79 years ago this afternoon (3:25pm), in an abandoned squash court beneath the West Stand of Stagg Field @UChicago, a team led by physicist Enrico Fermi used a secretly-built reactor (Chicago Pile 1) to achieve the world’s first artificial, self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction.
Three scientists—Leona Marshall, Herbert Anderson, and William Sturm—recorded measurements that day in a log book as control rods were slowly removed in order to achieve criticality. See the notation “We’re cookin!” at 3:42:30 Central War Time at the bottom of page 29.
Metallurgical Laboratory head Prof. Arthur Holly Compton called James Conant, chair of the National Defense Research Committee, to share the news in ad hoc code:
Compton—“The Italian navigator has landed in the New World.”
Conant—“How were the natives?”
Compton—“Very friendly.”
To commemorate this historic but secret achievement and honor project director and Italian physicist Enrico Fermi, physicist Eugene Wigner produced and opened a bottle of Chianti Bertolli wine that everyone present silently drank from (using paper cups) and subsequently signed.
Ted Petry, the last of the 49 witnesses to this world-changing event, died in 2018. He was a 17-year-old high school student who worked as a laborer building the 20-foot-tall pile composed of tons of ultra-pure graphite, uranium metal, and uranium oxide.
Chicago Pile 1 led directly to the secret construction of the X-10 graphite reactor at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and the B Reactor at Hanford, Washington. The latter produced plutonium for the first atomic bomb, detonated 957 days later southeast of Socorro in the New Mexico desert.
The original Stagg Field was demolished in 1957. The site was declared a national historic landmark in 1965. In 1967, on the 25th anniversary, a sculpture by Henry Moore was erected to commemorate that momentous day. It stands there still, next to two libraries and a dormitory.
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55 years ago today, the United States conducted the Sterling nuclear test inside Tatum Salt Dome 21 miles southwest of Hattiesburg, Mississippi. A 380-ton device was detonated at a depth of 2,715 feet inside the cavity created by the 5.3-kiloton Salmon test on October 22, 1964.
This was the second of two underground nuclear tests to determine whether decoupled nuclear explosions inside salt domes could be detected and their yields accurately measured. This was done in the context of assessing the verifiability a nuclear test ban.
Today, the site is marked with a granite monument erected by the Department of Defense explaining what happened there, along with a warning not to excavate, drill, or remove any materials from the area.
Tonight in 1949, the US AEC and Air Force conducted a secret experiment at the Hanford Reservation in Washington State, exposing thousands of people living downwind to dangerous levels of radioactive iodine-131 and xenon-133 from freshly-irradiated or “green” uranium fuel.
The purpose of the experiment was to determine if specially-instrumented aircraft could detect emissions from nuclear fuel production facilities by mimicking what were thought to be conditions inside the Soviet Union, in order to better assess Soviet atomic bomb production rates.
The fuel was dissolved in acid at the T Plant just 16 days after being removed from a reactor at Hanford (rather than the typical 90-day waiting period to allow the most dangerous radioactivity to decay to safer levels). In addition, filters on the high stack were disconnected.
Today in 1958, a B-47 on ground alert at Chennault AFB, Louisiana, carrying a sealed-pit H-bomb containing no plutonium caught fire when the Jet-Assisted Take-Off (JATO) bottles accidentally discharged during the pilot’s acceptance check, pushing the plane into a towing vehicle.
The aircraft and most of the bomb were destroyed in the fire, but the secondary remained Intact and the tritium reservoir was subsequently recovered. Contamination was reportedly limited to the weapon residue “slag” within the aircraft wreckage.
At the time of this accident, the B-47 bomber could be armed with B15, B28, B36, or B39 thermonuclear bombs. It could also carry the B18, the highest-yield US uranium fission bomb ever built (500 kilotons). Of these weapons, the B28 definitely utilized a sealed-pit design.
Tonight in 1975, the guided missile cruiser USS Belknap (CG-26) collided with the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) when the Belknap turned into the Kennedy's path in rough seas during night-flying exercises in the Mediterranean Sea about 70 miles east of Sicily.
The Kennedy's massive flight deck sliced into the Belknap's superstructure, severing a fuel line on the Kennedy and setting off multiple fires on the Belknap, which burned out of control for two-and-a-half hours and came within 40 feet of the Belknap's nuclear weapons magazine.
Inside that magazine were Terrier surface-to-air missiles armed with W45 nuclear warheads (with a yield of 1 or 5 kilotons). The Kennedy was also carrying nuclear weapons at the time of the accident: approximately 100 air-delivered gravity bombs.
Tonight in 1963, the Presidential Emergency Satchel was caught on film at Andrews AFB after newly-sworn-in President Lyndon B. Johnson returned from Dallas, Texas, on Air Force One following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy (Johnson is in the crowd at center left).
Here's a short film clip:
Although Johnson was informed by White House military aide Gen. Chester Clifton about the existence and purpose of the “Football” for the first time sometime after he was sworn in, he was not actually briefed on the Single Integrated Operational Plan until August 20, 1964.
One advantage of being older is that you have often actually lived through the history you're discussing, rather just hearing or reading about it long after the fact. During its first term, the Reagan admin absolutely planned to fight and prevail in a nuclear war. Some evidence:
Lastly, I never claimed “The Day After” was a masterpiece of filmmaking. From today's vantage point, it has some obvious weaknesses. But watching it _collectively_ (something we seldom get to experience anymore) _at that moment in time_ was an absolutely compelling experience.