The Trinity Project: Testing The Effects of a Nuclear Weapon

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The Trinity Project was a project conducted to test the effects of a nuclear weapon. The Trinity nuclear device was detonated on a 100-foot tower on the Alamogordo Bombing Range in south-central New Mexico at 0530 hours on 16 July 1945. (Rohrer, 1995-2003). This project was organized by the Manhattan Engineer District (MED). This organization worked diligently planning and coordinating all of the logistics for the groundbreaking event. From 1945-1946 over 1000 personnel either worked or visited the test site. The United States was trying to gain nuclear proliferation throughout the world so this project was necessary for our enemies to see the devastation of a nuclear blast. One of the driving forces behind the trinity project was a briefing that President Harry Truman received from one of his fellow contemporaries a savvy gentleman named Jeff Byrnes from South Carolina who had a tremendous nose for politics. It was rumored that Byrnes was little upset for not being selected as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s running mate in the presidential election of 1944. The fact that Byrnes had a great influence in politics; he briefed President Truman on the amount of casualties that The United States might take if they invaded Japan. Byrnes along with the chairman of the Interim committee Henry Stimson stopped information about Atomic research to be shared with the Russian even the British. With that said politics always has a play; the Truman administration was thinking about their image, and if word got out that there was any reluctance to use the atomic bomb and many American lives were lost it would have looked disastrous for the administration. This Committee maybe similar to what we will call a working group... ... middle of paper ... ...gasaki were annihilated. At the onset of this event, all of the people involved in the project really did not take into account of the pictures, fatalities and the overall devastation that the Trinity project would have led to. The reports from those involved said they suffered great remorse Works Cited C.S.C., W. D. (2011). The Most Controversial Decision Truman the atomic Bombs, and the defeat of Japan. University of Notre Dame: Cambridge University Press. http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Tests/Trinity.html. (2003). Retrieved from http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Tests/Trinity.html Rohrer, C. M. (1995-2003). Trininty Atomic Website. Retrieved from Trininty Atomic Website: http://www.cddc.vt.edu/host/atomic/trinity/projtrinity.html Walker, G. (1995-2205). http://www.abomb1.org/. Retrieved from Trinity atomic website: http://www.abomb1.org/

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