This is Only a Test
State and local planners wrote detailed scenarios for atomic attacks that included initial warning, shelter and evacuation protocols, rescue and medical responses, casualty counts, travel and food distribution for survivors, and finally “restitution of normal conditions.”
Operation Alert was an annual event that saw mock air raids in metropolitan areas nationwide. In Chicago’s 1958 drill a 10 megaton bomb hit the ground at 63rd and Kedzie Ave, leveling much of the south and west sides of the city. These reenactments were often upbeat, praising preparedness and predicting survival even as they acknowledged the potential for the total annihilation of Chicago and its inhabitants. Documents from Operation Alert 1958 show portions of the city unaffected by a direct hit even as they laid out plans for special elections to replace officials who were expected to die.
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This page references:
- Operation Alert, 1958
- Map of Ground Burst at 63rd and Kedzie Ave
- Some of the effects of a single atomic bomb burst
- Chicago Sun Times Article "Area Defense Test Best By Far"
- Photograph showing the area near 63rd and Kedzie
- Phases of atomic attack
- Expected Effects of Acute Whole Body Radiation Doses
- Air raid instructions