States drops an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, the first of two to be dropped on Japan this week.