Japan formally surrenders aboard the battleshipĮnola Gay departs Tinian for Roswell Army Air Field, New Mexico Weather plane on the Nagasaki atomic mission Twelve hours and thirteen minutes after takeoffįlight report and operations order indicate that Enola Gay flies as The aircraft returns to Tinian at 2:58 p.m., Three days after the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima "My God," he asked himself, "what have we done" Then he turned away to write in his journal. Lewis said he could taste atomic fission, it tasted like lead. "Look at that, look at that! look at that"Įxclaimed the co-pilot, Robert Lewis, pounding on Tibbets's shoulder. Hidden by that awful cloud.boiling up, mushrooming" "We turned back to look at Hiroshima, the city was The B-29 that dropped the first atomic bomb. Paul Tibbets, the pilot of the Enola Gay, The atomic bomb is released over Hiroshima at 8:15 a.m. Ground crew works feverishly to prepare it for the next day's missionĮnola Gay departs at 2:45 a.m. John Porter, ground maintenance officerĪircraft 44-86292 formally named Enola Gay after Col. William "Deak" Parsons, Manhattan Project Scientist Jacob Beser, radar countermeasure officer LewisĪircraft and 11 man crew depart Wendover for South PacificĪircraft arrives at Guam, where additional modifications to theīomb bay are made, then flies on to Tinian Island in the MarianasĬol.
Martin Aircraft Factory, Omaha, NebraskaĪircraft ferried to Wendover Army Air Field, Utah,īy pilot-in-command Capt. Many thanks for starting this thread - it has brought back some wonderful memories.Īircraft 44-86292 delivered to U.S. I will look at her from a distance but know I have been inside and really seen her up close. Part of the airplane has now been restored and is on display at one of the Air & Space locations. This will always remain one of the most fascinating experiences of my life. I understood where I was, and I was totally, completely awed. Tibbets looked through to see the effects of the bomb.
I held the yoke, I touched the throttle levers I looked out the same plexiglass windows that Col. Finally, we went into the forward section and onto the flight deck (cockpit). Then, we all went into the bomb-bay and just stood and silently reflected. To my utter surprise the Major agreed and even helped look. But, the older gentleman in the group with us had actually flown on the Enola Gay (after the atomic mission) and he asked if we might be allowed to look for where he had scratched his name near one of the gunner positions. She was dirty and disheveled, but there she was - original and unrestored !! We had not been allowed to touch (or even approach) any of the hundreds of aircraft we had already seen. The fuselage was in two (equal length) pieces the tail and stabilizers were off, the wings off, the engines off the wings and sitting nearby. In the middle of the last building we visited was the Enola Gay. Around noon on Saturday of that weekend my dad, uncle and I drove from McLean to Suitland where we (and 4 people from another family) were given a tour through the Garber Facility by an active duty, uniformed, Air Force Major. I asked my uncle to make the tour arrangements knowing he could get past any complications which might arise. I got both of them hooked on my idea, and we arranged a family gathering (at my uncle's in McLean) for a Holiday weekend (Labor Day I think). I bought additional copies of the book and sent one to my dad and another to an uncle who lives just outside of Washington and has lots of connections. He also said that I could arrange for an escorted tour of the facility. (where they keep and restore all the airplanes not on display or on loan). He confirmed that the ariplane was at the Paul Garber facility in Suitland, Md. I called the curator/director of the Air & Space Museum and asked about "things". Being a "Smithsonian Associate" (contributing member) I decided I wanted to see the plane. Roughly 20 years ago I read a book about the airplane, the crew, and the mission - I was fascinated ! The epilog stated that the DOD had given the airplane to the Smithsonian and it was stored in a warehouse in Maryland. The Enola Gay is one of my favorite subjects. I am a huge airplane buff but not a pilot.