The encounter brought back vivid childhood memories. A commemorative sign said it was the hangar for the “Enola Gay,” the name of the B-29 that dropped the A-bomb on Hiroshima. Near the southeastern corner of town, I came upon an abandoned airfield, with a huge airplane hangar sitting on it. Wendover sits on the western edge of the Great Salt Lake Desert, an area almost as big as Connecticut, and one of the most desolate regions in the planet’s temperate zone. It was late afternoon in June 2008 when I pulled into Wendover, Utah, population 1,500, on the border of Nevada. I found out about this event after a chance encounter in a Western desert. In one night that weapon killed more people than were killed at Nagasaki and perhaps as many as were killed in Hiroshima. What most of us don’t remember – or more likely never knew – is that we had already developed a weapon that was just as deadly as the A-bomb. Americans are still told that, though the truth of this is questionable. Back then, we were told that the A-bomb shortened the war and saved lives. Last year we observed the 70 th anniversary of our atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Like Tweet Email Print Subscribe Donate Now
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |