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The project required immense financial resources from "summary" of The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Richard Rhodes

The Manhattan Project demanded an unprecedented amount of money. The scale of the endeavor was staggering, with costs that would dwarf any previous military program. The project was so large that its financial requirements exceeded the total cost of the Hoover Dam, the nation's largest public works project at the time. The Manhattan Project would end up costing billions of dollars, a sum that was simply unimaginable in the context of pre-war budgets. Funding for the Manhattan Project was a major challenge from the beginning. Even before the United States officially entered World War II, scientists like J. Robert Oppenheimer realized that the project would require a massive infusion of cash. Obtaining the necessary funds was no easy task, however. The project was shrouded in secrecy, with only a select few individuals aware of its true nature. This secrecy made it difficult to secure the money needed to move forward. With the entry of the United States into the war, the financial situation became even more complicated. The government had to balance the demands of the Manhattan Project with other critical war efforts. Resources were limited, and every dollar spent on the atomic bomb was a dollar that could not be allocated to other military operations. Despite these challenges, the project continued to receive the financial support it needed to push forward. The financial burden of the Manhattan Project was immense, but it was deemed necessary in order to achieve the ultimate goal of developing the atomic bomb. The cost of the project would have far-reaching implications, not only for the war effort but for the future of warfare and international relations. The decision to allocate such vast sums of money to the Manhattan Project was a pivotal moment in history, one that would shape the course of the war and the world for decades to come.
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    The Making of the Atomic Bomb

    Richard Rhodes

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