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Throwback Thursday – NOLA Travel: Visit to America’s Secret City – Oak Ridge, TN

American Museum of Science & Energy, Oak Ridge, TN

Jump back with us in our summer Throwback Thursday series, as we revisit some of our favorite pieces from previous summers. Let’s revisit June 2012, when Glen Abbott revealed to us, a secret city in Tennessee.

Despite its colorful reputation for scandals and corruption, Louisiana is not home to America’s “Secret City.”

That honor goes to Oak Ridge, Tennessee — although not for the aforementioned reasons.

In an era of instantaneous information, it’s difficult to imagine the U.S. government being able to keep the existence of an entire city a secret.

But 70 years ago, that’s exactly what happened.

It was a time of unquestioning patriotism. What the government wanted, it got.

And what the government wanted in 1942 was the atomic bomb. We were at war, and it was feared that our enemies would develop the bomb first.

American Museum of Science & Energy, Oak Ridge, TN

The government needed a secret site to build a facility to enrich uranium for the weapon, and the hills of Eastern Tennessee were deemed the perfect location. Problem was, parts of the area were already occupied: four rural communities were spread throughout its hills.

Virtually overnight, more than 3,000 people were ordered to move from their homes — with surprisingly little public protest from the evictees — and construction began immediately on a new, secret city on the 59,000-acre tract in the Black Oak Ridge Valley. That city came to be called Oak Ridge.

“We are a city that wasn’t on any maps until the 1950s,” according to Lissa Clark, of the American Museum of Science & Energy in Oak Ridge.

The top-secret city of Oak Ridge was one of three primary locations for the Manhattan Project (others were Los Alamos, NM and Hanford, Washington). During World War II, over 75,000 residents lived there, making it Tennessee’s fifth-largest city.

In addition to three main production plants (named Y-12, K-25, and X-10), authorities built nearly 10,000 homes and apartments, as well as dormitories, trailers, and military barracks used for housing. Most employees of the facility didn’t know what was going on there — just that they were helping in the war effort.

Today, Oak Ridge is obviously no longer a secret. The city’s population is just under 30,000; it could be considered a bedroom community for Knoxville, as it’s just a 30-minute drive away. The U.S. Department of Energy operates the Oak Ridge National Laboratory there, parts of which are open for public tours.

American Museum of Science & Energy, Oak Ridge, TN

The American Museum of Science & Energy offers a comprehensive look at the history of Oak Ridge and the Manhattan Project, as well as displays on nuclear energy (the museum is owned by the U.S. Department of Energy, and is part of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory), but it is also a Smithsonian affiliate.

It’s worth a stop, especially if you’re in Eastern Tennessee. The museum’s exhibits offer a look at what America was like before the “information age,” at a time when government secrets were accepted without question, a time when “loose lips sink ships.”

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

AMSE-American Museum of Science & Energy

300 South Tulane Ave.

Oak Ridge, TN 37830

(865) 576-3200

www.amse.org

Oak Ridge, TN Tourism: http://www.oakridgevisitor.com/

Tennessee Tourism: http://www.tnvacation.com/

Photo gallery (Glen Abbott photos):

 

 

Glen Abbott is a New Orleans-based freelance travel writer/photographer. Visit his blog at www.TravelinGringo.com.

 

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12/18/17
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12/18/17
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