Kenneth Nichols

Kenneth David Nichols

Major General Kenneth D. Nichols
Nickname Nick
Born 13 November 1907(1907-11-13)
Cleveland, Ohio
Died 21 February 2000(2000-02-21) (aged 92)
Bethesda, Maryland
Place of burial Arlington National Cemetery
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1929–1953
Rank Major General
Commands held Armed Forces Special Weapons Project
Manhattan Engineer District
Battles/wars Occupation of Nicaragua
World War II
Awards Distinguished Service Medal (2)
United States Atomic Energy Commission Distinguished Service Award
Commander of the Order of the British Empire, (Great Britain)
Medal of Merit (Nicaragua)
Other work General Manager of the Atomic Energy Commission

Kenneth David "Nick" Nichols (13 November 1907 – 21 February 2000) was a United States Army officer and an engineer. He worked on the Manhattan Project which developed the Atomic Bomb during World War II as Deputy District Engineer and then District Engineer of the Manhattan Engineer District. He was responsible for both the uranium production facility at the Clinton Engineer Works at Oak Ridge, Tennessee and the plutonium production facility at Hanford Engineer Works.

Nichols remained with the Manhattan Project after the war until it was taken over by the Atomic Energy Commission in 1947. He was military liaison officer with the Atomic Energy Commission from 1946 to 1947. After briefly teaching at West Point, he was promoted to major general and became chief of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project, responsible for the military aspects of atomic weapons, including logistics, handling and training. He was deputy director for the Atomic Energy Matters, Plans and Operations Division of the Army's general staff, and was the senior Army member of the military liaison committee that worked with the Atomic Energy Commission.

In 1950, General Nichols became deputy director of the guided missiles division of the Department of Defense. He was appointed chief of research and development when it was reorganized in 1952. In 1953, he became the general manager of the Atomic Energy Commission, where he promoted the construction of nuclear power plants. He played a key role in the proceedings brought against J. Robert Oppenheimer, that resulted in Oppenheimer's security clearance being revoked. In later life, Nichols became an engineering consultant on private nuclear power plants.

Contents

Early life

Kenneth David Nichols was born on 13 November 1907 in West Park Ohio, which later became part of Cleveland, Ohio, one of four children of Wilbur L. Nichols and his wife May née Colbrumn.[1] He graduated fifth in his class at the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1929 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Corps of Engineers. In 1929, he went to Nicaragua as part of an expedition led by Lieutenant Colonel Daniel I. Sultan whose purpose was to conduct a survey for the Inter-Oceanic Nicaragua Canal.[2] Here he first met First Lieutenant Leslie Groves, a fellow officer in the expedition.[3] For his service on the expedition, Nichols was awarded the Nicaraguan Medal of Merit "For exceptional service rendered the Republic of Nicaragua."[2]

Nichols returned to the United States in 1931 and went to Cornell University, where he received a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. He became assistant to the Director of the Waterways Experiment Station in Vicksburg, Mississippi in June 1932. In August he continued his studies at Cornell where he completed his master's degree in civil engineering.[2] While at Cornell he married Jacqueline Darrieulat.[3] Their marriage produced a daughter and a son.[1] He returned to the Waterways Experiment Station in 1933. The next year he received a fellowship awarded by the Institute of International Education to study European Hydraulic Research Methods for a year at the Technische Hochschule in Berlin. The thesis he wrote won an American Society of Civil Engineers award.[3] While there he was promoted to first lieutenant on 1 October 1934. On returning to the United States he received another one year posting to the Waterways Experiment Station. From September 1936 to June 1937 he was a student officer at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.[2] He then became a student again, using his Technische Hochschule thesis as the basis for a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the State University of Iowa.[3] He became an instructor at West Point in August 1937, where he was promoted to captain on 13 June 1939.[2]

World War II

In June 1941, Colonel James C. Marshall summoned Nichols to the Syracuse District to become area engineer in charge of construction of the Rome, New York Air Depot.[4] He was promoted to major on 10 October 1941 and lieutenant colonel on 1 February 1942,[5] when Marshall asked him to take on additional responsibility as area engineer in charge of construction of a new TNT plant, the Pennsylvania Ordnance Works, in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. On this project, Nichols worked with DuPont and Stone & Webster as major contractors, and dealt with Leslie Groves, now the colonel in charge of military construction.[4]

In June 1942, Nichols was again summoned by Marshall, this time to Washington, D.C..[6] Marshal had recently been appointed as district engineer of the new Manhattan District and had received authorization to staff it by drawing on officers and civilians working for the Syracuse District, which was now winding down as the major part of its construction program was nearing completion. Marshall started by designating Nichols as his Deputy District Engineer, which became effective when the Manhattan District was officially formed on 16 August 1942.[7]

The first major decision confronting the new district, which unlike other engineer districts had no geographic limits, was the choice of construction site. On 30 June Nichols and Marshall set out for Tennessee, where they met with officials of the Tennessee Valley Authority and looked over prospective sites in the foothills of the Cumberland Mountains that had been identified by scouts from the Office of Scientific Research and Development that combined the desirable attributes of power, water and transportation with sparse population. A site at Oak Ridge, Tennessee was chosen, but Marshall delayed purchase while he awaited scientific results that justified a full-scale plant. Afterwards, Nichols visited the Metallurgical Laboratory or "Met Lab" at the University of Chicago, where he met with Arthur Compton. Seeing the problems of crowding there, Nichols, on his own authority, arranged for a new experimental site to be established in the Argonne Forest which would eventually become the Argonne National Laboratory.[8]

Nichols took charge of ore procurement. He arranged with the State Department for export controls to be placed on uranium oxide and negotiated with Edgar Sengier for the purchase of 1,200 tons of ore from the Belgian Congo in a warehouse on Staten Island. Nichols arranged with the Eldorado Mining and Refining Company for the purchase of ore from its mine in Port Hope, Ontario and its shipment in 100-ton lots.[9] Nichols met with Undersecretary of the Treasury Daniel W. Bell and arranged for the transfer of 14,700 tons of silver from the West Point Depository for use in the Y-12 National Security Complex in place of copper, which was in desperately short supply in wartime.[10]

In September 1942, Brigadier General Leslie R. Groves, Jr assumed command of the Manhattan Project.[11] Groves immediately moved on the most urgent issues. He promptly approved the purchase of the site at Oak Ridge and negotiated for the project to be given a AAA priority rating.[12] Groves soon decided to establish his project headquarters on the fifth floor of the New War Department Building in Washington, D.C., where Marshall had maintained a liaison office.[13]

Nichols, who concentrated his attention on ore procurement, feed materials and the plutonium project,[14] was promoted to colonel on 22 May 1943.[5] On 13 August, he replaced Marshall as district engineer of the Manhattan Engineer District.[15] As District Engineer, Nichols was responsible for both the uranium production facility at the Clinton Engineer Works at Oak Ridge and the plutonium production facility at the Hanford site. One of his first task as district engineer was to move the district headquarters to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, although its name did not change.[16] For his wartime work on the Manhattan Project, Nichols was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal by the United States Secretary of War, Robert P. Patterson.[17]

Post war

Nichols was promoted to brigadier general on 22 January 1946.[5] Following the departure of Major General Thomas Farrell, Nichols became Groves' deputy, although he also continued as district engineer. Asked to spend more time on weapons production and storage, Nichols established a new underground assembly plant at the Mound Laboratories in Miamisburg, Ohio, and recommended that Sandia Base be transferred from the United States Army Air Corps to the Manhattan District.[17] In December, Nichols recommended the closing down of the alpha tracks of the Y-12 plant, thereby cutting the payroll from 8,600 to 1,500 and saving $2 million a month. Henceforth, uranium enrichment would be performed by the gaseous diffusion plants, the wartime K-25 and the new K-27,[18] which had commenced operation in January 1946.[19]

Nichols kept the national laboratories going with $60 million worth of research grants for fiscal year 1947.[20] He helped Captain Hyman G. Rickover train a team of naval engineers at Oak Ridge to become experts in nuclear propulsion.[21] In June 1946, Nichols went to Bikini Atoll to represent the Manhattan Project at Operation Crossroads, a series of nuclear weapons tests conducted to investigate their effects on warships.[22] Like many of his contemporaries, Nichols was reduced in rank on 30 June 1946, reverting to his substantive rank of lieutenant colonel.[5] On return from Bikini, he found that he had been made an honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire.[23]

In February 1947 Nichols was appointed Professor of Mechanics at West Point, but in April 1948, he was appointed to command the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project, with the rank of major general,[5] the youngest in the Army at the time. Although his rank entitled him to quarters at Fort Myer, Virginia, the Chief of Staff of the United States Army, General Omar Bradley advised him not to ask for them as there had been criticism from some senior colonels.[24] Nichols also became Senior Army Member of the Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), and Deputy Assistant Chief of Staff of the Army (G-3) for Atomic Energy.[5]

In his new role Nichols clashed with the AEC over the issue of whether it or the Department of Defense should have custody of nuclear weapons. The administration's policy remained firmly in favor of AEC control. This was tested during the Berlin Blockade, when President Harry S. Truman ordered nuclear-armed B-29 bombers to Europe.[25] For a time there was talk of calling off the Operation Sandstone nuclear weapons tests, but Nichols successfully argued for their continuation.[26] In 1950, he became deputy director of the guided missiles division of the Department of Defense, overseeing the Nike Project.[27] He was appointed chief of research and development when it was reorganized in 1952.[28] Nichols retired from the Army on 31 October 1953. For his services from 1948 to 1953, he was belatedly awarded a second Distinguished Service Medal in 1956.[29]

Nichols became General Manager of the AEC on 2 November 1953.[29] In this capacity he initiated the AEC Personnel Security Board hearing on the loyalty and trustworthiness of atomic scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer. In a harshly worded memorandum to the AEC on 12 June 1954, subsequent to the hearing, Nichols recommended that Oppenheimer's security clearance not be reinstated. In five "security findings," Nichols said that Oppenheimer was "a Communist in every sense except that he did not carry a party card," and that he "is not reliable or trustworthy."[30] The commission agreed, and Oppenheimer was stripped of his security clearance.[31] A second scandal was the Dixon-Yates contract, a political controversy that became a major issue in the 1954 elections, resulting in Nichols appearing before a United States Senate subcommittee.[32]

Later life

Nichols left the Atomic Energy Commission in 1955 and opened a consulting firm on K Street, specializing in commercial atomic energy research and development. His clients included Alcoa, Gulf Oil, Westinghouse Electric Corporation and the Yankee Rowe Nuclear Power Station.[33] Nichols was involved with the construction of the Yankee Rowe Nuclear Power Station, the first privately owned pressurised-water plant, and the Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant, which commenced operation in 1961 and 1968 respectively. They were both experimental and not expected to be competitive with coal and oil, but later became competitive with inflation and large increases in coal and oil prices. He was critical of over-regulation and protracted hearings, which meant that by the 1980s similar boiling-water or pressurised-water plants took almost twice as long to build in the United States as in France, Japan, Taiwan or South Korea.[34]

Nichols died of respiratory failure on 21 February 2000 at the Brighton Gardens retirement home in Bethesda, Maryland. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.[33] His papers are in the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library & Museum.[35]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Family Details, Alger History and Ancestry, http://www.algerclan.org/getperson.php?personID=I42008&tree=Alger, retrieved 8 October 2010 
  2. ^ a b c d e Cullum 1940, p. 778
  3. ^ a b c d Nichols 1987, pp. 25–26
  4. ^ a b Nichols 1987, pp. 28–29
  5. ^ a b c d e f Cullum 1950, p. 593
  6. ^ Nichols 1987, p. 31
  7. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 42–44
  8. ^ Fine & Remington 1972, pp. 655–658
  9. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 85–86
  10. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 153
  11. ^ Fine & Remington 1972, pp. 659–661
  12. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 78–82
  13. ^ Groves 1962, pp. 27–28
  14. ^ Nichols 1987, p. 67
  15. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 99–101
  16. ^ Jones 1985, p. 88
  17. ^ a b Nichols 1987, pp. 226–229
  18. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 646
  19. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 630
  20. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, p. 28
  21. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 74–76
  22. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 232–233
  23. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 243–244
  24. ^ Nichols 1987, p. 258
  25. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, pp. 169–172, 354–355
  26. ^ Hewlett & Duncan 1969, p. 159
  27. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 280–284
  28. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 288–291
  29. ^ a b Nichols 1987, pp. 298–299
  30. ^ Stern 1969, pp. 394–398, 400–401
  31. ^ Hewlett & Holl 1989, pp. 64–65,102–108
  32. ^ Hewlett & Holl 1989, pp. 127–133
  33. ^ a b Kenneth David Nichols, Arlington National Cemetery, http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/kdnichols.htm, retrieved 16 October 2010 
  34. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 343–345
  35. ^ Finding aid for Kenneth D. Nichols Oral History, Eisenhower Presidential Center, http://eisenhower.archives.gov/Research/Oral_Histories/Oral_Histories.html, retrieved 16 October 2010 

Bibliography