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Photographing the Dawn of the Nuclear Age

Sixty years ago, Jack Aeby snapped one of history's most important photographs -- a rare color picture of the first atomic bomb test. Aeby was a 21-year-old amateur photographer working as a technician on the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, N.M.

On the morning of July 16, 1945, he was granted permission to photograph a top-secret test bombing, code named Trinity, in the New Mexico desert.

Color film was difficult to get during World War II, but a friend gave him a three-foot chunk from a long roll. Aeby, now 82, remembers getting the shot:

"I'd walked out just a bit north of base camp. I used a chair as a tripod, sat in the seat with the back facing the detonation area, and rested the camera on the back of the chair. I managed to choose a wide-open exposure and aimed it in the proper direction."

As fast as he could wind the film forward and shoot, he snapped three pictures in rapid succession. "By serious accident," he says, one of the three was correctly exposed.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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