Manhattan Project Shield Window - Full Window 54" Wide
Manhattan Project Shield Window - Full Window 54" Wide
A truly exceptional, one-of-a-kind artifact from WWII. This complete shield window from the Manhattan Project's T-221 Plant in Hanford, Washington is breathtaking to behold.
ℹ️ If you’re wondering what that big rock is in the center of the picture, it’s a $1,800,000 crystal standing behind the window. Yes, the glass is really that clear.
📸 Engineers working in the 221-T Plant
Through this crystal clear window, scientists at the Hanford Site in Washington produced the plutonium that would eventually be used in the world's first atomic bomb explosion: the Trinity nuclear test where Robert Oppenheimer would recall the words of the Bhagavad Gita, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds." Later, the site would produce the plutonium used in the "Fat Man" atomic bomb.
Only a few complete shield windows still exist, with many having been broken or lost. This particular window was sold during a government surplus auction in the late 1980s as part of the decommissioning process of the plant. Measuring 54" in length and weighing roughly 1,700 pounds, this particular window is the largest known complete window in private hands.
The window was acquired from a government surplus auction in the late 1980s as part of the long (and continuing) decommissioning process. The yellow color of the glass is due to a high concentration of lead-oxide (up to 70%), which blocks blue and near-UV spectral frequencies, and also gives the glass its protective qualities.
There's no fear of radioactivity in this relic due to its high lead concentration. That said, any prospective buyer will still want to be careful to use gloves, as too much lead exposure can be dangerous. This was just one of many dangers scientists working on the Manhattan Project faced on a daily basis.
📸 A Fragment of a Shield Window
While this object is destined for one particular collection, fragments from smaller shield windows are also available with prices starting at just $29.
LEAD WARNING: The glass is not radioactive but it is comprised of lead-oxide. The glass should be handled with care and only while wearing gloves.
Lead is known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.
Manhattan Project Shield Window Fragment
📸 ATOMIC BOMBING OF NAGASAKI ON AUGUST 9, 1945, TAKEN BY CHARLES LEVY
More About the Manhattan Project
The Manhattan Project first appeared in the Fourth Edition of the Mini Museum. At the time, we produced a long form article for our Companion Guide Book entitled "Nothing Would Ever Be the Same".
We invite you to learn more about the Manhattan Project through the lives of two very different individuals an American physicist named Luis Alvarez, and Nagasaki bombing survivor, Sumiteru Taniguchi.
📸 T Plant (221-T) under construction.
The Hanford, WA facilities encompass 586 square miles of high desert. The Columbia River constitutes about 50 miles of the site’s north and east borders.
Hanford’s facilities originally had 554 buildings, including several production reactors and the unique chemical processing buildings where Plutonium was extracted from Uranium. These buildings were 800 feet long, 65 feet wide, and about 80 feet high. Standing in one reminded workers of standing in the bottom of a canyon, so the buildings were known as “the canyons.”
📸 Nuclear reactors line the riverbank at the Hanford Site along the Columbia River in January 1960 (USDOE N1D0069267)
For decades, the Hanford facilities produced plutonium for America’s nuclear weapons programs. The last reactor at Hanford ceased operation in 1987. Soon after, the U.S. Department of Energy, the EPA, and Washington State University’s Department of Ecology signed an agreement to clean up the hundreds of billions of gallons of liquid and millions of tons of solid waste stored there.
Today, there are 8,000 employees involved in the deactivation, decommissioning, decontaminating, and demolishing of the site’s facilities and structures, except those designated as part of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park. Tours of the site are available to the public, government officials, the media, and other interested parties. The tours for the public focus on efforts to decommission and decontaminate buildings and building sites, and the disposal of radioactive and industrial chemical waste.