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Katherine Oppenheimer

Katherine "Kitty" Oppenheimer (née Puening; August 8, 1910 – October 27, 1972) was a German American biologist, botanist, and a member of the Communist Party of America. She is best known as the common-law wife of activist Joe Dallet, and then the wife of physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, the director of the Manhattan Project's Los Alamos Laboratory during World War II.

Katherine Oppenheimer
Wartime Los Alamos identification badge
Born
Katherine Vissering Puening

(1910-08-08)August 8, 1910
DiedOctober 27, 1972(1972-10-27) (aged 62)
Panama City, Panama
Resting placeAshes scattered at sea off Carval Rock, near Saint John, U.S. Virgin Islands
Other namesKatherine Ramseyer, Katherine Dallet, Katherine Harrison
Alma mater
Political partyCommunist Party of America
Spouses
Frank Ramseyer
(m. 1932; ann. 1933)
Stewart Harrison
(m. 1938; div. 1940)
(m. 1940; died 1967)
Partner(s)Joseph Dallet, Jr.
(1934–1937)
Children2

Early life

Katherine "Kitty" Vissering Puening was born in Recklinghausen, Westphalia, Prussia, Germany, on August 8, 1910, the only child of Franz Puening and his wife Käthe Vissering. Although she claimed that her father was a prince and that her mother was related to Queen Victoria, this was untrue. Her mother was a cousin of Wilhelm Keitel, who later became a field marshal in the German Army during World War II, and was hanged in 1946.[1][2]

Puening arrived in the United States on May 14, 1913, aboard the SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. Her father, a metallurgical engineer, had invented a new kind of blast furnace, and had gained employment with a steel company in Pittsburgh, and the family settled in the suburb of Aspinwall, Pennsylvania. Although her first language was German, she soon became fluent in English, speaking both languages without accent. Her parents regularly took her with them on summer visits to Germany.[1][2]

After graduating from Aspinwall High School in June 1928, Puening enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh.[3] She lived at home and attended freshman classes in mathematics, biology and chemistry. Her father now worked for Koppers, and held patents for the design of blast furnaces.[4][5][6] Puening convinced her parents that it would be a good idea for her to study in Germany, and she sailed for Europe in March 1930. It is doubtful that she took any classes, but she did meet Frank Ramseyer, an American studying music in Paris under Nadia Boulanger, before sailing for home on 19 May.[6]

Puening completed the first year of her degree, but married Ramseyer before a Justice of the Peace in Pittsburgh on 24 December 1932. The couple moved to an apartment near Harvard University, where Ramseyer hoped to pursue a master's degree in music. She re-enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh in January 1933, and returned to her parents' house in Aspinwall. In June 1933 she sailed to Europe again, with her husband. When she returned, she enrolled at the University of Wisconsin, although there is no record of her ever completing any classes. She obtained an annulment of her marriage from the Superior Court of Wisconsin on 20 December 1933. She later told friends that she had discovered evidence that Ramseyer was a homosexual and a drug addict. She also had an abortion.[7]

Communism

At a New Year's Eve party later that year, Puening met Joseph Dallet, Jr., the son of a wealthy Long Island businessman who had attended Dartmouth College. He had been radicalized by the 1927 executions of Sacco and Vanzetti, and had joined the Communist Party of America in 1929. He had been involved in the International Unemployment Day protest in Chicago on 6 March 1930 that had been brutally repressed by the authorities, and was currently working as a union organizer with the steel workers in Youngstown, Ohio. At one point he ran for mayor of Youngstown on the Communist Party ticket, but was not elected.[8][9]

Puening's parents had moved to Claygate, southwest of London, where her father represented a Chicago-based firm. On returning to the United States on 3 August 1934 after visiting family in Europe, she moved in with Dallet, becoming his common-law wife. They shared a room in a dilapidated boarding house that cost $5 per month. Gus Hall and John Gates had a room down the hall. They lived on the dole, $12.50 per month each. As the wife of a party member, Puening was allowed to join the Communist Party, but only after proving her loyalty by hawking copies of the Daily Worker on the streets. Her party dues were 10c a week.[10][8]

They separated in June 1936, and Puening went to live with her parents in Claygate, where she worked as a German-to-English translator.[10] Months went by without any word from Dallet, until Puening discovered that her mother had been hiding his letters to her. "Her mother," her friend Anne Wilson recalled, "was a real dragon, a very repressive woman. She disappeared one day over the side of a transatlantic ship, and nobody missed her. That says it all."[11]

The last letter from Dallet said that he was heading to Spain on the RMS Queen Mary to join the International Brigades fighting in the Spanish Civil War.[10][8] Puening met up with Dallet and his best friend Steve Nelson in Cherbourg, and they travelled to Paris together. After a few days there, she returned to London, and they headed south, crossing into Spain[12] where he joined the Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion, a unit composed of American and Canadian volunteers.[13]

Puening wanted to join Dallet in Spain, and finally secured permission to do so. Her trip to Spain was delayed by hospitalization for an operation on 26 August 1937 for what was initially thought to be appendicitis, but which was determined to be ovarian cysts, which were removed by the German doctors. Puening returned to England to recuperate. Before she could depart for Spain, the news arrived that Dallet had been killed in action on 17 October 1937. His letters to her were published as Letters from Spain by Joe Dallet, American Volunteer, to his Wife (1938).[13][14]

Puening went to see Nelson, who was in Paris, having been wounded in August, and they returned to New York, where she stayed with Nelson and his wife Margaret at their home in Brooklyn for two months. She then headed for Philadelphia to see her friend Zelma Baker, who worked at the Cancer Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania. Puening enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania. There she met Richard Stewart Harrison, a medical doctor with degrees from Oxford University, who was completing his internship in the US. They were married on 23 November 1938.[15][16]

Romance with Oppenheimer

Soon after, Harrison left for Pasadena, California, for his residency at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), while she remained in Philadelphia to complete her bachelor's degree in botany at the University of Pennsylvania, and was offered a postgraduate research fellowship at the University of California, Los Angeles.[15][16] At Caltech, she worked with physicist Charles Lauritsen. The X-ray laboratory at Caltech used for physics research was also used for experimental cancer therapy research. It was at a garden party thrown by Lauritsen and his wife Sigrid in August 1939 that she met Robert Oppenheimer, a physicist who taught at Caltech for part of each year.[17] Soon after, she began an affair with Oppenheimer. They were frequently seen about town in his Chrysler coupe.[18] Oppenheimer had dated several women since his break up with long-time girlfriend Jean Tatlock, some of them married, like Kitty Harrison. At Christmas time she went up to Berkeley without her husband, to spend time with Oppenheimer. His friend Haakon Chevalier met Kitty at a holiday dinner party thrown by the pianist Estelle Caen, one of Oppenheimer's ex-girlfriends.[19]

Oppenheimer invited Harrison and Kitty to spend the summer at his New Mexico ranch, Perro Caliente. Harrison declined, as he was engaged in his research, but Kitty accepted. Robert Serber and his wife Charlotte collected Kitty in Pasadena, and drove her to Perro Caliente, where they met up with Robert, his brother Frank Oppenheimer, and his wife Jackie.[20] The Serbers had met Kitty before, at Charlotte Serber's parents' house in Philadelphia in 1938.[21] The Oppenheimers loved to ride through the pine and birch forests and floral meadows of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, camping with minimal food and equipment. Kitty impressed them with her riding ability; horsemanship was a normal accomplishment for women of her social class, and she had learned to ride as a girl on the riding trails around Aspinwall. Kitty and Robert rode out to stay the night with his friend Katy Page in Los Pinos, New Mexico. The following day Page rode to Perro Caliente on her bay horse to return Kitty's night gown, which had been left under Robert's pillow.[22][20]

Kitty later told Anne Wilson that she got Robert to marry her the "old-fashioned way"—by getting pregnant.[23] In September 1940, Robert phoned Harrison with the happy news, and they agreed that the best way forward was for Kitty to get a divorce so she could marry Robert. Soon after, Robert shared a podium with Nelson to raise money for refugees from the Spanish Civil War, and he informed him that he was engaged to Kitty. Nelson's wife was also pregnant, and he named his daughter, who was born in November 1940, Josie in memory of Dallet. To obtain a divorce, Kitty moved to Reno, Nevada, where she stayed for six weeks to meet the state's residency requirements. The divorce was finalised on November 1, 1940, and Kitty married Oppenheimer the following day in a civil ceremony in Virginia City, Nevada, with the court janitor and clerk as witnesses.[24]

Manhattan Project

Their child, a son they called Peter, was born in Pasadena, on May 12, 1941, during Oppenheimer's regular session at Caltech. When they returned to Berkeley, he bought a new house at One Eagle Hill with a view over the Golden Gate. Kitty worked at the University of California as a laboratory assistant. They left Peter with the Chevaliers and a German nurse and headed out to Perro Caliente for the summer. The holiday was marred when Oppenheimer was trampled by a horse, and Kitty was injured when she had an accident in their Cadillac convertible.[25][26] The United States entered World War II in December 1941, and Oppenheimer began recruiting staff for the Manhattan Project. Among the first were the Serbers, who moved into the apartment over the garage at One Eagle Hill.[27]

On March 16, 1943, the couple boarded a train for Santa Fe, New Mexico. By the end of the month, they had moved to Los Alamos, New Mexico, where they occupied one of the buildings formerly belonging to the Los Alamos Ranch School. Los Alamos was known to the occupants as "the Hill" and to the Manhattan Project as Site Y. Oppenheimer became the director of Project Y.[28] Kitty abdicated the role of post commander's wife to Martha Parsons, the wife of Robert's deputy, Navy Captain William S. Parsons.[29] She put her biologist training to use working for the director of the Health Group at Los Alamos, Louis Hempelmann, conducting blood tests to assess the danger of radiation.[30]

In 1944, Kitty became pregnant again. Her second child, a girl Katherine who she named after her mother but called Toni, was born on December 7, 1944. Like other babies born in wartime Los Alamos, Toni's birth certificate gave the place of birth as P.O. Box 1663.[31] In April 1945, Kitty was depressed by the isolation of Los Alamos, and she left Toni with Pat Sherr, the wife of physicist Rubby Sherr; Pat had recently lost her son, Michael, to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Kitty returned with Peter to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania to live with her parents. They returned to Los Alamos in July 1945.[32][33]

Later life

With the end of the war in August 1945, Oppenheimer had become a celebrity, and Kitty had become an alcoholic. She suffered a series of bone breaks from drunken falls and car crashes.[34][35] In November 1945, Robert left Los Alamos to return to Caltech,[36] but he soon found that his heart was no longer in teaching.[37] In 1947, he accepted an offer from Lewis Strauss to take up the directorship of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.[38] The job came with rent-free accommodation in the director's house, a ten-bedroom 17th-century manor with a cook and groundskeeper, surrounded by 265 acres (107 ha) of woodlands. Robert had a greenhouse built for Kitty, where she raised orchids; for her birthdays Oppenheimer had rare species flown in from Hawaii.[39][40] Olden Manor was sometimes known as "Bourbon Manor";[41] Kitty and Robert liked to keep the liquor cabinet well stocked, and like many of their generation, liked to celebrate cocktail hour with martinis, Manhattans, Old Fashioneds and highballs. Both were also fond of smoking,[42] and Kitty's habit of combining too much alcohol with smoking in bed led to a plethora of holes in her bedding and at least one house fire.[35] She sometimes took too many pills, and suffered from abdominal pains caused by pancreatitis. Pain often prompted outbursts of anger.[43]

In 1952, Toni contracted polio, and doctors suggested that a warmer climate might help. The family flew to the Caribbean, where they rented a 72-foot (22 m) ketch. Robert and Kitty discovered a shared love of sailing, while Toni soon recovered. The family spent part of each summer on Saint John in the Virgin Islands, eventually building a beach house there.[44] On January 6, 1967, Robert was diagnosed with inoperable cancer, and he died on February 18, 1967.[45] Kitty had his remains cremated and his ashes were placed in an urn, which she took to St. John and dropped into the sea off the coast, within sight of the beach house.[46] She took up with Robert Serber, whose wife Charlotte had committed suicide in May 1967. She talked him into buying a 52-foot (16 m) yawl, which they sailed from New York to Grenada. In 1972, they purchased a 52-foot (16 m) ketch, with the intention of sailing through the Panama Canal and to Japan via the Galapagos Islands and Tahiti. They set out, but Kitty became ill, and was taken to Gorgas Hospital, where she died of an embolism on October 27, 1972. Serber and Toni had her remains cremated, and they scattered her ashes near Robert's.[47][48][49]

References

  1. ^ a b Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 154–155.
  2. ^ a b Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 9–10, 26–27.
  3. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 42–43.
  4. ^ US 1542955  Heating method and apparatus
  5. ^ US 1799702  Heating apparatus
  6. ^ a b Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 78–79.
  7. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 80–82.
  8. ^ a b c Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 156–157.
  9. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 89–90.
  10. ^ a b c Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 93–94, 97–98.
  11. ^ Conant 2005, p. 184.
  12. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 104–105.
  13. ^ a b "Joseph Dallet, Jr". Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  14. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 111–117.
  15. ^ a b Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 119.
  16. ^ a b Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 158–161.
  17. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 120–121.
  18. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, p. 161.
  19. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 125–126.
  20. ^ a b Bird & Sherwin 2005, p. 162.
  21. ^ Serber & Crease 1998, p. 51.
  22. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 128–129.
  23. ^ Conant 2005, p. 186.
  24. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 162–163.
  25. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 164–165.
  26. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 138–139.
  27. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 141–142.
  28. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 213–214.
  29. ^ Conant 2005, p. 179.
  30. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 51.
  31. ^ Conant 2005, pp. 262–263.
  32. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 204–211.
  33. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 263–264.
  34. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 207.
  35. ^ a b Wolverton 2008, p. 176.
  36. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 333–335.
  37. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, p. 351.
  38. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, pp. 360–365.
  39. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, p. 369.
  40. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 234–235.
  41. ^ Wolverton 2008, p. 270.
  42. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 243.
  43. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 276.
  44. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 251.
  45. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, p. 295.
  46. ^ Bird & Sherwin 2005, p. 588.
  47. ^ Streshinsky & Klaus 2013, pp. 301–302.
  48. ^ Serber & Crease 1998, pp. 220–221.
  49. ^ "Mrs. J. Robert Oppenheimer, 62, Nuclear Physicist's Widow, Dies". New York Times. October 29, 1972. Retrieved April 17, 2018.

Sources

External links

  • Katherine Oppenheimer FBI file
  • Letters from Spain by Joe Dallet, American Volunteer, to his Wife

katherine, oppenheimer, katherine, kitty, oppenheimer, née, puening, august, 1910, october, 1972, german, american, biologist, botanist, member, communist, party, america, best, known, common, wife, activist, dallet, then, wife, physicist, robert, oppenheimer,. Katherine Kitty Oppenheimer nee Puening August 8 1910 October 27 1972 was a German American biologist botanist and a member of the Communist Party of America She is best known as the common law wife of activist Joe Dallet and then the wife of physicist J Robert Oppenheimer the director of the Manhattan Project s Los Alamos Laboratory during World War II Katherine OppenheimerWartime Los Alamos identification badgeBornKatherine Vissering Puening 1910 08 08 August 8 1910Recklinghausen Westphalia Prussia GermanyDiedOctober 27 1972 1972 10 27 aged 62 Panama City PanamaResting placeAshes scattered at sea off Carval Rock near Saint John U S Virgin IslandsOther namesKatherine Ramseyer Katherine Dallet Katherine HarrisonAlma materUniversity of PittsburghUniversity of PennsylvaniaPolitical partyCommunist Party of AmericaSpousesFrank Ramseyer m 1932 ann 1933 wbr Stewart Harrison m 1938 div 1940 wbr J Robert Oppenheimer m 1940 died 1967 wbr Partner s Joseph Dallet Jr 1934 1937 Children2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Communism 3 Romance with Oppenheimer 4 Manhattan Project 5 Later life 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksEarly life EditKatherine Kitty Vissering Puening was born in Recklinghausen Westphalia Prussia Germany on August 8 1910 the only child of Franz Puening and his wife Kathe Vissering Although she claimed that her father was a prince and that her mother was related to Queen Victoria this was untrue Her mother was a cousin of Wilhelm Keitel who later became a field marshal in the German Army during World War II and was hanged in 1946 1 2 Puening arrived in the United States on May 14 1913 aboard the SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse Her father a metallurgical engineer had invented a new kind of blast furnace and had gained employment with a steel company in Pittsburgh and the family settled in the suburb of Aspinwall Pennsylvania Although her first language was German she soon became fluent in English speaking both languages without accent Her parents regularly took her with them on summer visits to Germany 1 2 After graduating from Aspinwall High School in June 1928 Puening enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh 3 She lived at home and attended freshman classes in mathematics biology and chemistry Her father now worked for Koppers and held patents for the design of blast furnaces 4 5 6 Puening convinced her parents that it would be a good idea for her to study in Germany and she sailed for Europe in March 1930 It is doubtful that she took any classes but she did meet Frank Ramseyer an American studying music in Paris under Nadia Boulanger before sailing for home on 19 May 6 Puening completed the first year of her degree but married Ramseyer before a Justice of the Peace in Pittsburgh on 24 December 1932 The couple moved to an apartment near Harvard University where Ramseyer hoped to pursue a master s degree in music She re enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh in January 1933 and returned to her parents house in Aspinwall In June 1933 she sailed to Europe again with her husband When she returned she enrolled at the University of Wisconsin although there is no record of her ever completing any classes She obtained an annulment of her marriage from the Superior Court of Wisconsin on 20 December 1933 She later told friends that she had discovered evidence that Ramseyer was a homosexual and a drug addict She also had an abortion 7 Communism EditAt a New Year s Eve party later that year Puening met Joseph Dallet Jr the son of a wealthy Long Island businessman who had attended Dartmouth College He had been radicalized by the 1927 executions of Sacco and Vanzetti and had joined the Communist Party of America in 1929 He had been involved in the International Unemployment Day protest in Chicago on 6 March 1930 that had been brutally repressed by the authorities and was currently working as a union organizer with the steel workers in Youngstown Ohio At one point he ran for mayor of Youngstown on the Communist Party ticket but was not elected 8 9 Puening s parents had moved to Claygate southwest of London where her father represented a Chicago based firm On returning to the United States on 3 August 1934 after visiting family in Europe she moved in with Dallet becoming his common law wife They shared a room in a dilapidated boarding house that cost 5 per month Gus Hall and John Gates had a room down the hall They lived on the dole 12 50 per month each As the wife of a party member Puening was allowed to join the Communist Party but only after proving her loyalty by hawking copies of the Daily Worker on the streets Her party dues were 10c a week 10 8 They separated in June 1936 and Puening went to live with her parents in Claygate where she worked as a German to English translator 10 Months went by without any word from Dallet until Puening discovered that her mother had been hiding his letters to her Her mother her friend Anne Wilson recalled was a real dragon a very repressive woman She disappeared one day over the side of a transatlantic ship and nobody missed her That says it all 11 The last letter from Dallet said that he was heading to Spain on the RMS Queen Mary to join the International Brigades fighting in the Spanish Civil War 10 8 Puening met up with Dallet and his best friend Steve Nelson in Cherbourg and they travelled to Paris together After a few days there she returned to London and they headed south crossing into Spain 12 where he joined the Mackenzie Papineau Battalion a unit composed of American and Canadian volunteers 13 Puening wanted to join Dallet in Spain and finally secured permission to do so Her trip to Spain was delayed by hospitalization for an operation on 26 August 1937 for what was initially thought to be appendicitis but which was determined to be ovarian cysts which were removed by the German doctors Puening returned to England to recuperate Before she could depart for Spain the news arrived that Dallet had been killed in action on 17 October 1937 His letters to her were published as Letters from Spain by Joe Dallet American Volunteer to his Wife 1938 13 14 Puening went to see Nelson who was in Paris having been wounded in August and they returned to New York where she stayed with Nelson and his wife Margaret at their home in Brooklyn for two months She then headed for Philadelphia to see her friend Zelma Baker who worked at the Cancer Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania Puening enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania There she met Richard Stewart Harrison a medical doctor with degrees from Oxford University who was completing his internship in the US They were married on 23 November 1938 15 16 Romance with Oppenheimer EditSoon after Harrison left for Pasadena California for his residency at the California Institute of Technology Caltech while she remained in Philadelphia to complete her bachelor s degree in botany at the University of Pennsylvania and was offered a postgraduate research fellowship at the University of California Los Angeles 15 16 At Caltech she worked with physicist Charles Lauritsen The X ray laboratory at Caltech used for physics research was also used for experimental cancer therapy research It was at a garden party thrown by Lauritsen and his wife Sigrid in August 1939 that she met Robert Oppenheimer a physicist who taught at Caltech for part of each year 17 Soon after she began an affair with Oppenheimer They were frequently seen about town in his Chrysler coupe 18 Oppenheimer had dated several women since his break up with long time girlfriend Jean Tatlock some of them married like Kitty Harrison At Christmas time she went up to Berkeley without her husband to spend time with Oppenheimer His friend Haakon Chevalier met Kitty at a holiday dinner party thrown by the pianist Estelle Caen one of Oppenheimer s ex girlfriends 19 Oppenheimer invited Harrison and Kitty to spend the summer at his New Mexico ranch Perro Caliente Harrison declined as he was engaged in his research but Kitty accepted Robert Serber and his wife Charlotte collected Kitty in Pasadena and drove her to Perro Caliente where they met up with Robert his brother Frank Oppenheimer and his wife Jackie 20 The Serbers had met Kitty before at Charlotte Serber s parents house in Philadelphia in 1938 21 The Oppenheimers loved to ride through the pine and birch forests and floral meadows of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains camping with minimal food and equipment Kitty impressed them with her riding ability horsemanship was a normal accomplishment for women of her social class and she had learned to ride as a girl on the riding trails around Aspinwall Kitty and Robert rode out to stay the night with his friend Katy Page in Los Pinos New Mexico The following day Page rode to Perro Caliente on her bay horse to return Kitty s night gown which had been left under Robert s pillow 22 20 Kitty later told Anne Wilson that she got Robert to marry her the old fashioned way by getting pregnant 23 In September 1940 Robert phoned Harrison with the happy news and they agreed that the best way forward was for Kitty to get a divorce so she could marry Robert Soon after Robert shared a podium with Nelson to raise money for refugees from the Spanish Civil War and he informed him that he was engaged to Kitty Nelson s wife was also pregnant and he named his daughter who was born in November 1940 Josie in memory of Dallet To obtain a divorce Kitty moved to Reno Nevada where she stayed for six weeks to meet the state s residency requirements The divorce was finalised on November 1 1940 and Kitty married Oppenheimer the following day in a civil ceremony in Virginia City Nevada with the court janitor and clerk as witnesses 24 Manhattan Project EditTheir child a son they called Peter was born in Pasadena on May 12 1941 during Oppenheimer s regular session at Caltech When they returned to Berkeley he bought a new house at One Eagle Hill with a view over the Golden Gate Kitty worked at the University of California as a laboratory assistant They left Peter with the Chevaliers and a German nurse and headed out to Perro Caliente for the summer The holiday was marred when Oppenheimer was trampled by a horse and Kitty was injured when she had an accident in their Cadillac convertible 25 26 The United States entered World War II in December 1941 and Oppenheimer began recruiting staff for the Manhattan Project Among the first were the Serbers who moved into the apartment over the garage at One Eagle Hill 27 On March 16 1943 the couple boarded a train for Santa Fe New Mexico By the end of the month they had moved to Los Alamos New Mexico where they occupied one of the buildings formerly belonging to the Los Alamos Ranch School Los Alamos was known to the occupants as the Hill and to the Manhattan Project as Site Y Oppenheimer became the director of Project Y 28 Kitty abdicated the role of post commander s wife to Martha Parsons the wife of Robert s deputy Navy Captain William S Parsons 29 She put her biologist training to use working for the director of the Health Group at Los Alamos Louis Hempelmann conducting blood tests to assess the danger of radiation 30 In 1944 Kitty became pregnant again Her second child a girl Katherine who she named after her mother but called Toni was born on December 7 1944 Like other babies born in wartime Los Alamos Toni s birth certificate gave the place of birth as P O Box 1663 31 In April 1945 Kitty was depressed by the isolation of Los Alamos and she left Toni with Pat Sherr the wife of physicist Rubby Sherr Pat had recently lost her son Michael to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Kitty returned with Peter to Bethlehem Pennsylvania to live with her parents They returned to Los Alamos in July 1945 32 33 Later life EditWith the end of the war in August 1945 Oppenheimer had become a celebrity and Kitty had become an alcoholic She suffered a series of bone breaks from drunken falls and car crashes 34 35 In November 1945 Robert left Los Alamos to return to Caltech 36 but he soon found that his heart was no longer in teaching 37 In 1947 he accepted an offer from Lewis Strauss to take up the directorship of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey 38 The job came with rent free accommodation in the director s house a ten bedroom 17th century manor with a cook and groundskeeper surrounded by 265 acres 107 ha of woodlands Robert had a greenhouse built for Kitty where she raised orchids for her birthdays Oppenheimer had rare species flown in from Hawaii 39 40 Olden Manor was sometimes known as Bourbon Manor 41 Kitty and Robert liked to keep the liquor cabinet well stocked and like many of their generation liked to celebrate cocktail hour with martinis Manhattans Old Fashioneds and highballs Both were also fond of smoking 42 and Kitty s habit of combining too much alcohol with smoking in bed led to a plethora of holes in her bedding and at least one house fire 35 She sometimes took too many pills and suffered from abdominal pains caused by pancreatitis Pain often prompted outbursts of anger 43 In 1952 Toni contracted polio and doctors suggested that a warmer climate might help The family flew to the Caribbean where they rented a 72 foot 22 m ketch Robert and Kitty discovered a shared love of sailing while Toni soon recovered The family spent part of each summer on Saint John in the Virgin Islands eventually building a beach house there 44 On January 6 1967 Robert was diagnosed with inoperable cancer and he died on February 18 1967 45 Kitty had his remains cremated and his ashes were placed in an urn which she took to St John and dropped into the sea off the coast within sight of the beach house 46 She took up with Robert Serber whose wife Charlotte had committed suicide in May 1967 She talked him into buying a 52 foot 16 m yawl which they sailed from New York to Grenada In 1972 they purchased a 52 foot 16 m ketch with the intention of sailing through the Panama Canal and to Japan via the Galapagos Islands and Tahiti They set out but Kitty became ill and was taken to Gorgas Hospital where she died of an embolism on October 27 1972 Serber and Toni had her remains cremated and they scattered her ashes near Robert s 47 48 49 References Edit a b Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 154 155 a b Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 9 10 26 27 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 42 43 US 1542955 Heating method and apparatus US 1799702 Heating apparatus a b Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 78 79 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 80 82 a b c Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 156 157 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 89 90 a b c Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 93 94 97 98 Conant 2005 p 184 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 104 105 a b Joseph Dallet Jr Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives Retrieved 11 April 2018 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 111 117 a b Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 119 a b Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 158 161 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 120 121 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 p 161 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 125 126 a b Bird amp Sherwin 2005 p 162 Serber amp Crease 1998 p 51 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 128 129 Conant 2005 p 186 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 162 163 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 164 165 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 138 139 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 141 142 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 213 214 Conant 2005 p 179 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 51 Conant 2005 pp 262 263 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 204 211 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 263 264 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 207 a b Wolverton 2008 p 176 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 333 335 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 p 351 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 pp 360 365 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 p 369 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 234 235 Wolverton 2008 p 270 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 243 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 276 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 251 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 p 295 Bird amp Sherwin 2005 p 588 Streshinsky amp Klaus 2013 pp 301 302 Serber amp Crease 1998 pp 220 221 Mrs J Robert Oppenheimer 62 Nuclear Physicist s Widow Dies New York Times October 29 1972 Retrieved April 17 2018 Sources EditBird Kai Sherwin Martin J 2005 American Prometheus The Triumph and Tragedy of J Robert Oppenheimer New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 375 41202 6 OCLC 56753298 Conant Jennet 2005 109 East Palace Robert Oppenheimer and the Secret City of Los Alamos New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 5007 9 OCLC 57475908 Serber Robert Crease Robert P 1998 Peace amp War Reminiscences of a Life on the Frontiers of Science New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10546 0 OCLC 1014748640 Streshinsky Shirley Klaus Patricia 2013 An Atomic Love Story The Extraordinary Women in Robert Oppenheimer s Life New York Turner Publishing ISBN 978 1 61858 019 1 OCLC 849822662 Wolverton Mark 2008 A Life in Twilight The Final Years of J Robert Oppenheimer New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 37440 2 OCLC 223882887 External links EditKatherine Oppenheimer FBI file Letters from Spain by Joe Dallet American Volunteer to his WifePortals biography communism World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Katherine Oppenheimer amp oldid 1124538151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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