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The Uranium Committee PDF Print E-mail

Manhattan Project History Early Government Support

Dr. Lyman J. Briggs - Dir. Bureau of Standards

Lt. Col. Keith F. Adamson - Army Representative

Cdr. Gilbert C. Hoover - Navy Representative

October 1939

"If I had known that the Germans would not succeed in constructing the atom bomb, I would never have lifted a finger." - Albert Einstein

In October of 1939, as he had promised Albert Einstein, President Roosevelt established the Uranium Committee, which met for the first time on October 21st.

Lyman J. Briggs, director of the National Bureau of Standards, was chosen to head up this important advisory committee on uranium.

This committee, which included both civilian and military representation, took up the task of evaluating where the United States stood with regards to uranium research and to, more importantly, recommend an appropriate role for the federal government.

In one of its first, and most important actions, the Committee recommended that limited funding be authorized for research on uranium isotope separation as well as Enrico Fermi's and Leo Szilard's work on nuclear chain reactions at Columbia University in New York City.

The work of the committee gained momentum in April of 1940 when it was learned that the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Germany had undertaken an extensive research program involving uranium.

NOTE: The first meeting of the Advisory Committee on Uranium met on October 21, 1939 - a Saturday. In attendance were Lyman Briggs; Briggs' assistant; Adamson for the Army; Hoover for the Navy; Alexander Sachs; Leo Szilard; Eugene Wigner; Edward Teller; and Richard Roberts. Teller represented Enrico Fermi who refused to attend because of a dispute with the Navy Dept.

A little more than week later, on November 1st, the Uranium Committee issued a report to President Roosevelt, stating among other things: "If the reaction turns out to be explosive in character, it would provide a possible source of bombs with a destructiveness vastly greater than anything now known" and "we recommend adequate support for a thorough investigation."

As verified by Roosevelt's aide, "Pa" Watson, the President read the report and "wished to keep it on file." There it remained for several months, well into 1940.

 

 
 
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Atomic Story of the Week

Before any of the important visitors arrived, we knew that the decision had been made that this would be a laboratory. About a month or two earlier, a “mega-bulldozer” came through the place and set about redoing things—roads and everything else. The construction work was being done at a tremendous rate.

There were four of us who were seniors at the Los Alamos Boys Ranch School. To fill in for one of the faculty, I was teaching the math class. We knew the school was going to be closed because of the war. I mean you just felt it. But we were all wondering why the government would put anything up here on the mesa. It was so hard to get water and there was no good transportation or railroads nearby and so on. It was just a crazy place to do any war thing. Secrecy? You would do so much better, if secrecy is what you want, to locate it in the middle of a military compound. Just anything else.

So we used to kid from the very beginning about what kind of science-fiction laboratory they might have here with white-coated scientists. Then these two guys show up, one wearing a porkpie hat and the other wearing a fedora, a hat that we thought was uniquely E. O. Lawrence. Of course the porkpie, there was just no question that this was Oppenheimer.

We knew enough from physics class and publications of the current physics issues that fission could be used to make a chain reaction. So when those two showed up after this place had already been run over by the mega-bulldozer, there was absolutely no question in the mind of a couple of us smart ass kids that this meant that they would be making a nuclear bomb.

STIRLING COLGATE, LOS ALAMOS

 
 
 

Did You Know?

"To avert a vast, indefinite butchery, by a few explosions seemed, after all our perils and toils, a miracle of deliverance." ( Winston Churchill; quote submitted by Michael White of Virginia)
 
 

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