The operations order is a basic sequence of events for crew
members on the nine planes involved in the bombing, from when to attend
prayer services, rise from bed, eat meals, attend briefings and finally
take flight for Japan.
The
museum, which Rendell established in 1999, also has a copy of a
similarly nondescript order for the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki
three days later on Aug. 9. That blast and its aftermath claimed another
80,000 lives, prompting Japan to surrender days later on Aug. 15.
Rendell,
who has amassed a considerable trove of World War II related artifacts
for his museum, says he purchased the operations orders over two decades
ago from the family of Jacob Beser, a radar and electronics specialist
who was the only man to have flown both bombing missions. Beser died in
1992.
Other items in the exhibit also were purchased from the family of crew members.
For
example, there are some personal effects from Enola Gay's navigator
Theodore "Dutch" VanKirk, who was the last surviving member of the crew
before he died last year at the age of 93. Among them are VanKirk's
headset, bible and navigator's sextant, which he used to plot the course
to Hiroshima.
There also is a handwritten missive that George
Caron, the Enola Gay's tail gunner, penned to his wife upon returning
from the successful mission.
"It
seems our crew and airplanes made history or something," he writes.
"When they let us write about it from here, I'll be able to tell you all
about it. Our picture will probably be all over the states before we
can say anything."

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