Special Engineer Detachment
The Special Engineer Detachment (SED) was a US Army program that identified enlisted personnel with technical skills, such as machining, or who had some science education beyond high school. Those identified were organized into the Special Engineer Detachment, or SED. SED personnel began arriving at Los Alamos in October 1943. By August 1945, 1800 SED personnel worked at Los Alamos.[1] These troops worked in all areas and activities of the Laboratory, including the Trinity Test, and were involved in overseas operations on Tinian.
References
Sources
- Bederson, Benjamin (2004). "SEDs at Los Alamos". In Kelly, Cynthia C. (ed.). Remembering the Manhattan Project: a Personal Memoir. World Scientific Publishing. pp. 81–88. ISBN 9812560408.
Further reading
- Bederson, Benjamin (2001), "SEDs at Los Alamos: A Personal Memoir" (PDF), Physics in Perspective, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, 3 (1): 52–75, Bibcode:2001PhP.....3...52B, doi:10.1007/s000160050056, S2CID 117157405
- "Special Engineer Detachment" (PDF), Y-12 National Security Complex official website, United States Department of Energy
- "Herbert M. Lehr Collection (Special Engineering Detachment 1943–1946)", Veterans History Project, Library of Congress, 2019-11-06, AFC/2001/001/12058
External links
- Special Engineer Detachment - "Scientists in Uniform" at childrenofthemanhattanproject.org
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.