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Manhattan Project (U.S.)
Manhattan Project records.
Primary source documents and subsequent material relating to the development of the atomic bomb constituting the official history of the enterprise, commissioned by Major General Leslie R. Groves.
The Manhattan Engineer District was officially designated as such by the U. S. War Department on August 13, 1942. [The Manhattan District was the name given the unit within the Army Corps of Engineers; the Manhattan Project covered not only the District but also the scientific, strategic, and governmental aspects involved in the building and eventual delivery of the bomb.] By mid-1943, the Manhattan Engineer District was also known as the Manhattan Project. Initialy headquartered in New York, it functioned as a special district for directing the atomic bomb project. It supervised research, development, and testing of projects, plant construction, and production programs relating to the project and administered numerous laboratories and field instalations including Clinton Engineer Works at Oak Ridge, TN; Hanford Engineer Works at Richland, WA; and the laboratory at Los Alamos, NM. On December 31, 1946 the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project was established to assume the military functions of the Manhattan Engineer District and on January 1, 1947 all phases of nuclear energy research and production came under control of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. The Manhattan Engineer District continued for about six months longer solely as an administrative agency to close out the project.
Groves, Leslie R., 1896-1970 -- Records and correspondence.
United States. Army -- Weapons systems.
United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Manhattan District.
Atomic bomb -- History.
Manhattan Project (U.S.) -- Documentation.
Nuclear weapons -- Research.
Nuclear weapons -- Testing.
World War, 1939-1945 -- Weapons systems.
AIP-ICOS
National Archives and Records Administration. Civil Reference Branch. Washington, DC 20408, USA
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