old magazine article typewriter
Old Magazine Articles
  
Loading Search Engine

World War Two - The Enola Gay

Click here to email this page to a friend

Hiroshima Crew image

•Articles about the Atomic Bomb can be read here



The Bombers Speak (Coronet Magazine, 1960)

First appearing in a 1960 issue of CORONET MAGAZINE was this piece that revealed the assorted introspective perceptions of the crew of the ENOLA GAY.

In the fifteen years that had past since the dropping of the Atomic bomb these are the personal thoughts that were produced after years of sober reflection concerning their part in one of the preeminent events of the last century:

"After 15 years the scene over Hiroshima is still sharp and clear to them, and though they disagree on details, they are unanimous on the point of whether they'd do the same things again".

 

Paul Tibbets of the ENOLA GAY (Yank Magazine, 1945)

A one page interview with Paul Tibbets (1915 – 2007) and the crew of the ENOLA GAY as they recounted their historic mission over Hiroshima during the closing days of World War Two. Paul Tibbets remained in uniform long after the war and eventually retired as an Air Force General. When he died during the fall of 2007 it was revealed that he preferred there not be a memorial service, nor any marker identifying his grave in order to deprive protesters of a staging ground. His ashes were sprinkled over the North Atlantic.

What if the Atomic Bomb had never been invented? When would the war have ended?

•A Contemporary Interview with the Navigator of the Enola Gay•

 

The Crew of the Enola Gay Fifteen Years Later (Coronet Magazine, 1960)

A collection of thumbnail portraits that outline what each crew member did on that August day, and what they were doing fifteen years afterward.

This article was partially written in order to squelch the spreading rumors that reported that the atomic bomber crews from 1945 had all slowly gone mad.

"The men of the Enola Gay were hand-picked experts, chosen for intelligence, emotional stability and discipline, qualities they have put to good use in their post-war careers. Four remained in the service (one died in 1953) and the others are all successful in their business carees. They earn above-average salaries, all but one are married and they have 26 children among them. None of them has been to Japan since the war, and few have met since separation."

 

 
 read articles about the atomic bomb  
 
© Copyright 2005-2012 Old Magazine Articles
 
   
 
  Home
  FAQs
  About Us
  Advertising
  Log In / Register
  Contact Us
  Legal Disclaimer
 


Click Here!

 
Recently Added Articles
 1925: Wind Power
 African-American History
 Ku Klux Klan
 Lynchings
 American English
 Aviation History
 Charles Lindbergh
 Women Pilots
 Zeppelins and Dirigibles
 Babe Ruth
 Benito Mussolini
 Car History
 1950s Cars
 Cartoons
 China - Twentieth Century
 Sino-Japanese Wars
 Civil War History
  Abraham Lincoln
 Chronology
 Civil Behavior
 Gettysburg
 Dance
 Eminent Personalities: 1912 - 1960
 European Royalty
 Duke of Windsor
 Elizabeth II
 F.D.R.
 Eleanor Roosevelt
 Supreme Court-Packing
 Fashion
 1930s
 1940s
 1940s Modeling
 Flapper Style
 Mens Fashion
 Personal Beauty
 The New Look
 Food and Wine
 Football History
 Foreign Opinions About America
 Golf
 Immigration History
 Canadian Immigration
 Jews in the 20th Century
 College Antisemitism
 Living History
 Mahatma Gandhi
 Manners and Society
 Modern Art History
 Dada
 Modigliani
 Movie History
 Animation History
 Gone with the Wind
 Hollywood Blacklist History
 It's A Wonderful Life
 Marilyn Monroe
 Talkies 1930s
 Music History
 Big Band 1930s-1940s
 Eric Satie
 Native Americans
 Old Iraq
 Old New York History
 Prohibition History
 Prohibition Cartoons
 Religion
 Jefferson's Bible
 Silent Movie History
 Cartoons
 Charlie Chaplin
 D.W. Griffith
 Douglas Fairbanks & Mary Pickford
 Soviet History
 Television History
 Tennis History
 The Great Depression
 The Nazis
 Adolf Hitler
 Hermann Goering
 On the Rise
 Titanic History
 Twentieth Century Writers
 Eugene O'Neill
 W.B. Yeats
 U.S. Army Uniforms of World War One
 Overseas Caps
 Trench Coats
 U.S. Armies, Corps and Divisions
 U.S. Navy Uniforms of World War One
 U.S. Marine Corps Uniforms
 Weird Inventions
 Womens Suffrage
 Woodrow Wilson
 World War One
 African Americans
 Aftermath
 Animals
 Armistice
 Artists
 Belleau Wood
 British Uniforms
 Cartoons
 Cemeteries
 Censorship
 Clip Art
 Color Photographs
 Doughboys
 Draft Dodgers
 Fashion
 Gas Warfare
 Inventions and Weapons
 Letters
 Lusitania
 Poetry
 Posters
 Prelude
 Rail Guns
 Siberian Expedition
 Snipers
 Stars and Stripes Archive
 Trench Warfare
 Versailles Treaty
 Women
 Writing
 World War Two
 1930s Military Buildup
 Aftermath
 Animals
 Atomic Bomb
 Combat Training
 D-Day
 Fashion
 General Eisenhower
 General Marshall
 German Home Front
 Hollywood
 Home Front
 Iwo Jima
 Japanese-American Internment
 Japanese-American Service
 Kamikaze Attacks
 Medal of Honor Recipients
 Paris
 Photographers
 Post-War Japan
 Prisoners of War
 Submarines
 The Enola Gay
 VE Day
 VJ Day
 Weapons and Inventions
 Women
 Yank
 The Cold War
 The Vietnam War

get=