Enola gay crew picture

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A handheld 16 mm film camera on The Great Artiste captured the only known motion film of the explosion. Russell Gackenback, Navigator aboard then unnamed Necessary Evil, took two still photographs of the cloud about one minute after detonation using his personal AFGA 620 camera. Film from another handheld was mishandled in developing, making Caron's the only official still photographs of the explosion. After the mission, Ossip developed photos from all the aircraft, but found that the fixed cameras failed to record anything. Immediately before the mission, the 509th's photography officer, Lieutenant Jerome Ossip, asked then Staff Sergeant Caron to carry a handheld Fairchild K-20 camera. Of the four 509th Composite Group aircraft assigned to the Hiroshima bombing, Caron's camera and two others captured the explosion on film.

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Facing the rear of the B-29, his vantage point made him the first man to witness the cataclysmic growth of the mushroom cloud over Hiroshima.Ĭaron was also the only photographer aboard, and took photographs as the mushroom cloud ascended. Technical Sergeant George Robert Caron (Octo– June 3, 1995) was the tail gunner, the only defender of the twelve crewmen, aboard the B-29 Enola Gay during the historic bombing of the Japanese city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945.

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The mushroom cloud over Hiroshima after the dropping of ' Little Boy' photographed by Bob Caron.

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