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FDR Gives Final Approval PDF Print E-mail

December 28, 1942

"He was the biggest sonovabitch I've ever met in my life, but also one of the most capable individuals.  He had an ego second to none..." - Kenneth D. Nichols; Groves assistant; speaking of General Groves after the war.

The S-1 Executive Committee met to consider the Lewis Report on December 9, 1942, just weeks after Allied troops landed in North Africa.  Most of the morning session was spent evaluating the controversial recommendations that only a small electromagnetic plant be built.  Lewis and his colleagues based their recommendations on the belief that Lawrence could not produce enough uranium 235 to be of military significance.  But since the calutron could provide enriched samples quickly, the committee supported the construction of a "small" electromagnetic plant.

     Conant disagreed with the Lewis committee's assessment, believing that uranium had more weapon potential than plutonium.  And since he knew the that gaseous diffusion could not provide any enriched uranium until the gaseous diffusion plant was in full operation, he supported the one method that might, if all went well, produce enough uranium 235 to build a bomb in 1944.

     During the afternoon, the S-1 Executive Committee went over a draft Groves had prepared for Bush to send to the President.  It supported the Lewis committee's report except that it recommended skipping the pilot plant stage for the pile.  After Conant and the Lewis committee met on December 10 and reached a compromise on the electromagnetic method, Groves' draft was amended and forwarded to Bush.

     On December 28, 1942, President Roosevelt approved the establishment of what ultimately became a government investment in excess of $2 billion, $.5 billion of which was itemized in Bush's report submitted on December 16.  The Manhattan Project was authorized to build full-scale gaseous diffusion (K25 at Oak Ridge) and plutonium plants (X-10 Reactor at Oak Ridge) and the compromise electromagnetic plant (Y-12 at Oak Ridge), as well as heavy water production facilities.  In his report, Bush reaffirmed his belief that bombs possibly could be produced during the first half of 1945 but cautioned that an earlier delivery was unlikely.

     No schedule could guarantee that the United States would overtake Germany in the race for the bomb, but by the beginning of 1943 the Manhattan Project had the complete support of President Roosevelt and the military leadership, the services of some of the nation's most distinguished scientists, and a sense of urgency driven by fear.  Much had been achieved between Pearl harbor and the end of 1942.

     No single decision created the American atomic bomb project.  Roosevelt's December 28 decision was inevitable in light of numerous earlier ones that, in incremental fashion, committed the United States to pursuing atomic weapons.

 
 
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Atomic Story of the Week

There were a lot of rumors about what was going on at Hanford. Everything was coming in, nothing was going out. And some people said, "Oh, that's a sandpaper factory. They hold up a glued sheet of paper and the dust coats it." Others said that the gigantic facilities rising from the desert were going to be FDR's winter place. At a show-and-tell session at school, a kid says, "I know what they're making. They're making toilet paper. My dad brings home two rolls in his lunch bucket everyday."

I remember an incident when one of the workers was leaving the plant with a bunch of copper wire wrapped around his waist. A patrolman noticed him, gave him a pat search and said, "Step over here, please." The rest of us went on. We never saw the guy again.

ROGER ROHRBACHER, HANFORD
 
 
 

Did You Know?

"When you get to the end of all light you know and it's time to step into darkness of the unknown, faith is knowing that one of two things shall happen: either you'll be given something solid to stand on, or you will be taught how to fly." (Edward Teller; quote provided by Scott Fisher of Tennessee)
 
 

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