OTIS L. GRAHAM, JR., Review of Newman, Enola Gay and the Court of History, Pacific Historil Review, Vol. 74, No. 3 (Augt 2005), pp. 481-483
Contents:
ENOLA GAY AND THE URT OF HISTORY
* enola gay and the court of history *
Review of Newman, Enola Gay and the Court of History on JSTOR. Newman’s argument centers on the ntroversy that epted around the Natnal Air and Space Mm’s (NASM) exhib of Enola Gay 1995. Enola Gay and the Court of History is pulsory readg for all those terted the history of the Pacific war, the moraly of war, and the failed NASM exhibn.
ENOLA GAY AND THE COURT OF HISTORY
Enola Gay /Bomber. Seventy-five years ago, the Uned Stat dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, brgg an end to a long and vastatg World War II and makg the Enola Gay, the B-29 that livered , one of the most famo history. The Enola Gay, known only as No.
He handpicked the plane the night before the missn, to the surprise of s crew, and had his mother’s name -- Enola Gay -- pated on s si.
6, 1945, the Enola Gay took off for Hiroshima, an important Japane ary center.
ENOLA GAY
It was a moment for which none of the Enola Gay’s crew -- away by then, but still rocked by the blast -- was que prepared.
What some don’t know is that the Enola Gay flew that missn, too. Some fly ahead to check the weather to see what ’s like at the actual target, and Enola Gay was part of that for Nagasaki," Kney said. After the bombgs and the war’s quick end, the Enola Gay remaed wh the Army Air Forc, takg part the Biki Atoll atomic tts before beg shipped to the Smhsonian 1960.
The origal patg of the words “Enola Gay” n still be seen on s si. While no members of the crew that flew the Enola Gay rema to tell s story, the aircraft liv on for visors.