Monthly Archives: June 2016

Operation Crossroads Test Able 1946: Dave’s Dream Drops Rita Hayworth

Operation Crossroads - Able

Operation Crossroads – Able

On June 30, 1946, (July 1 local time), Dave’s Dream dropped Rita Hayworth taped to a 23kt Mark 3 implosion bomb, nicknamed Gilda, on Bikini Atoll.

The first post-war test of an atom bomb was conducted at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands located near the equator in the Pacific Ocean. Operation Crossroads originally consisted of three shots, Able, Baker, and Charlie, although the last was canceled. This testing series was one of the largest military operations in U.S. history.

Both the tests used the Mark 3 plutonium implosion bomb, the same as “Fat Man” used on Nagasaki. Test Able was an aerial drop, and Test Baker (on July 25) was detonated 90 feet underwater.

Rita Hayworth as "Gilda" on the Mark 3.

Rita Hayworth as “Gilda” on the Mark 3.

Test Able’s bomb was stenciled with the name Gilda in two-inch black letters and was decorated with a picture of Rita Hayworth (in her femme-fatale Jean Louis black strapless dress) by photographer Bob Coburn cut out of the June 1946 Esquire magazine. Rita Hayworth was the star of the popular 1946 film, Gilda. Although the gesture was meant as a compliment, Hayworth was deeply offended.

Dave's Dream

Dave’s Dream (7354)

Gilda was dropped from the silverplate B-29 Superfortress, Dave’s Dream of the 509th Bombardment Group. This B-29, previously known as Big Stink, participated in the atomic bomb drop on Nagasaki as a camera and scientific observer plane.

Dave's Dream

Dave’s Dream (7354)

The purpose was to test the effect of nuclear weapons on warships and was conducted by the Joint Army/Navy Task Force 1, not the Manhattan Engineer District (Manhattan Project). The test was arguably a publicity stunt for the U.S. Navy to demonstrate ship survivability (or vulnerability, depending upon which side of the politics you sat).

Test Able’s target array consisted of 78 vessels. The original zeropoint target was the battleship Nevada (number 32 in the picture, below) because it was the most rugged ship available. However, due to poor aerodynamics by the high-drag tail fin structure of the bomb, Gilda detonated 2,130 feet from the target and 518 feet directly above and 50 yards off the bow of the attack transport Gilliam (number 5 in the picture, below) with a yield of 23 kilotons. [Source: National Park Service.]

Test Able Target Array

Test Able Target Array

Operation Crossroads’ tests were the first to be publicly announced beforehand and observed by an invited audience, including a large press corps. Buried in the Metro section of the Chicago Tribune on June 30, 1946, is a small announcement that the test would be covered by WGN and WBBM.

Chicago Sunday Tribune, June 30, 1946, Part 3, Page 8

Chicago Sunday Tribune, June 30, 1946, Part 3, Page 8

Radio to Cover Atomic Bomb Test at Bikini

Radio to Cover Atomic Bomb Test at Bikini

Operation Crossroads Test Able was only the fourth time that an atom bomb was detonated, the first three being Trinity, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki. Nuclear weapons testing by the United States would continue until 1992, for a total of 1,054. [Source: United States Nuclear Tests: July 1945 through September 1992, DOE/NV–209-Rev 15, December 2000.]

For more information, travel, and videos…

You can visit the Bradley Science Museum in Los Alamos, NM, which houses historical weapons-research artifacts, including a replica of “Fat Man” and the Fireset (triggering mechanism).

Fat Man Replica

Fat Man Replica

Fireset Triggering Mechanism for Fat Man

Fireset Triggering Mechanism for Fat Man

On display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, OH, is another replica of the Mark 3 Fat Man atom bomb. The museum has replicas and casings of numerous nuclear warheads and bombs throughout, providing a visual history of our Cold War arms race.

Fat Man Replica

Fat Man Replica (Mark 3)

Watch a 27-minute government documentary from 1946 about Operation Crossroads, Test Able.

https://youtu.be/MuQKc-YCVr4

Some vintage footage of Dave’s Dream B-29 preparing to drop the Test Able bomb, Gilda, along with other B-29 chaser planes.

Dave’s Dream B-29 Illustration by Don Greer in Bell, D. (1997). Air Force Colors Volume 3: Pacific & Home Front 1942-1947 – Specials Series. Carrollton, TX: Squadron/Signal Publications. (Amazon)
Rita Hayworth & Gilda verified. CONELRAD Adjacent. (2013, August 19). Atomic Goddess Revisited: Rita Hayworth’s Bomb Image Found!

Report on Atomic Bombings

Leslie Groves

Major General Leslie Groves

Brigadier General Thomas Farrell

Brigadier General Thomas Farrell

On June 29, 1946, the Manhattan Engineer District published their report, The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, describing the effects of the atomic bombs. The report was compiled under the direction of Major General Leslie Groves, who instructed Brigadier General Thomas Farrell to organize a special Manhattan Project Atomic Bomb Investigating Group. Their mission was to secure scientific, technical, and medical intelligence about the atomic bomb effects from Hiroshima and Nagasaki as soon as possible after the cessation of hostilities.

Brigadier General James Newman

Brigadier General James Newman

Dr. Masao Tsuzuki

Dr. Masao Tsuzuki

Stafford L. Warren

Dr. Stafford L. Warren

Farrell arrived in Hiroshima on September 8, 1946, equipped with portable geiger counters. Along with Brigadier General James Newman, Dr. Masao Tsuzuki (member of the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission also acting as translator), and Colonel Stafford Warren, the head of the Manhattan District’s Medical Section. They remained in Hiroshima until September 14, then surveyed Nagasaki from September 19 through October 8.

Nagasaki Survey Team

Nagasaki Survey Team

The dropping of the two atomic bombs raised many military and medical questions that would eventually lead to more nuclear tests, specifically Operation Crossroads.

US Strategic Bombing Survey

US Strategic Bombing Survey

Concurrently with the Manhattan District’s survey teams, the United States Strategic Bombing Survey also conducted research on the effects of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This report (The United States Strategic Bombing Survey: The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki), published on June 30, 1946, incorporated much of what was included in the Manhattan District’s report, but more from a “lessons learned” perspective as well as future implications for use of the atomic bomb on others or on the United States. The report’s somewhat convoluted conclusion regarding the use of the atomic bombs in influencing Japan’s surrender is that it created the excuse for them to accept the Potsdam terms while saving “face” — no army without the weapon could possibly resist an enemy who had it.

How to Drop an Atom Bomb

Saturday Evening Post, June 8, 1946

Saturday Evening Post, June 8, 1946

On June 8, 1946, the Saturday Evening Post published an article by Col. Paul W. Tibbetts, Jr., the pilot of the Enola Gay who dropped “Little Boy” on Hiroshima, as told to Wesley Price, a Post stringer who wrote about aviation.

The feature story follows Col. Tibbetts from the formation of the 509th Composite Group, to practicing extreme maneuvers over the Utah desert out of Wendover (now Historic Wendover Airfield), to Tinian, and to dropping the bomb.

The captivating article provides insight into the 509th from a fresh, first-hand perspective less than a year after the bombing. Further, the secrecy of the mission is repeatedly emphasized, including a poem by an exasperated clerk at the base operations who was frustrated by the lack of information:

NOBODY KNOWS
Into the air the secret rose,
Where they’re going nobody knows;
Tomorrow they’ll return again,
But we’ll never know where they’ve been.
Don’t ask about results or such,
Unless you want to get in Dutch;
But take it from one who is sure of the score,
The 509th is winning the war.

When the other Groups are ready to go,
We have a program of the whole damned show;
And when Halsey’s Fifth shells Nippon’s shore,
Why, shucks, we hear about it the day before;
And MacArthur and Doolittle give it out in advance.
But with this new bunch we haven’t a chance.
We should have been home a month or more,
For the 509th is winning the war.

Tibbetts reflects on how he felt about dropping the bomb, saying, “We’re all living in the Atomic Age together, and the atom bomb was made and dropped for the people of the United States.”

Source:  Tibbetts Jr., P. W., & Price, W. (1946). How to Drop an Atom Bomb. Saturday Evening Post, 218(49), 18-136.