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Before Hiroshima

I found this online and thought it was interesting. The effort was so highly classified that even the people working there were not told what they were doing. And it took took two years, doing something that had never been done before, with technology we would consider primitive today.

Almost ten thousand girls right out of high school were hired in Oakridge Tennessee in 1943, to operate mass spectrometers called Calutrons. They weren't even told what they were doing. They were only told to turn this knob, flip this switch, make this meter read a certain level. But they were enriching Uranium and it took them two years to make enough material for one bomb, the one dropped on Hiroshima.
My mother-in-law was one of these "Calutron Girls". Whenever I asked what she did at Oakridge she would say, "if I told you, I would have to kill you! It was something for the war effort". I assumed she was a secretary.

Then in the 90's, after things were declassified, I printed this picture from the internet and showed it to her, asking if this is what she did. She said, "Yeah! That's where I worked!! In building Y-12! I'm not sure she ever knew what those machines did.

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FreddieUK · 70-79, M
There were a lot of things that happened in the War that those involved at the time did not fully understand. I suspect a lot of families know things today that those who are no longer with us either didn’t tell us about, or only had a vague idea about themselves.