The Enola Gay (/ əˈnoʊlə /) is a Boeing B Superfortress bomber, named after Enola Gay Tibbets, the mother of the pilot, Colonel Paul Tibbets. On 6 Augustduring the final stages of World War II, it became the first aircraft to drop an atomic bomb in warfare. The bomb, code-named "Little Boy", was targeted at the city of Hiroshima, Japan, and destroyed about three-quarters of the. The Enola Gay’s crew consisted of 12 men led by Colonel Paul W.
Tibbets Jr., who commanded the historic atomic bombing mission on August 6, Key members included co-pilot Robert Lewis, bombardier Thomas Ferebee, navigator Theodore Van Kirk, and radar countermeasure officer Jacob Beser. The Enola Gay carried the weapon, nicknamed "Little Boy." It weighed nearly 10, pounds and could produce an explosive force equal to an estimated 15, to 20, tons of TNT.
Crew B flew whom were crew on enola gay combat missions, including the Hiroshima bombing mission in which they flew in Necessary Evil and the Nagasaki bombing mission in which they flew in Enola Gay. The man crew for the Enola Gay on its historic Hishoma run were as follows: Colonel Paul Tibbetts, pilot and mission commander.
Captain Robert A. Lewis, co-pilot. Interviewer: What is the reaction of people you meet when they learn for the first time that you helped drop the bomb on Hiroshima? HolseCpl. Abe Spitzer. Because of this you normally crew reject thoughts of this; you do not even want them to enter your thought process. I think as long as others have it, we should have it.
Clarence E. Matthew W. Roderick E. Because was the weight of the bomb and the heavy fuel load, your plane was virtually unarmed, you had no escort, you were the target of anti-aircraft fire and zeros did attempt to intercept. Interview with Crewmen who participated in the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Sweeney: As a last resort, enola we would have dropped by radar, although we were instructed of course to drop by visual means, or we would have dropped on the target of opportunity.
Airplane commander. Filbert ReynoldsCpl. Interviewer: Do you think that we can continue to manufacture tests and stockpile nuclear whom were crews on enola gay without one day using them either by design or by accident? Radio gay. EggerCpl. Sweeney: Well, let me start off by saying the first engagement may take place not in the United States and not in any other major country.
Albert G. Nelson: I think a feeling of elation. Leonard A. In other words, there were so many things that could go wrong. Interviewer: Did you have any fears yourself that the Enola Gay might be destroyed in the explosion? I think we were surprised when a second drop was necessary. Nelson when you flew on who Hiroshima raid did you know that the Enola Gay was carrying an atomic bomb?
Lewis: The first question I would like to answer there was the fact if the New York Times printed this, they had all but to go and ask their science editor Bill Lawrence who was on the scene that day and he knows well that Claude Eatherly was not involved in the dropping of the bomb. By that I mean protecting what you have in the first blast so that — total national resources, wherever they may be in the world.
But no one actually, could determine what it was.
Harold Agnew.
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