Wendover’s Atomic Secret
How B-29 crews trained to drop the bomb.
- By Carl Posey
- Air & Space magazine, March 2011
During the war, Wendover Army Air Base was one of the country's most secretive locations.
Wendover AFB History Office
(Page 2 of 4)
Even as the Silverplates gave up their guns, the first standard B-29s touched down on Saipan, an island in the Northern Marianas that U.S. forces had taken in June 1944. Seabees (the Navy’s Construction Battalions, or CBs) were soon turning Tinian, Saipan’s southern neighbor, into a vast complex of airfields. North Field, with four 8,000-foot runways, would eventually be the world’s biggest airport, with hundreds of B-29s leaving to strike Japan.
GENERAL LESLIE GROVES, the Army engineer commanding the Manhattan Project, wanted someone on the airplane who knew about the device and could monitor its arming and fusing systems en route to a target—a crewman he called a weaponeer. His ideal candidate would be a service academy graduate and regular officer, an ordnance expert, and a combat pilot. Groves found his man in Frederick Ashworth, a young Navy commander and Annapolis graduate with a strong ordnance background who had commanded a squadron of Grumman TBF Avengers at Guadalcanal. "I met Parsons in Washington," recalled Ashworth in a 2004 lecture to Los Alamos scientists, when he was a retired vice admiral. "He told me to pick up my orders to Wendover Army Air Base in Utah."
Ashworth had first visited Wendover in 1924 while driving cross-country with his parents. Twenty years later, the bleak, bleached community, population about 100, hadn’t changed much. It lay perched on the barren eastern rim of a salt-flat desert, with its slightly larger sister city, West Wendover, on the Nevada side. The towns linked two very different cultures. Within the walls of the State-Line Hotel, for example, you could eat dinner in sedate Utah, but drink and gamble in rowdy Nevada. Civilization, in the form of Salt Lake City, was 110 miles east.
Sprawled upon the salt crust just south of town, Wendover Army Air Base had been activated in 1942, and was on its way to becoming a little Army Air Forces city of white frame barracks, family bungalows, service clubs, and a 300-bed hospital. Seven large hangars sprang up on the field, and three 8,100-foot paved runways were laid. The natural silence of the place was now shattered by the roar of B-17s and B-24s training for Europe, and later P-47s. Now it would be the B-29s’ turn, for the field had been selected as the home of Tibbets’ command, formalized in December 1944 as the 509th Composite Group.
The 509th was a veritable air force unto itself. Its combat arm was the 393rd Bombardment Squadron (Very Heavy), then training B-29 crews at Fairmont, Nebraska. Twenty Silverplate B-29s came to Wendover—15 used to train crews and five dedicated to a drop-test program for Los Alamos. The 320th Troop Carrier Squadron, known as the Green Hornet Line for the verdant livery on its C-54s, became the group’s private airline. The field was also home to the 216th Army Air Force Base Unit (Special), which included a flight-test section with an ordnance unit that made the test bombs for the drops.
Ashworth was met at Wendover by Norman Ramsey and driven into the desert, where Ramsey told him they were developing an atomic bomb. Ashworth liked the work, but said he didn’t want to bring his wife and two young children to Wendover. Ramsey managed to move him to Los Alamos. Over the next six months, Ashworth and others on his team would shuttle to the Utah field from Kirtland Army Air Base, near Albuquerque.
But the 509th and the 216th stayed at Wendover. The diverse community of airmen and -women, physicists and technicians, wives and children was an imitation of small-town America. Because everyone was young and the country was at war, most of the newcomers took the Wendover experience in stride. They accepted the rudimentary base housing, knowing they were lucky to find anything at all; many rented rooms and trailers in town. Families hiked, picnicked, and skied in the nearby pine-covered hills. Men living in the barracks played poker; some raced their cars, two abreast, down the arrow-straight two-lane highway between Wendover and Salt Lake City, sometimes passing a bottle back and forth between them. Pilots often announced their return from a training flight by buzzing their homes.
But the community was also suffocated by a pall of secrecy. Concentrating families in one remote location provided cover for the clandestine program unfolding at Wendover, and it also made dependents easier to control. The FBI and Wendover military police monitored interactions between people, and even between work areas. Airplane people were barred from talking shop with ordnance people, and never saw one of the test bomb units being assembled or loaded. Husbands could not discuss their work with wives. Telephones were tapped, letters opened. The place crawled with undercover FBI agents, trolling for leaks. People who asked or answered too many questions wound up in the Aleutians. The discernible future was a blank to everyone but Paul Tibbets and a few Los Alamos scientists.
"I’ve never been to a place that was so secret," B-29 commander James Price recalled in an interview in 2009. He had arrived at Wendover after flying B-17s on Guadalcanal and training B-17 crews in Louisiana. Like everyone at Wendover, Price had no sense of where the job would take him. Then, one evening over drinks at the officers’ club, Norman Ray, another aircraft commander, pointed out a man standing at the bar. "Ray asked if I knew who that was," said Price. "It was Dr. Ernest Lawrence," the famed physicist for whom the Livermore, California lab is named. "He was from the University of California at Berkeley. I’d read about his work before I got in the Air Force. When Ray told me that, I knew exactly what we were going to do. I wouldn’t talk in the car, afraid it was bugged. But later I told Ray, ‘We’re going to drop an atomic bomb.’"
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Comments (15)
I grew up in Ely, Nevada, an old mining town 127 miles south of Wendover. In 1944, when I was 11, my mother and I took a bus to Salt Lake City, Utah to get my first pair of glasses. The bus stopped at the State Line Hotel for a break and I remember going in and observing the large lobby with a line down the center, marking the Utah/Nevada state border. Gambling and drinking was going on in the West side of the room but the Utah side was quite bare. I do remember that it was explained to me that there was some kind of a military air base there but I never knew the full details. Until now. Reading this article. Wow, so close to history but unaware of how that history would change the world.
Posted by Dave Shaver on January 26,2011 | 11:44 PM
July 2010, in Dearborn ME I was priveleged to hear Captain Theodore "Dutch" Van Kirk - the last surviving crew member of the Enola Gay speak. He told us this wonderful story. I don't like second hand history, but if you can tolerate a tale with that caveat, read on, it may amuse.
Dutch told a room of about 600 people how Col. Paul Tibbits, requisitioned the B29s for the Fat Man / Little Boy missions and was turned down. He re-submitted the requisition with the magic word "Silverplate" and was again turned down.
Dutch said that the 1-star general who had turned down the B29 requisition twice, despite the magic word, was summoned to a room full of generals. On entering he was told by a 4-star: "Sit in that chair over there ... 'Colonel.'
After a very long and very awkward silence the 4-Star said: "Any questions?"
Posted by Scott Rainey on January 29,2011 | 03:14 PM
A few months before he passed away my Dad told me a story about one of the Secret Projects he worked on during WW II. Part of the necessary work to make the 33 foot bomb bay work was the bomb bay doors.
Aeronca, in Middletown, Ohio, received the contract to build the doors. As he explained it to me, it was somewhat complex.
Being 33' in length, and going from sea level to 30,000 feet, the Aluminum would expand and contract. They had to figure out how to stabilize the assembly so it would work in both arenas. It wanted to 'warp' and it took several weeks to figure out a solution.
Although the Long Bay B-29 never saw combat, we did have a connection to the Atomic bombs that ended World War II.
Posted by John Totten on March 1,2011 | 08:59 PM
My mother was one of the first people to set up Wendover Air Base. There wasn't much out there from what she's told me and they stayed in town at the State Line Motel. She can still hold my attention for hours telling me stories about her days at Wendover Field.
Posted by Don Halberg on March 7,2011 | 06:34 PM
My father was in the army air corps at march field near riverside and served in the pacific during ww2.
His friend, Dave Semple, was the navigator/bombardier on one of those B-29s later named "dave's dream" which dropped the bikini bomb in 1946.
Posted by Bill K on March 8,2011 | 11:01 AM
I have done a lot of reading on the subject of atomic weapons, and this article is the first mention I have come across of "Thin Man" being a long cased plutonium bomb. Every other source deals with "Little Boy" and "Fat Man". Little Boy being a uranium based device, working on the gun principle, and Fat Man an implosion based plutonium weapon. I have never heard of a gun type plutonium device... which the shape of Thin Man as described would indicate.
I have also come across an anecdote about the final assembly of the Fat Man weapon. The implosion bomb requires the simultaneous detonation of a number of high explosive "lenses" which focus a shock wave onto the plutonium core, thus crushing it into a smaller, denser sphere until it reaches critical mass and the nuclear chain reaction starts. When the live nuclear Fat Man was being assembled, the technicians went to plug the detonator wiring loom into that coming from the fuses...and found they had two plugs and no socket!! To rectify this in accordance with the instructions in force would have meant completely dismantling the bomb and starting again. Knowing that it was essential to drop this weapon as soon after the Hiroshima bomb as possible, to give the impression to the enemy that there was a good supply of atomics, one of the technicians took a number of extension leads and a soldering iron in to the bomb assembly area and changed one plug for a socket, enabling the fusing system to connect with the detonators, and the bomb to be dropped on schedule!
Posted by John Douglas on March 9,2011 | 07:52 AM
How did the replacement of the Wright Cyclones Engines with Fuel Injected Engines affect the performance and reliability of the aircraft ?
Posted by Frank Sobol on March 16,2011 | 04:13 PM
Regarding 'thin man' , Wikipedia has a good article under that heading . It appears authoritative
Posted by Steve C on March 19,2011 | 07:42 PM
Having had the good fortune over the years to sit and talk with many crew members (and their wives) of the 509th air crews, I found this article to be very well written. Their personal stories are just fascinating. The aviators, and of course, nor their wives, ever had any idea of when the crews would fly off, where they were going, or when they would be back.
A sign at Wendover Army Airfield read:
WHAT YOU HEAR HERE
WHAT YOU SEE HERE
WHEN YOU LEAVE HERE
LET IT STAY HERE!
I wonder how that would work out today?
There are already a few good books out there so I created a web site in honor of one of the crews.
www.laggindragon.com
Posted by Scott Davis on April 7,2011 | 10:48 PM
A VERY HELPFUL "Reference Desk" researcher at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum dug through materials on my request earlier this month to come up with the following interesting added factoids.
The second special weapon flown to Nagasaki was indeed loaded aboard "Bockscar" B-29, but the crew which flew that mission was from "The Great Artiste" aircraft.
In a Studs Terkel interview with Col Paul Tibbets (circa. 2002) a few years before his death, Colonel Tibbets related that on a call from Curtis LeMay a "THIRD BOMB" in storage at Utah was loaded aboard a 509th Copmposite aircraft then got as far as a San Francisco embarcation point where it was stopped.
On August 16th following both Hiroshima and Nagasaki A-bomb explosions, the Japanese still had not surrendered so yet another "maximum effort" of all available B-29s from Saipan, Guam and Tinian Islands loaded "Pumpkin" bombs for a third bombing of the Japanese mainland - before their surrender.
There are added first person accounts in a book titled "The Manhattan Project" published for the Atomic History Museum edited by that museum's director at that time. Among them from Harold Agnew, Olivi and Laurence [the New York Times' science reporter who witnessed the second explosion].
Posted by DAVE PHILLIPS in Reno, NV on April 28,2011 | 12:31 PM
What this fine article partially reveals that has been overlooked by others historians is that there was another AAF "atomic bomb commander", senior to Tibbets, and, among other exemplary contributions, commanded not only the Wendover base; but also the unit that formulated the dummy bombs and tested them in 155 drops; the "Green Hornet" squadron that fulfilled all the transportation needs of Project Alberta from Los Alamos to Wendover, to Tinian; and was in the queue to drop another bomb if necessary. Tibbets, in five books, never acknowledged his commanding officer, and he died in anonymity, but not before receiving the Distinguished Service Medal. The story will be the subject of a forthcoming article. This officer was my late father-in-law.
Posted by Darrell Dvorak on May 19,2011 | 01:19 PM
My Father was a bombardier on one of the 507th B29 crews that was trained to drop an Atomic Bomb. I still have his officer's uniform if anyone is interested in it.
Posted by James Swanson on November 9,2011 | 02:10 AM
Recently came across information that the famous RAF Squadron Leader George C. Barwell, who helped train our gunners in the famous Ploesti Raid, may have been one of the many who tested the Silverplate B-29's. Am in contact with his grandson, and looking for information or links.
Thanks,
Sgt. mac ;)
Posted by Sgt. Mac on September 9,2012 | 09:22 PM
My Dad was Clyde Stanley Shields, Commanding Officer of the 216th B.U. (Special) Flight Test Section at Wendover Field. He was in a B-29 above the Trinity Test Site when the First Atomic Bomb was tested @ 5:30 AM on July 16, 1945. Aboard his airplane was Capt. Mann, Capt Semple, Cpl. Rochlitz, T/Sgt. Blinn and Observers - Capt Parsons OSN, Louie Alverez and Bernie Waldman. In the other B-29 was Capt. Hartshorn, 1st Lt O'Hara and Capt. VonGraffen and Observers - Col Heflin and Pennington Great Britian
Posted by Stanley Keith Shields on January 28,2013 | 04:45 PM