Dayton Daily News

Museum documentin­g area role in Atomic Age may move

- By Eileen McClory Contact this reporter at 937-694-2016 or email eileen.mcclory@coxinc.com.

Organizers of a Cold War museum in Miamisburg that showcases work Dayton scientists and engineers did using nuclear technologi­es are worried the museum may need to move away from the site where the work was done.

The Mound Cold War Discovery Center shows the first Atomic Energy Commission site constructe­d after World War II to continue and consolidat­e work that Dayton scientists were doing on the Manhattan Project, which produced the first atomic bombs.

The Miamisburg-based museum opened in 2018 with funding from the Legacy Management program at the Department of Energy. Dayton History is also involved. But the program funding is expected to end in September of 2025.

“We have between now and then to become self-sustaining,” said Jaclyn Miller, site and project manager for the Mount Cold War Discovery Center.

The museum offers tours for school groups and has some grants to offset the cost. The site has been trying to advertise their existence but drew back slightly to prioritize cataloguin­g some of the archives.

Miller said the one saving grace would be that if the center does close, the collection in the museum would move to Carillon Park. But it’s not clear what would happen to some of the other records that the Mount Cold War Discovery Center has, and Miller argues that it’s closer to the history of the Mound to have the museum on the site of where the research happened.

Plus, April Hauser, site manager for the Mound Developmen­t Corporatio­n, argues the museum

At least two Mound inventions are still considered cutting edge: the radioisoto­pe thermoelec­tric generator, a type of nuclear battery, and the differenti­ating bubbler, a system to measure the amount of tritium, or radioactiv­e hydrogen, in the air.

sticking around would keep institutio­nal knowledge of the nuclear work that was conducted at the site. More than $1 billion was put into cleanup to make it up to

industrial standards and it’s safe to be on the grounds.

“That just shows that you can move past that age,” she said. “And people are getting more knowledge and better

understand­ing through the educationa­l programs they offer here and elsewhere, of that how we use that energy and how clean that energy is.”

But Hauser said people still can’t fish at the pond down the street, for example, and she worries that if no one is there and the site is turned into a nature preserve like other nuclear project sites, people will feel it’s OK to take soil from the site and use it to grow food, which could make people sick.

Doug Gabriel, president of the Mound Associatio­n and a former employee of the Mound, said a group of former Mound workers wanted to start a museum to show the legacy of the work done there.

Work done at the Mound still has an impact on the modern day, though it closed in 2006. Miller said some of the Space Race research done at the site has been requested by private companies who are working on space projects.

At least two Mound inventions are still considered cutting edge: the radioisoto­pe thermoelec­tric generator, a type of nuclear battery, and the differenti­ating bubbler, a system to measure the amount of tritium, or radioactiv­e hydrogen, in the air.

“There’s a historical marker down at the bottom of the hill that is part of the commemorat­ion, but the whole idea of the museum was to honor the work that had been done,” Gabriel said.

The museum is open Wednesday to Saturday to the public and by appointmen­t for groups. Admission is free. Call (937) 247-0402 for more informatio­n.

 ?? ?? Doug Gabriel worked at the Mound in Miamisburg for 30 years and explains a plutonium 238 battery. The technology discovered during the Cold War is still being used today.
Doug Gabriel worked at the Mound in Miamisburg for 30 years and explains a plutonium 238 battery. The technology discovered during the Cold War is still being used today.
 ?? JIM NOELKER PHOTOS / STAFF ?? This is one of many exhibition at the Mound Cold War Discovery Center in Miamisburg. The center is in danger of close because of lack of funding.
JIM NOELKER PHOTOS / STAFF This is one of many exhibition at the Mound Cold War Discovery Center in Miamisburg. The center is in danger of close because of lack of funding.
 ?? ?? The Mound Cold War Discovery Center is located on Mound Road in Miamisburg.
The Mound Cold War Discovery Center is located on Mound Road in Miamisburg.

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