Author Topic: Hiroshima August 6 1945  (Read 1341 times)

Offline 1Cane

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Hiroshima August 6 1945
« on: August 06, 2016, 04:30:53 PM »
I would like to salute the men who served in the Pacific during world war two.
My father was assigned to landing craft and was at Okinawa on this date.  It was unknown to him at the time but his older brother was on an aircraft carrier there  also.  He'd never talked much about it except to say they have trouble with the M1 carbine when fired it would run away and empty magazine.
To all those who served their countries may the rest in peace
« Last Edit: August 06, 2016, 06:37:28 PM by 1Cane »
AkCaine

Offline Slate

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Re: Hiroshama August 6 1945
« Reply #1 on: August 06, 2016, 05:02:49 PM »
    :salute to all that faithfully performed their duty under difficult conditions. Bless the souls of the lives that have seen what terrors can be unleashed by the terrible genius of mankind.   :pray
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Offline Zoney

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Re: Hiroshama August 6 1945
« Reply #2 on: August 06, 2016, 05:06:19 PM »
Is "Hiroshama" a typo or is it a different place than "Hiroshima" ?
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Offline -ammo-

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Re: Hiroshama August 6 1945
« Reply #3 on: August 06, 2016, 05:47:49 PM »
Is "Hiroshama" a typo or is it a different place than "Hiroshima" ?


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Offline -ammo-

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Re: Hiroshama August 6 1945
« Reply #4 on: August 06, 2016, 05:48:46 PM »
"WTF was that!"  Mayor of Hiroshima, 0815 hours, 6 August 1945



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Offline oakranger

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Re: Hiroshama August 6 1945
« Reply #5 on: August 06, 2016, 06:35:27 PM »
Intresting facts: 

1. The US Airforce before dropping the A-bomb, dropped pamphlets in Hiroshima warning people of the bombing.

2. For decades, the mayor of Hiroshima, Tadatoshi Akiba wrote letters of protest each time a nuclear test was conducted, as a plea to end the use of nuclear weapons.

3. The Flame of Peace in Hiroshima, Japan has burned since 1964 in honor of the victims and will be extinguished only when all nuclear weapons are removed from the world and the Earth is free from nuclear threat.

4. After the first Hiroshima atomic bombing in Japan, one Hiroshima policeman went to Nagasaki to teach police about ducking after the atomic flash. As a result of this timely warning, not a single Nagasaki policeman died in Nagasaki’s atomic blast.

5. In 1945, a man named Tsutomu Yamaguchi survived the atomic blast at Hiroshima, dragged himself into an air-raid shelter, spent the night there, in the morning caught a train so he could arrive at his job on time in Nagasaki, where he survived another atomic blast.

6. The oleander is the official flower of the city of Hiroshima because it was the first thing to bloom again after the explosion of the atomic bomb in 1945.

7. About 12 cyanide pills were kept in the cockpit of the Enola Gay (plane carrying A-bomb), and pilots were instructed to take them if the mission was compromised during the bombing of Hiroshima

8. Only 3 of the 12 people on board the Enola Gay actually knew the real purpose of their mission to Hiroshima.

9. After the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, hundreds of people (many of them already injured), made their way towards Nagasaki. Of these, 165 survived, both the bombings and lived to tell the tale.

10. An American made bank vault saved the contents from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. After reconstruction of the bank, the new manager sent a congratulatory letter to the vault manufacturer.

11. “Hiroshima shadows”: When the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the intensity of the blast was of such intensity that it permanently burned shadows of people and objects into the ground.

12. In 1945, Japanese radar operators detected a small number of incoming US planes (one of which carried the nuclear bombs to be dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki), but decided not to intercept them as the small number of planes were not seen as a threat.

13. The most destructive bombing event of WWII was neither Hiroshima nor Nagasaki. It was the Operation Meetinghouse, the American firebombing of Tokyo.

14. The Gingko Biloba species of three is 270 million years old. It rarely suffers disease or insect attack and was one of the only living things to survive the Hiroshima nuclear bombing. The trees healed quickly and are still alive today.

15. The ancient board game of “Go” was being played at a tournament in Hiroshima in 1945, when the atomic bomb went off only 3 miles away. Though the building was damaged and people were injured, they finished the match later that same afternoon (white won)

16. “Horton Hears a Who” was an allegory about Hiroshima and the America’s occupation of Japan and may have been Dr. Seuss’s way of apologizing for his support of Japanese Internment. – Source

17. It took Tokyo about 3 hours before they realized Hiroshima had been bombed.

18. The USA originally denied that atomic bombs caused any lingering radioactivity whatsoever, calling such claims as Japanese propaganda. Even New York Times ran an article with the headline “NO RADIOACTIVITY IN HIROSHIMA RUIN,” citing only military sources and ignoring eyewitness accounts of radiation sickness.

19. The Japanese army planned to have every man, woman and child to fight America to the death Kamikaze style even after Hiroshima. They even attempted a coup when the Emperor gave word to surrender

20. The closest known survivor of the Hiroshima atomic bomb was in a basement only 170m (560 ft) from ground zero.

21. Godzilla was created by Japan as a reaction to the bombings of Hiroshima, the monster itself spawning as a result of the nuclear detonations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

22. During WW2, the Japanese city of Kyoto was spared from atomic destruction solely by Henry L Stimson; the sitting US Secretary of War who had admired the city during his honeymoon decades earlier. Nagasaki took its place on the list.

23. Major Charles Sweeny, the pilot of the B29 that nuked Nagasaki, ignored direct orders during the bombing, nearly causing the plane to crash due to low fuel. Instead of investigating Sweeny’s conduct, the chief of staff for the Strategic Air Forces simply stated “You diddlyed up, didn’t you, Chuck?”

24. Around 25% of the deaths caused by the atomic bombs in Hiroshima & Nagasaki were conscripted Koreans.

25. The US dropped about 49 practice bombs nicknamed “pumpkin bombs” that killed 400 and injured 1,200 before nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

26.  If the Japanese had not surrendered on August 15, 1945, they would have been hit by a third and potentially more powerful atomic bomb just a few days later and then, eventually, an additional barrage of up to 12 further nuclear attacks.
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Offline Masherbrum

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #6 on: August 06, 2016, 08:30:09 PM »
26 is incorrect.   Grossly incorrect.
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Offline branch37

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #7 on: August 06, 2016, 10:39:58 PM »
Since we only had 4 at the time and tested 2


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Offline oakranger

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #8 on: August 07, 2016, 12:15:35 AM »
26 is incorrect.   Grossly incorrect.

IDK.  Never said when they would drop them but U.S must had enough to make 12 more or could produced.   I will have to research more on it.
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Offline branch37

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #9 on: August 07, 2016, 12:18:54 AM »
I'm sure there were more scheduled for production, but there were only 4 available at first. 2 uranium bombs and 2 plutonium bombs.  2 were tested in the desert, the other 2 went to Japan.

Another fun fact, Truman was completely unaware of the Manhattan project as vice president.  Only after FDR died and he was sworn in did Sam Rayburn let him in on the little secret. 

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Offline oakranger

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #10 on: August 07, 2016, 12:53:15 AM »
I'm sure there were more scheduled for production, but there were only 4 available at first. 2 uranium bombs and 2 plutonium bombs.  2 were tested in the desert, the other 2 went to Japan.

Another fun fact, Truman was completely unaware of the Manhattan project as vice president.  Only after FDR died and he was sworn in did Sam Rayburn let him in on the little secret.

Fact is there are a lot of top secrets out there that has not got out into public or shared.

I read something of one town in Japan, starts with "K" I believe,  that was the primary target - twice.  It faith was saved do to weather conditions.
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Offline zack1234

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #11 on: August 07, 2016, 01:38:36 AM »
Another fact is that Berlin would have bombed if the Narzzies had not surrendered :old:

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Offline Masherbrum

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #12 on: August 07, 2016, 06:46:05 AM »
I'm sure there were more scheduled for production, but there were only 4 available at first. 2 uranium bombs and 2 plutonium bombs.  2 were tested in the desert, the other 2 went to Japan.

Another fun fact, Truman was completely unaware of the Manhattan project as vice president.  Only after FDR died and he was sworn in did Sam Rayburn let him in on the little secret.

Bingo.   We had to wait another six months for the next batch.   So bloodshed would have resumed. 
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Offline Rolex

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #13 on: August 07, 2016, 08:17:10 AM »
Truman wrote in his diary that he wasn't going to drop any more.

Offline Traveler

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Re: Hiroshima August 6 1945
« Reply #14 on: August 07, 2016, 09:31:59 AM »
26 is incorrect.   Grossly incorrect.

# 26, Agreed,  after they dropped the second  one, the covered was bare.  Also # 1 is incorrect, the US Air Force did not exist until 1948.  The US Army Air Corp. dropped the only Atomic weapons during WWII.
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