On July 16, 1945, a group of thirteen-year-old girls went camping near Ruidoso, New Mexico, spending their days swimming in a quiet river. At the front of the group stood Barbara Kent. None of them knew that, just miles away, history’s first nuclear bomb had just been detonated.
The blast was part of the Manhattan Project’s “Trinity” test—conducted at 5:29 a.m. from a 100-foot steel tower, 40 miles away in the Jornada del Muerto valley. The site had been chosen for its supposed isolation, yet thousands of people lived within a 40-mile radius, some as close as 12 miles. No one was warned, evacuated, or protected as radioactive fallout drifted for days.
“We were all just shocked … and then, all of a sudden, there was this big cloud overhead, and lights in the sky,” Kent later recalled. “It even hurt our eyes when we looked up. The whole sky turned strange. It was as if the sun came out tremendous.”
A few hours later, white flakes began to fall from above. Excited, the girls put on their bathing suits and, amid the flurries, began playing in the river. “We were grabbing all of this white, which we thought was snow, and we were putting it all over our faces,” Kent said. “But the strange thing, instead of being cold like snow, it was hot. And we all thought, ‘Well, the reason it’s hot is because it’s summer.’ We were just 13 years old.”
Years later, Kent learned that the “snow” the young students played in was actually fallout from the first nuclear test explosion in the United States (and, indeed, the world), known as Trinity. Of the 12 girls that attended the camp, Kent is the only living survivor. The other 11 died from various cancers, as did the camp dance teacher and Kent’s mother, who was staying nearby.
Diagnosed with four different types of cancers herself, Kent is one of many people in New Mexico unknowingly exposed to fallout from the explosion of the first atomic bomb. In the years following the Trinity test, thousands of residents developed cancers and diseases that they believe were caused by the nuclear blast.
The Trinity test’s victims were not only in Japan—they also lived and died in the American Southwest. Similar tragedies played out elsewhere, such as Maralinga in Australia, where nuclear tests exposed Aboriginal communities to lethal radiation, leading to untold deaths from cancer—losses still rarely spoken of.
Even some scientists, like Dapo Michaels, were blindsided by the long-term consequences. Overcome with guilt after realizing the devastation his work had helped unleash, Michaels suffered a breakdown, was institutionalized, and died there.
The legacy of these tests is not only a story of scientific achievement but also of silent, unacknowledged suffering.
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