======================================================================
Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
======================================================================


NY Times June 11, 2010
Joan Hinton, Physicist Who Chose China Over Atom Bomb, Is Dead at 88
By WILLIAM GRIMES

Joan Hinton, a physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project, which 
developed the atom bomb, but spent most of her life as a committed 
Maoist working on dairy farms in China, died on Tuesday in Beijing. She 
was 88.

The cause has not yet been determined, but she had an abdominal 
aneurysm, her son Bill Engst said.

Ms. Hinton was recruited for the Manhattan Project in February 1944 
while still a graduate student in physics at the University of 
Wisconsin. At the secret laboratory at Los Alamos, N.M., where she 
worked with Enrico Fermi, she was assigned to a team that built two 
reactors for testing enriched uranium and plutonium.

When the first atom bomb was detonated near Alamogordo, N.M., on July 
16, 1945, she and a colleague, riding a motorcycle, dodged Army jeep 
patrols and hid near a small hill about 25 miles from the blast point to 
witness the event.

“We first felt the heat on our faces, then we saw what looked like a sea 
of light,” she told The South China Morning Post in 2008. “It was 
gradually sucked into an awful purple glow that went up and up into a 
mushroom cloud. It looked beautiful as it lit up the morning sun.”

Ms. Hinton thought that the bomb would be used for a demonstration 
explosion to force a Japanese surrender. After the bombings of Hiroshima 
and Nagasaki, she became an outspoken peace activist. She sent the 
mayors of every major city in the United States a small glass case 
filled with glassified desert sand and a note asking whether they wanted 
their cities to suffer the same fate.

In 1948, alarmed at the emerging cold war, she gave up physics and left 
the United States for China, then in the throes of a Communist 
revolution she wholeheartedly admired. “I did not want to spend my life 
figuring out how to kill people,” she told National Public Radio in 
2002. “I wanted to figure out how to let people have a better life, not 
a worse life.”

In China she met her future husband, Erwin Engst, a Cornell-trained 
dairy-cattle expert, who went on to work on dairy farms as a breeder 
while she designed and built machinery. During the Cultural Revolution, 
they were editors and translators in Beijing.

Ms. Hinton applied her scientific talents to perfecting a 
continuous-flow automatic milk pasteurizer and other machines. For the 
past 40 years, she worked on a dairy farm and an agricultural station 
outside Beijing, tending a herd of about 200 cows.

Joan Chase Hinton was born on Oct. 20, 1921, in Chicago. Her father, 
Sebastian Hinton, was a patent lawyer who invented the jungle gym in 
1920. Her mother, Carmelita Chase Hinton, founded the Putney School, a 
progressive coeducational secondary school in Putney, Vt., which Joan 
attended and where she excelled as a skier, qualifying for the United 
States Olympic Team that would have competed in the 1940 games had they 
not been canceled.

After earning a bachelor’s degree in natural science from Bennington 
College in 1942, she enrolled at the University of Wisconsin, where she 
earned a doctorate in physics in 1944.

At Los Alamos, teams were assigned to theoretical and practical work. 
Ms. Hinton, assigned to practical work, piled beryllium blocks around 
the core of the site’s first reactor and constructed electronic circuits 
for the counters.

According to Ruth H. Howes and Caroline L. Herzenberg, the authors of 
“Their Day in the Sun: Women of the Manhattan Project,” she then helped 
design and construct the control rods for a second reactor.

In her spare time, she played violin in a string quartet whose members 
included the physicists Edward Teller and Otto Frisch.

After the war she studied with Mr. Fermi as a fellow at the Institute 
for Nuclear Studies at the University of Chicago and then left for 
China, where she met and married Mr. Engst, who had been in the country 
since 1946 teaching agriculture and dairy-herd management.

Mr. Engst died in 2003. In addition to her son Bill, of Marlboro, N.J., 
she is survived by another son, Fred Engst of Beijing; a daughter, Karen 
Engst of Pau, France; and four grandchildren.

During the McCarthy era, Ms. Hinton’s name surfaced as a possible spy 
and spiller of nuclear secrets after she spoke at a peace conference in 
Beijing. Rear Adm. Ellis M. Zacharias denounced her in a 1953 article 
for Real magazine titled “The Atom Spy Who Got Away.”

An illustration depicted her as a furtive blonde in a trench coat, 
taking notes as she observed a nuclear test. There was never any 
evidence to show that Ms. Hinton passed secrets or did any work as a 
physicist in China.

She and her husband remained true believers in the Maoist cause.

“It would have been terrific if Mao had lived,” Ms. Hinton told The 
Weekend Australian in 2008 during a trip to Japan. “Of course I was 100 
percent behind everything that happened in the Cultural Revolution — it 
was a terrific experience.”

________________________________________________
Send list submissions to: Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu
Set your options at: 
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to