Special Engineer Detachment

Wikipedia

9812nd Special Engineer Detachment [1]
Manhattan Project Shoulder Patch
ActiveMay 22, 1943 to June 1946(?) [2]
CountryUnited States
BranchArmy
Size334 on May 22, 1943, 1800 at peak in September 1945
Garrison/HQLos Alamos Laboratory, Oak Ridge
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders

The Special Engineer Detachment (SED) was a US Army program that identified enlisted personnel with technical skills, such as machining, or who had some science education beyond high school. Those identified were organized into the Special Engineer Detachment, or SED. SED personnel began arriving at Los Alamos in October 1943. By August 1945, 1800 SED personnel worked at Los Alamos.[3] These troops worked in all areas and activities of the Laboratory, including the Trinity Test, and were involved in overseas operations on Tinian.

An article released by the Atomic Heritage Foundation wrote that; "After the war, many went back to school and became successful scientists in their own right—including Val Fitch, who was awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1980."[4]

References

Sources

  • Bederson, Benjamin (2004). "SEDs at Los Alamos". In Kelly, Cynthia C. (ed.). Remembering the Manhattan Project: a Personal Memoir. World Scientific Publishing. pp. 81–88. ISBN 9812560408.

Further reading