Manhattan Project National Historical Park
Manhattan Project National Historical Park is a United States National Historical Park commemorating the Manhattan Project that is run jointly by the National Park Service and Department of Energy. The park consists of three units: one in the Oak Ridge, Tennessee, one in Los Alamos, New Mexico and one in Hanford, Washington. It was established on November 10, 2015 when Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell and Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz signed the memorandum of agreement that defined the roles that the two agencies had when managing the park.[1][2]
The Department of Energy had owned and managed most of the properties located within the three different sites. For over ten years, the DoE worked with the National Park Service and federal, state and local governments and agencies with the intention of turning places of importance into a National Historical Park. After several years of surveying the three sites and five other possible alternatives, the two agencies officially recommended a historical park be established in Hanford, Los Alamos and Oak Ridge. The Department of Energy would continue to manage and own the sites while the National Park Service would provide interpretive services, visitor centers and park rangers. After two unsuccessful attempts at passing a bill in Congress authorizing the park in 2012 and 2013, the House and Senate ultimately passed the bill in December 2014, with President Obama signing the National Defense Authorization Act shortly thereafter which authorized the Manhattan Project National Historical Park.[3][4]
Sites
Hanford B Reactor
The Manhattan Project National Historical Park protects many structures associated with the Manhattan Project, but only some are open for touring.
Hanford, Washington
Los Alamos, New Mexico
Currently not open to the public.
- Gun Site Facilities: three bunkered buildings (TA-8-1, TA-8-2, and TA-8-3), and a portable guard shack (TA-8-172).
- V-Site Facilities: TA-16-516 and TA-16-517 V-Site Assembly Building
- Pajarito Site: TA-18-1 Slotin Building, TA-8-2 Battleship Control Building, and the TA-18-29 Pond Cabin.
Controls of the X-10 Graphite Reactor
Oak Ridge, Tennessee
The American Museum of Science and Energy provides bus tours of several buildings in the Clinton Engineer Works including the:
References
External links
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- Admiralty Inlet
- Badger Gulch
- Bald Hill
- Barker Mountain
- Bone River
- Camas Meadows
- Carlisle Bog
- Castle Rock
- Charley Creek
- Chehalis River Surge Plain
- Chopaka Mountain
- Clearwater Bogs
- Cleveland Shrub Steppe
- Columbia Falls
- Columbia Hills
- Cypress Highlands
- Dabob Bay
- Dailey Prairie
- Davis Canyon
- Entiat Slopes
- Goose Island
- Gunpowder Island
- Hamma Hamma Balds
- Ink Blot
- Kahlotus Ridgetop
- Kennedy Creek
- Kings Lake Bog
- Kitsap Forest
- Lacamas Prairie Natural Area
- Little Pend Oreille River
- Marcellus Shrub Steppe
- Methow Rapids
- Mima Mounds
- Monte Cristo
- Niawiakum River
- North Bay
- Oak Patch
- Olivine Bridge
- Pinecroft
- Point Doughty
- Riverside Breaks
- Rocky Prairie
- Sand Island
- Schumacher Creek
- Selah Cliffs
- Skagit Bald Eagle
- Skookum Inlet
- Snoqualmie Bog
- Spring Creek Canyon
- Trout Lake
- The Two-Steppe
- Upper Dry Gulch
- Washougal Oaks Natural Area
- Whitcomb Flats
- Willapa Divide
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