In August of 1946, General Leslie Groves, Chief of the Manhattan
Project, ordered 60 young officers to Sandia, New Mexico. In a
project so wrapped in secrecy that few know of it even a
half-century later, Groves charged them to learn how to assemble
the early and highly complex atomic bombs. With that goal
accomplished, they established a school to train additional
assembly teams and the weaponeers and bomb commanders needed for
the services' atomic-capable aircraft. Although the wartime atomic
scientists believed such tasks lay beyond the ken of military
personnel, the Sandia Pioneers soon maintained even the bombs'
fissionable cores and assisted the Atomic Energy Commission
scientists and technicians in their pursuit of improved bomb
designs. The secret history of the young officers who replaced the
scientists that had assembled the first atomic bombs, proving that
the military was capable of building and maintaining the atomic
stockpile, is told here.
Possessed of a very special skill, the Pioneers also contributed
to the construction and assembly facilities aboard aircraft
carriers and at airbases in the United States and England. With the
AEC lacking enough technicians to conduct the 1948 atomic tests at
Eniwetok, Groves sent many of the Pioneers to assist scientists
testing improvements in the design of bombs' fissionable cores.
Those tests demonstrated that the new designs increased the bombs'
yield while making better use of scarce plutonium, thereby
permitting a dramatic increase in the size of the atomic
stockpile.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!