‘Observers in the tail of our ship saw a giant ball of fire rise as though from the bowels of the earth.’ –WILLIAM L. LAURENCE, EYEWITNESS
It looked alive.” The officer then shot 16 photographs of the new weapon’s awful power as it yanked the life out of some 80,000 people in the city on the Urakami River. Six days later, the two bombs forced Emperor Hirohito to announce Japan’s unconditional surrender in World War II. Official scensored photos of the bomb’s devastation, but Levy’s image—the only one to show the full scale of the mushroom cloud from the air—was circulated widely. The effect shaped American opinion in favor of the nuclear bomb, leading the nation to celebrate the atomicage and proving, yet again, that history is written by the victors.