In the shadows of the infamous Las Vegas Strip is the Frank H. Rogers Science and Technology building, home to the National Atomic Testing Museum, devoted to preserving the history of the Nevada Test Site (NTS) and the early days of the atomic age. While technically not a “weapons museum” in the usual sense, this 10,000-square- foot facility focuses instead on the history of the ultimate weapon, namely nuclear weapons and the 928 announced nuclear tests (100 atmospheric, 828 underground).
It’s the only one of its kind that offers visitors a look into the history of atomic testing, beginning in the Second World War to the end of atomic testing during the Cold War. The museum offers the reasons why the United States developed the atomic bomb. In the collection is a complete copy of the Einstein–Szilárd letter sent to U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt that warned Germany might develop an atomic bomb and suggested the United States should start its own nuclear program. This prompted action by Roosevelt, which eventually resulted in the Manhattan Project developing the first atomic bombs.
First opened March 2005 as the “Atomic Testing Museum,” today it’s operated by the Nevada Test Site Historical Foundation as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. The museum has been affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution since December 31, 2011, when President Barack Obama signed a military spending bill, designating it as the National Atomic Testing Museum. It’s now one of just 37 national museums in the United States, and the only one dedicated to the study of atomic testing.
The museum is a noted repository for one of the most comprehensive collections of nuclear history. As part of its mission, the National Atomic Testing Museum continues to seek to collect and preserve a wide variety of materials and artifacts relating to atomic testing, the Nevada Test Site, the Cold War, and nuclear and radiological science and technology. The current collection includes thousands of rare photographs, videos, artifacts, scientific and nuclear reports and data, and one-of-a kind scientific collections.
This includes numerous nonfunctional/non-nuclear warheads and other weapons including scale models of Little Boy and Fat Man, the respective code names for the atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. In addition to the scale models of those bombs, the museum offers a concise history of the Manhattan Project and the beginning of the nuclear age. This includes an overview of the unsuccessful “Thin Man” nuclear bomb, and how this led to Little Bomb — a gun-type fission weapon.
There are multiple “bombs” or warheads in the collection, and these include a B57 tactical nuclear bomb and the massive B-53 high-yield “bunker buster thermonuclear weapon.” Designed from 1958-61, it remained in the U.S. arsenal until 1997. It had a yield of 9 megatons and was the most powerful weapon in the U.S. nuclear arsenal after the last B41 nuclear bombs were retired in 1976.
While the focus is on atomic weapons testing, the museum also highlights how these weapons in
the long run may have resulted in peace. It’s largely focused on the period from the first test at NTS on January 27, 1951, to the present. Among the exhibits is a short presentation in the “Ground Zero Theater,” simulating the experience of observing an atmospheric nuclear test as well as a discussion on whether it was necessary to develop such a weapon, but how thankfully these were never used.
The film footage includes various thermonuclear explosions, including the hydrogen testing of “Bravo,” which exploded with the forces of a 15-megaton bomb and created a fireball that was 3.6 miles wide! Talk about the “big one.”
Museum exhibits also include vintage Geiger counters, radio badges, and other radiation testing devices, but the National Atomic Testing Museum also features exhibits relating to Native American artifacts that were from test area. The Atomic age has a unique history of pop culture memorabilia in everything from candy and breakfast cereal, to comic books and toys, and even a lab kit designed for children.
The collection now includes more than 3,500 artifacts that span more than 65 years, as well as more than 16,000 official government and unofficial personal photos that document the 70 years of atomic history.
The museum, which is divided into several key galleries, allows visitors to understand the history of atomic testing both in the atmosphere and later underground. What’s notable too is that while visitors can take in the weapons of mass destruction that came about from the atomic testing, it also highlights how cooler heads prevailed and how the United States and Soviets actually met in 1988 at the Nevada Test Site. Within just a few years of that historic meeting, the Soviet Union would fall and the long Cold War would be over.
It’s fitting then that the National Atomic Testing Museum even has on display a section of the Berlin Wall, a symbol that serves to mark the end of the Cold War and the need to end atomic testing.
Beyond the direct nuclear aspect of the test site, the museum offers a small exhibit to the nearby “Area 51” and while the truth may or may not be out there, the gallery also offers temporary exhibits on other aspects of the atomic age. Finally, just outside the museum is a weather station that records weather data for downtown Las Vegas, and the data includes temperature, wind speed, and notably background gamma radiation in microroentgens per hour.
Hours of Operation:
Open Monday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Closed Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day
Address:
Frank H. Rogers Science and Technology
755 E. Flamingo Road, Las Vegas, NV
Admission: $22
URL: nationalatomictestingmuseum.org
A great little rifle and a great new round. How does a Pure Precision rifle…
Steel case ammo is back! Or is it? Magtech Steel Case 9mm is one of…
Rugged SurgeX is built like a tank, but can it be as quiet as you…
The old things are new again! Springfield Armory is releasing their SA-16A2, an M16A2 clone…
A piece of history that has an earned reputation for being on the of the…
Do you own body armor? Should you? We take a closer look at the pros…