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A Brief History of American Fallout Shelters

Wes O'Donnell
6 min readMay 2, 2022

Growing up in the 1980s, I watched my dad and grandpa attempt to build a bomb shelter in our Dallas, Texas backyard.

Having just watched “The Day After”, a low budget (but effective) fictional depiction of a nuclear apocalypse in the American heartland, they endeavored to protect the family from the Soviet nuclear threat.

They made it about three feet down before calling it quits — there’s a reason homes in Texas don’t have basements — digging in that Texas clay is like trying to dig through concrete!

But despite their failure, the experience left its mark on my mind. What could have possibly scared these two Marlboro men so badly that they would want to hide underground?

The 1950s and the Red Scare

In the first decade following World War II, Americans had to come to terms with the nuclear genie they unleashed from the bottle.

Oppenheimer may have said it best. Watch him recall witnessing the first atomic blast:

As images of the flattened cities Hiroshima and Nagasaki began circulating widely, and the radiation threat (fallout) came to be better appreciated, many Americans wondered if they might someday…

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Wes O'Donnell
Wes O'Donnell

Written by Wes O'Donnell

US Army & US Air Force Veteran | Global Security Writer | Intel Forecaster | Law Student | TEDx Speaker | Pro Democracy | Pro Human | Hates Authoritarians

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