Office of Scientific Research and Development explained

Agency Name:Office of Scientific Research and Development
Nativename:OSRD
Dissolved:December 1947
Superseding1:related extant agencies: NSF, DoE
Preceding1:National Defense Research Committee
Child1 Agency:Committee on Medical Research
Child2 Agency:Manhattan Project
Parent Agency:Office for Emergency Management
Jurisdiction:United States Government
Headquarters:Washington, D.C.
Chief1 Name:Vannevar Bush

The Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) was an agency of the United States federal government created to coordinate scientific research for military purposes during World War II. Arrangements were made for its creation during May 1941, and it was created formally by Executive Order 8807 on June 28, 1941.[1] [2] It superseded the work of the National Defense Research Committee (NDRC), was given almost unlimited access to funding and resources, and was directed by Vannevar Bush, who reported only to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

The research was widely varied, and included projects devoted to new and more accurate bombs, reliable detonators, work on the proximity fuze, guided missiles, radar and early-warning systems, lighter and more accurate hand weapons, more effective medical treatments (including work to make penicillin at scale, which was necessary for its use as a drug[3]), more versatile vehicles, and, the most secret of all, the S-1 Section, which later became the Manhattan Project and developed the first atomic weapons.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Executive Order 8807—Establishing the Office of Scientific Research and Development . The American Presidency Project . 1941-06-28 . 2023-12-16.
  2. Book: Sullivan, Neil J. . The Prometheus Bomb: The Manhattan Project and Government in the Dark . Lincoln . . 2016 . 978-1-61234-815-5 . 78.
  3. Web site: Alexander Fleming Discovery and Development of Penicillin - Landmark . American Chemical Society . 3 August 2022 . en.