Quincy Generals
Portrait of Maj. Charles W. Sweeney (circa 1945) by David Wang
“At 25 years of age, I was to be the only pilot who flew both atomic missions over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I piloted the B-29 carrying the instruments to Hiroshima on the right wing of the Enola Gay. I watched as the Enola Gay’s bomb bay doors snapped open and the 9,000-pound uranium bomb was released. I thought, ‘It’s too late now. There are no strings or cables attached. We can’t get it back, whether it works or not. But if it works, it might just end the war.’ None of us, I remember, was entirely sure what that bomb would do – to its target or to us. . . Three days later, I commanded my first combat mission, to Nagasaki, this time carrying a 10,300-pound plutonium bomb, a weapon that had never been tested free-falling from an airplane before it was loaded into the bomb bay of Bock’s Car on August 8, 1945. The Japanese military surrendered six days later, and World War II came to an end. It was as simple and as complicated as that.”
Maj. Gen. Charles W. Sweeney, USAF, “War’s End: An Eyewitness Account of America’s Last Atomic Mission,” 1997
On season 2 episode 30 Quincy’s City View podcast, Mark Carey and Quincy’s Mayor Tom Koch recap the Generals Park & Bridge Dedication. Mayor Koch also discusses General Sweeney's important and historic legacy in ending WWII. Listen to the podcast here. Visit www.quincygenerals.com for more information.
Image source www.buzzsprout.com