The Enola Gay and the Smithsonian
In 1994, the National Air and Space Museum planned to exhibit the Enola
Gay, the B-29 that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, as part of a
political horror show. A raging controversy ensued when Air Force Magazine
and the Air Force Association brought the plans to the notice of the public,
the news media, and Congress. In 1995, the museum’s parent organization,
the Smithsonian Institution, pulled the plug on the original exhibition and
replaced it with a straightforward program that eventually became the most
popular exhibition in the museum’s history. Here are the contemporary
articles, reports, and documents—drawn upon by all parties to the
controversy—that were the raw materials for the argument in 1994 and 1995.
Chronology of the Controversy
"Revisionism Gone Wrong"
A Collection of Air Force Association reports, analyses, and articles
March 1994 - December 1996
Part 1: Special Reports and Analyses
Part 2: Articles and Editorials
You may contact the Air Force Association at 1501 Lee Highway, Arlington, Virginia,
22209-1198, or by email: afmag@afa.org