Albert Speer served the Nazi Regime from 1931-1945. It is within this 14 year period Speer’s significance from the war effort can be recognized as one of the most crucial and predominant roles within the Nazi leadership. As Hitler’s chief architect Albert created numerous designs and constructions used for Nazi propaganda as well as the Dora concentration camp. Using his power and influence within the German Nazi movement, Speer exploited the use of slave labor, as well as aided astronomically to the output of ammunitions and other vast weaponry, further prolonging world war two.…
“Convinced that German scientists could help America’s postwar efforts, President Harry Truman agreed in September 1946 to authorize “Project Paperclip,” a program to bring selected German scientists to work on America’s behalf during to “Clod War””(Laura Knight-Jadczyk). President Truman was collecting scientists to help start Project MKULTRA.…
On January 30th, 1995 Martian Harwit, the National Air and Space Museum, or NASM, director, announced the cancelation of the exhibit “The Last Act: The Atomic Bob and the End of World War II.” This exhibit was at the center of a yearlong controversy about the Enola Gay, the United States Air Force B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic bomb known under the code name “Little Boy” on the Japanese city Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. This act was known as the act that ended World War II and saved the lives of many American soldiers that otherwise were to invade Japan. Paul Tibbets, the pilot of the Enola Gay sated that the atomic bombing of Hiroshima was a “peace keeper…the harbinger of a cold war kept form getting hot.”2 While others believe that it was the beginning of a new holocaust due to it killing over 200,000 people, most of them civilians, not to mention the long term illnesses…
In another part of town Werner Georg Gudenburg and Otto Herman Voss worked together. They would find information on fireproof planes and the worlds most advanced power air cooled motor as well as other information regarding United States aircraft. That information was sent to Germany through Lonkowski, along with the information collected by other operatives. Finally, the head of the Abwehr Bremen station by the name of Erich Pfeiffe was responsible for directing and overseeing the espionage network…
2. The Germans and Americans had been racing to complete the bomb first but with Germany's destruction and the persecution of many of her top scientists who were Jewish the German effort was severely hampered.…
Assessment Task 1 - Secondary Sources Investigation CONTENT PAGE 2 Assessed Outcomes Robert Goddard Rockets in a Vacuum 3 Liquid Rockets 3 Attachments To Rockets 4 Guided Rockets 5 Werner Von Braun Sources of Funding 6 The V-2 Missile 6 Explorer 1 7 Saturn Series of Boosters 7 Bibliography Robert Goddard 9 Werner Von Braun 10 -112Physics Assessment Task 1 - Secondary Sources Investigation Assessed Outcomes [H1] Evaluates how major advances in scientific understanding and technology have changed the direction or nature of scientific thinking [H3] Assesses the impact of particular advances in physics on the development of technologies [H6] Explains…
During World War II in Nazi Germany, the only thing considered more imperative than committing genocide against the people of Jewish descent, was devising ways to inevitably defeat their foes. The merciless German researchers would stop at nothing to try and enhance their chances at constructing the "super race". Along with all the pharmaceutical help, researchers needed to experiment with these new drugs to ensure their effectiveness. Prisoners of concentration camps were forced to take these experimental drugs and have their limits tested. While the Americans' secret weapon was the atomic bomb, Germany tried to win the war with their own secret weapondrugs.…
It could not leak out into the public beacuse that same would happen that happpened to the germans , other countries would try and attempt the same thing. By 1945 there were at least 40 laboratories with around 200,000 employes working on this one project. In the midsts of all this there were some of the greatest scientists out there working in these laboratories and factories. Some of the famous scientist were Ablbert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, Richard Ferynam and Harold Urey.…
Historians are divided on the extent to which Albert Speer contributed to Nazi Germany during World War 2 and prior to it as Hitler’s architect. Speer was a winner as he became Reich minister of armaments and war production, becoming second in command (inside the third Reich). His success extended further in Nuremburg as he escaped with his life. However personalities are remembered as winners in history and Speer is now remembered as a deceitful Nazi who attempted to put his name down in history as a great historical figure.…
Rosenberg and Julius Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage during a time of war and executed (Schrecker,1). In 1995, the U.S. government released a series of decoded Soviet cables, codenamed VENONA, which confirmed that Julius acted as a courier and recruiter for the Soviets but which were ambiguous about Ethel's involvement (Roberts). Also the first successful nuclear tests by the Soviets. America commenced to fear the scientific achievement believing that Soviet spies must have been responsible for passing the nuclear technology from the United States to Russia. In 1950 the physicist Klaus Fuchs confessed to giving the Soviet information about America’s atomic bomb. The information gave the Soviet scientists an opportunity to develop their own atomic bomb years earlier than they would have. Mixed up in the Fuchs case were Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. When asked if they were Communists, the Rosenbergs pleaded the Fifth Amendment, opting not to lay the blame on…
The Polish Jew, Joseph Rotblat, was the only scientist to leave the Manhattan Project on moral grounds, but his attitude and position towards his involvement in the creation of the atomic bomb wasn't always so decisive. Joseph Rotblat entered the Manhattan Project in 1944, convinced that building the bomb was the correct choice, but by analyzing his actions later on, it is evident that his thoughts in relation to working on the atomic bomb had changed. Early on, Joseph Rotblat was taught to be aware of the consequences of his work by his professor Ludwick Wertenstein. Ludwick opened Rotblat's eyes to the humanitarian perspective of scientific development, and taught him to be aware of the consequences of his work (Veys 452). This is crucial…
During World War II, a scientific discovery was made that would alter the course of history. German scientists learned a new method in which the splitting of a uranium atom became achievable. This would ultimately lead to the possibility of a foreign power utilizing that energy to produce a weapon with the capacity of causing irreplaceable damage. In 1939, Albert Einstein, having come across this information, wrote to the United States President Franklin Roosevelt to warn him of the German’s findings. Two years later, in 1941, the United States had officially begun their own research to build an atomic bomb. This effort, under its code name, came to be known as the Manhattan Project. The Manhattan Project negatively…
Riley Griffin Mr. Bergmann Senior English P5 4/7/2016 Hitler’s Escape On April 30, 1945 Adolf Hitler committed suicide…or did he? One of the most popular conspiracy theories is that the Fuhrer and his new wife, Eva Braun, escaped to Argentina. FBI documents from September of 1945 admit that Hitler, like many other Nazi leaders, could be hiding in Argentina after arriving by submarine.…
Cited: /b><br><li>Asimov, Isaac. Asimov 's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science & Technology. 2nd ed. New York: Doubleday, 1978.<br><li>Badash, Lawrence. "Manhattan Project." Dictionary of American History. Vol. 4. New York: Charles Scriber 's Sons, 1976.<br><li>Beyer, Don. The Manhattan Project. New York: Franklin Watts, 1991. <br><li>Hewlett, Richard. "Atomic Bomb." Dictionary of American History. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scriber 's Sons, 1976.<br><li>Wood, Linda. "Men and Mission of the Manhattan Project." World War 2. Jul. 1995: 38-45. SIRS Researcher. CR computer network. SIRS, 1995.…
After World War II brought many scientific achievements (most notable of which being the atomic bomb), Americans were fascinated with science and the potential of the scientific community to solve the problems that were plaguing the country. The scientific community was promoting a “save the world” complex, and the American people believed in the power of science.…