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Office of Scientific Research and Development PDF Print E-mail

Manhattan Project History Early Government Support 

June 28, 1941

"Whenever the U. S. program bogs down in bureaucratic doubt, Hitler and his war machine rescue it." - Unknown

By the time that Vannevar Bush received the second of three reports issued by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), he had assumed the position of director of the Office of Scientific Research and Development. Established by an executive order from the President, the OSRD strengthened the scientific presence in the federal government. 

Bush, who had lobbied hard for the new setup, now reported directly to President Roosevelt and could evoke the prestige of the White House in his dealings with other federal agencies.

The National Defense Research Committee (NDRC), now headed by James B. Conant, president of Harvard University, became an advisory body responsible for making research and development recommendations to the OSRD. The Uranium Committee, still under Lyman Briggs, was renamed the Office of Scientific Research and Development Section on Uranium and was codenamed "S-1"

Note: The National Academy of Sciences was a well established organization that had been the "center of scientific thought" in the United States for many years. It was headed at the time by Frank Jewett, President of Bell Telephone Labs. The NAS issued three reports between May 17, 1941 and November 9, 1941 dealing with the "uranium question." The third and final report to the OSRD "agreed with the essence of the MAUD report from Britain that an atomic bomb WAS feasible." This 3rd NAS report was forwarded to President Roosevelt on November 27, 1941.

 

 
 
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Atomic Story of the Week

I went to Chicago with another man, a chemist, and the two of us found our way to the University of Chicago and to the Metallurgical Laboratory, which everybody called the Met Lab. We showed our credentials and we got taken to an office where there was a Dupont representative named Dr. Walter Dew. And he sat the two of us down and he said, “Have you made any guesses as to what this is all about?” And of course we’d been doing a lot of guessing but we said “No.” He said “Well, it’s about atomic energy. We are going to use atomic energy to make a bomb.”

He opened a drawer and he pulled out a couple little cubes of metal and threw them on the table and said, “Do you know what this is?” I picked one of them up and it felt very heavy so I said “Oh, I don’t know. It’s very dense.” He said, “Well, that’s uranium. We’re going to make a pile with uranium and graphite, and in this pile we’re going to make a new element called plutonium, and with this plutonium we’re going to make a bomb. Our part of it is to make the plutonium and other people are going to make the bomb. One way to think of it is that you would have people like slices of an orange and all these orange slices would go together and make a bomb.”

HARRY KAMACK, HANFORD

 

 
 
 

Did You Know?

"The world's greatest achievements often happen on the edge of chaos." (Unknown)
 
 

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