Although the home has changed ownership many times, one thing remains with every occupant.
The current homeowner asked if we wanted to see something. He took us to the garage where the previous owner specifically told him that this must stay with the home to avoid “bad juju.” He claimed it has been with the home since it was built.
He went to a corner of the garage, reached over a couple bicycles, and pulled out a wooden lawn chair from between the wall studs.
“This,” he said, “has to stay with the house. It’s been here forever and has been passed down from owner to owner.”
Maybe apocryphal, it’s entertaining to consider that the chair might have been used by Groves and his family to relax in the courtyard of their home.
These arming plugs for Little Boy are displayed at the Udvar-Hazy Center of the National Air and Space Museum. They were found in the navigator’s compartment during the restoration of the Enola Gay. It’s not known whether these plugs were from the assembled Little Boy atomic bomb (L-11), or one of the pre-assemblies (without uranium projectiles) used for testing or practice drops (L-1, L-2, L-5, and L-6).
Shortly after takeoff from Tinian island, Deak Parsons and Morris Jeppson crawled into the bomb bay of Enola Gay to follow the eleven steps1 to arm the atomic bomb. Step 1 was to check that the three wood-handled green plugs that blocked the firing signal between the fuse and the bomb were installed.
About an hour and a half before the bomb run, Jeppson crawled back into the bomb bay with three wood-handled, five-pin red plugs. He carefully removed each green plug, one-by-one, and replaced them with the red plugs, closing the firing circuits.
At 8:15 a.m. (Hiroshima time), the bomb was released, dislodging the instrument cords that connected it to the airplane and instrument monitoring panels. This immediately transferred power to the 24-volt battery, beginning a 44-second detonation cycle.
First, a timer of eight spring-wound clocks safeguarded that the bomb would not explode until at least 15 seconds after release, about one quarter of the predicted fall time, to ensure the safety of the aircraft.
Second, the firing signal transferred to the barometric pressure switch, designed to close at 7,000 feet. With 9 seconds to detonation, the switch closed and activated the Archie radars, with the Japanese-invented Yagi antennas which began bouncing their signals off the approaching ground.
At close to 1900 feet above the ground, the last relay switch closed. The firing signal jumped across the three red arming plugs, sending the signal to the breech primers and detonating the cordite charges, propelling the uranium 235 projectile down the six-foot barrel toward its uranium target, creating an uncontrolled chain reaction and changing history.
(1) Walker, S. (2005). Shockwave: Countdown to Hiroshima. HarperCollins. p. 192.
During the Cold War, three lines of defense protected North America from the “imminent” threat against Soviet long-range bombers. These consisted of radar stations along the DEW line (Distant Early Warning), the MCL (Mid-Canada Line), and the Pinetree Line. These joint ventures by Canada and the U.S. were staffed by U.S. Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force personnel from 1951 to 1991.
With the development of intercontinental ballistic missiles by 1960, however, most of these defenses became obsolete and were gradually dismantled.
Radar Hill is part of Pacific Rim National Park on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. The decommissioned RCAF Station Tofino provides hiking trails and scenic viewpoints. The site was operated as a Pinetree Line radar station from 1955 to 1958.
Remnants of the base are still visible, whether guy wire hooks, concrete pads, embedded radio tower piping, foundation walls, or the decking laid on top of the old building foundations.