America's Forgotten Atomic Town

Ойын-сауық

Go to ground.news/imperial to stay fully informed on breaking news, compare coverage and avoid media bias. Try it out or subscribe through my link for 30% OFF the Vantage plan if you support the mission and find it as useful as I do.
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Sources, Corrections & Notes: tinyurl.com/2nr85dkp
This videos covers two fairly different periods of history in and around Idaho Falls - there isn't necessarily a direct link between the two events, but I still wanted to include the entire gamut of a history that I found pretty enthralling.
Follow me on Twitter here: / yt_imper1al
Thanks to whatisnuclear.com/old-videos.... - their repository of old Nuclear Power videos aided in the making of this video.
Also thank you to Pea Hicks for the cocktail party archival footage in the intro.
The visuals or audio herein may not be utilised to train a machine learning algorithm of any kind without express permission of the Copyright holder (IMPERIAL)
JJJreact
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0:00 The First Atomic Town
1:13 Selecting the Naval Grounds
5:51 Cocktails & Cesium
8:13 Ground News Ad
9:19 Cocktails & Cesium Pt. 2
13:22 There’s Something on the Ceiling
19:13 An Enduring Mystery

Пікірлер: 380

  • @IMPERIALYT
    @IMPERIALYT7 ай бұрын

    Go to ground.news/imperial to stay fully informed on breaking news, compare coverage and avoid media bias. Try it out or subscribe through my link for 30% OFF the Vantage plan if you support the mission and find it as useful as I do.

  • @IMPERIALYT

    @IMPERIALYT

    7 ай бұрын

    Please also find the script and sources in the description - don't hesitate to use this comment to point out any inaccuracies and I'll be happy to add them to the document.

  • @BaderAlsh

    @BaderAlsh

    7 ай бұрын

    Can you make a music list? I really like your music but I can't find them@@IMPERIALYT

  • @MiggerPlease

    @MiggerPlease

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@IMPERIALYTI love you and I'm gay

  • @xarin42

    @xarin42

    6 ай бұрын

    Kinda hard to forget the place when I live quite close to it (Not gonna say exactly where on the internet for obvious reasons). Though I can't deny that it is currently a mostly unimportant place now and is defintely still in the middle of nowhere. For the few people who are curious it's probably just as common to call it IF (pronounced ai-eff, aka just saying to letters in the accronym) as it is to call it Idaho Falls properly. Though it obviously varies between buisness and private settings.

  • @ElementWolfe01

    @ElementWolfe01

    5 ай бұрын

    Really picky detail here but I thought I’d point it out anyway, at 6:05, the symbol used is a Biohazardous Materials symbol, and not a Nuclear Materials symbol. Such an interesting video and I’ve really enjoyed binging your content 😊

  • @evfin92
    @evfin927 ай бұрын

    this channel is a hidden gem

  • @Tallerthanusual

    @Tallerthanusual

    7 ай бұрын

    Not just a gem, one of the best small channels on KZread

  • @Soltra45

    @Soltra45

    7 ай бұрын

    It won’t be hidden for long.

  • @Alex26894

    @Alex26894

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s beginning to not be hidden anymore. This is just the beginning.

  • @rtd8k

    @rtd8k

    7 ай бұрын

    More like gem state!

  • @VinnyUnion

    @VinnyUnion

    7 ай бұрын

    You're a hidden gem! A ruby!

  • @dante3546
    @dante35467 ай бұрын

    Never thought I'd hear "ASS-KISSING" and "VERY SHIT" spoken seriously in a Imprial video.

  • @No_Feelings
    @No_Feelings7 ай бұрын

    I love how you really put into perspective the sheer horror of the situation those firefighters walked into. Many people focus on the atftermath, or the reactor itself, but not the men who are the only ones who know what truly happened.

  • @hallquiche

    @hallquiche

    6 ай бұрын

    Reminded me of the Chernobyl HBO-show. That really captured the horror of being first on the scene in such an accident.

  • @mygetawayart

    @mygetawayart

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@hallquiche I've been meaning to watch that show for a while and your comment finally convinced me

  • @hallquiche

    @hallquiche

    4 ай бұрын

    @@mygetawayart do it. It’s incredible!

  • @eugenenalpin6058
    @eugenenalpin60587 ай бұрын

    Wow. I've heard the tale of SL-1 many times before, but noone else has touched upon the politics and competition that took place before the disaster. Amazing job mate! P.S. The reason why SL-1 was designed to be controlled by only one control rod is because it was an experiment by the US military into field-deployable nuclear power source, so they were trying to make it as cheap and simple as possible, which is certainly in-character for any military

  • @cdservices4753

    @cdservices4753

    4 ай бұрын

    having been stationed at the Navy's prototype training site not all that far from SL-1, it was always a source of fascination. There were actually 9 control rods in the SL-1 design, 5 of which were described as "cruciform control rods." SL-1 was not truly an "experiment." It was more of a prototype for the Army's nuclear power program--similar to the way the Navy had determined that training personnel for nuclear plant operations was so important, no one could be certified for submarine (or surface ship) operation until they made it through a 6 month classroom training course and THEN actually "qualified" at a prototype site. There were a series of Army "portable" reactors actually deployed in the 1960s, but to my knowledge only the SL-1 site in Idaho and the first Army reactor in Fort Belvoir, Virginia were training prototypes. These reactors ended up on a mountain in Wyoming (Sundance), an army base in Alaska, "Camp Century" in Greenland, McMurdo Station in Antarctica, and on an old Liberty ship at the Panama Canal. The US Military is now considering getting back into this with the next generation of micro reactors. We'll see!

  • @kevting4512
    @kevting45127 ай бұрын

    Speaking of Atomic Town, I highly recommend 'Plutopia' by Kate Brown. A comparative study on two atomic cities: Richland, WA and Ozerk, Russia; both the world's first cities to exclusively produced plutonium. Yet the development and housing of the inhabitant are different based on 'permanent housing' and 'temporary workers' despite sharing equal access to the comfort of consumer goods. Its a fascinating look at both Cold War adversaries approach to their vision of the ideal community while concealing the truth of its purpose.

  • @jalako8592

    @jalako8592

    7 ай бұрын

    Are you crazy? Recommending BOOKS? Books to people whose attention span is the worst it has probably ever been in the existence of humans? I am obviously kidding though. Thanks for the recommendation, sounds really good, especially when you are interrested in this kind of topic. Honestly, if I could read, I would probably buy it.

  • @RyanLynch1

    @RyanLynch1

    7 ай бұрын

    it's free with an audible subscription!

  • @Dr-Weird

    @Dr-Weird

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@jalako8592 HOW DARE THIS PERSON RECOMMEND BOOKS. Lol I'm telling Big Brother to get the 'Firemen' before I go see The Giver

  • @Konusu

    @Konusu

    5 ай бұрын

    Being from richland wa, it's interesting to compare the looks of Richland, WA to other towns that had developed around the same time.

  • @Congp3
    @Congp37 ай бұрын

    It’s a real shame you don’t get more recognition for your work on these videos. I would say your up there with Lemmino in the quality of your videos.

  • @Smauritsius

    @Smauritsius

    7 ай бұрын

    And he uploads more often than Lemmino ;)

  • @rileygladue3979

    @rileygladue3979

    7 ай бұрын

    honestly I'd say the more frequent upload schedule, easier digestibility of his scripts and length makes him better than Lemmino

  • @rahil6455

    @rahil6455

    7 ай бұрын

    Surely there is a case that he copys lemino. This video style is eerily similar to the JFK one that Lemino just made, especially with all the narration of witnesses

  • @lonesome3958

    @lonesome3958

    7 ай бұрын

    Imo they are very different. This videoncan be watched casually, whilst still being interesting. But Lemminos Videos are more like movies that pull you in, and you cant just watch them anywhere. Both great in their own right

  • @mason96575

    @mason96575

    7 ай бұрын

    Did you mean "you're up there" instead of "your up there" ? Or am I missing something?

  • @fantasticbrit3515
    @fantasticbrit35155 ай бұрын

    As an kid living just ten miles from Idaho Falls, I'm honestly surprised I've never heard this story as much of my family works at the site. Very good work!

  • @djlopez7976

    @djlopez7976

    3 ай бұрын

    I’m a kid living in Idaho falls. hi

  • @KPrendo

    @KPrendo

    3 ай бұрын

    what is it like

  • @nathangoshawk
    @nathangoshawk7 ай бұрын

    This story sounds like the screenplay of a 1950's movie (black and white of course). Parties, beautiful women, personal animosity, unstable characters and some poor bugger pinned to the ceiling! It's amazing how cavalier the attitude was to safety back then, even in the development of peaceful applications.

  • @nickfromidaho
    @nickfromidaho7 ай бұрын

    Never would have thought imperial would drop a video about my home town 😅

  • @PhilEdwardsInc
    @PhilEdwardsInc7 ай бұрын

    ashamed to say i'd never heard of this but glad i have now! fascinating!

  • @Takara-nb9rw
    @Takara-nb9rw4 ай бұрын

    I have grown up in Idaho Falls and still live and go to school here! A ton of people work at the site but I never really knew the history behind it. Thank you for some insight into this little city!

  • @cobwebbyargos6953
    @cobwebbyargos69537 ай бұрын

    As an native Idahoan, hearing PAWcatello really hurt instead of POEcatello

  • @UnholyShade

    @UnholyShade

    7 ай бұрын

    My husband had to close his eyes and process that while I just burst into laughter.

  • @t0irc114

    @t0irc114

    7 ай бұрын

    Yall have some damn good views of big southern out there, not as good over here in IF!

  • @aaroncapricorn5867

    @aaroncapricorn5867

    6 ай бұрын

    cry more? british people have their own accent. did you now know of this?

  • @_c_y_p_3

    @_c_y_p_3

    3 ай бұрын

    Now you know what it is like listening to us ‘Mericans pronounce just about every word we speak outside of ‘Merican English WRONG.

  • @makaveliliveson

    @makaveliliveson

    2 ай бұрын

    @@aaroncapricorn5867dont care they dont exist

  • @spectacles-dm
    @spectacles-dm7 ай бұрын

    Legendary work, as always. A super intriguing mystery well-told.

  • @YoutubeAccount-150
    @YoutubeAccount-1507 ай бұрын

    Woah imperial dropped a video

  • @catman404

    @catman404

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s not every month

  • @hb-mek
    @hb-mek7 ай бұрын

    Great video, Its always great to learn about the early days of nuclear and how many things have changed since then. Another thing that I was suprised wasnt touched on was how common untrained operators were in those days. Back when the AEC was buying up farm land they were struggling to find qualified and trained individuals that were willing to move out to south-eastern Idaho, as a result a lot of the farmers sons were offered high paying and pretty important jobs and a large portion of them were trained as reactor operators even though they never had any university training and a lot of them had little to no schooling. A large section of the workforce back then was really underqualified to be operating such devices so its suprising that this was the only disaster that happened out there and it was relatively tame. Also theory #2 is almost certainly the most likely cause, they were withdrawing the control rod to attach it to a new automatic control system, but as stated in the video with 300 pulls only 250 of them occured without any sticking, over 50+ times the control rod stuck in the reactor when it was attempting to be withdrawn and considering this was done in the dead of winter most people are confident it was simply him yanking the control rod too hard. Ofcourse that doesnt really get the media going as much so most of the reporting was done taking the personality conflict angle rather than the more likely scenario of it being a design flaw. A design flaw like that in such a critical component nowadays would be unheard of (I hope)

  • @TheTulerie
    @TheTulerie7 ай бұрын

    Idaho Falls, ID is not the first Atomic city, It was Arco, ID. About 50 minutes west of Idaho falls on the other side of the INL site. Arco was the very first city to be powered by nuclear power, being run off of the BORAX-III reactor in 1955.

  • @nikphatslap

    @nikphatslap

    7 ай бұрын

    Tell me you didn't watch the video without telling me you didn't watch the video

  • @adamdetweiler5269

    @adamdetweiler5269

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nikphatslap in his opening statement, he said that Idaho Falls was the first town powered using nuclear power.

  • @atomicwest995

    @atomicwest995

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m from Idaho, and Arco is known as the first city powered by nuclear energy. It’s even taught in schools here. So, the story of Idaho Falls being the first is a strange to me. But the headquarters and offices being in Idaho Falls makes sense.

  • @nikphatslap

    @nikphatslap

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@adamdetweiler5269he 100% did not

  • @adamdetweiler5269

    @adamdetweiler5269

    6 ай бұрын

    You’re correct. He said first civilian atomic town. I misheard.

  • @KoleWilliams
    @KoleWilliams7 ай бұрын

    I grew up in Idaho Falls & never knew about this disaster until now, what a story!

  • @tonestop
    @tonestop5 ай бұрын

    It is a crazy story. I lived in Idaho my whole life so I can say the Atomic Age is a core part of Idaho though it started to lessen in the 80s once fear mongering began around anything atomic. I hope to see the Atomic Age come back to Idaho. It really is a great State here, somewhat isolated from the US at large and often only feels the problems of national issues if its a large economic one.

  • @Linuxabuser888
    @Linuxabuser8887 ай бұрын

    Dude I've been to Idaho Falls, its honestly so beautiful. The canyon is awesome and stretches for miles and its all around pretty cool.

  • @jasonheckenlively1172

    @jasonheckenlively1172

    7 ай бұрын

    There are no canyons in idaho falls. You are probably confusing it with twin falls.

  • @devinosland359

    @devinosland359

    7 ай бұрын

    Or the valley of pocatello, Idaho falls is kinda boring to be honest, not really any notable land structures around, it is a very wide open plain

  • @WallabytheThumper

    @WallabytheThumper

    7 ай бұрын

    @@devinosland359it’s what you make it

  • @christycullen2355
    @christycullen23557 ай бұрын

    Crazy how cavalier people had around nuclear power back then. If you want an indepth video about the actual reactor then watch Plainly Difficult. His breakdown of it is really good

  • @vex3825
    @vex38257 ай бұрын

    Its interesting learning about this after working on a job in Idaho Falls this week. I've driven past the facility a couple of times to various jobsites across Idaho and Montana. I believe they will be updating their facility after the massive success of the Livermore National Laboratory, who created a nuclear reaction that achieved "Net Energy" which means they created more energy than they used to initiate it. Fingers crossed I can work on that project and learn more about this little bit of history. Great work on this video! Definitely going to be subscribing so I can tune in on my longer drives.

  • @JohnTaylor-xg4jn
    @JohnTaylor-xg4jn7 ай бұрын

    I worked at the INL for 10 years. It's really cool to see the story get told in this format on KZread!

  • @_c_y_p_3

    @_c_y_p_3

    3 ай бұрын

    My Grandpa died mysteriously around age 40 after working at the experimental test reactor but my family never put it together he could be exposed to anything that would sshorten his life like that, not in USA#1!

  • @richane22
    @richane226 ай бұрын

    Very interesting. I am originally from Pocatello, with family in Idaho Falls and was completely unaware of this history.

  • @natenate3292
    @natenate32927 ай бұрын

    Earned a new a sub! I live in this area of Idaho/Montana and I learned so much from this video that I didn’t know. Top tier production too. Well done!

  • @montananerd8244
    @montananerd82444 ай бұрын

    Fascinating! My parents lived there in the 60s & then went to Hawthorne NV, where the AFB was doing secret pane tests. They were just trying to find a nice quiet town lol. I am fascinated by IdahoFalls, as it seems to have way more going on than is normal for a 20k town. Internet celebs, internet scammers, murder, millionaire secret santa, cultists, major MLMs, and a huge Mormon population that absolutely does not explain this particular oddness. But they certainly do have a backstory, maybe that's the root lol...

  • @weirdgurl288
    @weirdgurl2886 ай бұрын

    Fun fact Idaho falls has a garden dedicated to it's sister city, Tokai Mura in Japan, Tokai Mura is known as the nuclear capital of Japan, and the most irradiated human in history Hisashi Ouchi.

  • @mfri
    @mfri7 ай бұрын

    drove through idaho falls last january while driving from bozeman montana to salt lake city utah, definitely one of the places of all time

  • @Bonserak23
    @Bonserak237 ай бұрын

    Drove through that area in Idaho, it's pretty eerie, it's like a weird small desert hwy that a Deth claw would come running out of. Plus there was a dust storm happening when we were going through.

  • @MintyPuggo
    @MintyPuggo6 ай бұрын

    Oh wow! I’ve read stuff about SL-1, but somehow totally forgot where it happened. The backstory on the selection process was very intriguing. Keep up the good work!

  • @captaincole4511
    @captaincole45117 ай бұрын

    This channel is the definition of quality. I honestly cannot believe how underrated your videos are.

  • @Moto_Medics
    @Moto_Medics7 ай бұрын

    I live in the state and most of this I’ve never heard of. Nice work man

  • @jariprodofficial
    @jariprodofficial7 ай бұрын

    You are still way underrated, ill keep sharing until you make it, the content is incredibly polished! 👍

  • @MBSzCat
    @MBSzCat7 ай бұрын

    I grew up in Idaho falls but moved while still a kid, I NEVER knew this!!!! My parents literally worked at the site haha. Fascinating man, thank you! New sub here!

  • @A_Clark
    @A_Clark7 ай бұрын

    I'd be remiss if I didn't suggest to you the story of the McCluskey Room, which is the forever sealed-off Americium Reclamation facility attached to the plutonium finishing plant at the Hanford site in Washington State. A horrifying event with a bittersweet ending.

  • @BlitzkriegHD
    @BlitzkriegHD7 ай бұрын

    11:33 “Pocatello parties often excluded women…” Particularly hilarious that a potential factor to the choice of locale for a new atomic energy testing grounds could’ve been based off of which district was able to “bring the hoes”, so to speak. Science is an art.

  • @brettcoles6462
    @brettcoles64627 ай бұрын

    I grew up in the Idaho Falls area, and I never learned about SL-1 until later. I also never knew about the competition for being the headquarters of the site. That was very interesting!

  • @BiggusWeeabus
    @BiggusWeeabus5 ай бұрын

    Tbh, considering this reactor design I'm honestly surprised the damage was not worse

  • @marenjeworowski9859
    @marenjeworowski98597 ай бұрын

    This video was brilliant. So well made! 👍

  • @njunderground82
    @njunderground825 ай бұрын

    That is an interesting area. I checked it out a little when I was up in Yellowstone and Craters of the Moon last year. There's a small rest stop on one of the roads passing through the site that has some interesting history boards about the testing and the original reactor.

  • @FT__Cool_Stuff______-of5pi
    @FT__Cool_Stuff______-of5pi5 ай бұрын

    I rode my motorcycle through Idaho, right through that area. It is still SUPER barren. They chose the right place.

  • @devinosland359
    @devinosland3597 ай бұрын

    My dad has worked at INL (what this site is now called) for like 20 years now, he trained in one of the reactors there that is sadly being torn down in the coming years. I've been to multiple family days up there and it is really a cool place. They do a decent amount of other stuff there aswell as training navy men on the reactors that will be put intk the aircraft carriers and subs that they will be serving on. The reactors ate meant to mimick what it will be like on the ship so the building is built to be a replica of the ship with pipes and large pieces of what would be the enigine going through the room and conplete with bulkhead doors that you have to duck through and everything.

  • @grantruyle1995

    @grantruyle1995

    7 ай бұрын

    My grandfather worked their for like 30 years and my dad was stationed there for the naval nuclear school, that’s where he met my mom

  • @albaneincowboy183

    @albaneincowboy183

    7 ай бұрын

    My wife's grandpa and uncle both worked there as well.

  • @t0irc114

    @t0irc114

    7 ай бұрын

    Do you remember which reactor it was? f it was EBR-2 than its going to be replaced with a new one, so its not a complete loss!

  • @adamdetweiler5269

    @adamdetweiler5269

    6 ай бұрын

    @@t0irc114EBR-II’s done is being repurposed, yes.

  • @MD-zm6sn
    @MD-zm6sn7 ай бұрын

    Dude this video is really really good. You'll be the real deal with this quality.

  • @Karnacannn
    @Karnacannn7 ай бұрын

    amazing video!!! never disappoint

  • @natebeach
    @natebeach4 ай бұрын

    This was fascinating and intriguing, Thank You for sharing this.

  • @BradFalck-mn3pc
    @BradFalck-mn3pc6 ай бұрын

    As a line haul driver who used Interstate 15 From Canada to San Diego, Los Angeles and Yuma i have bad memories of the winter slog from Lima MT to Idaho Falls in the winter in the middle of the night, it was Always comforting to see Idaho Falls coming into view as a safe haven for rest and fuel

  • @_c_y_p_3

    @_c_y_p_3

    3 ай бұрын

    I almost died hitting a landslide up on Lolo pass in the middle of a storm I absolutely respect you truckers driving out there except when the trucks were filled with TNT headed to the mines and driving like they were on speed or something 🤯

  • @MostlyPonies1
    @MostlyPonies12 ай бұрын

    One minute of the editing and presentation put into this is more than most KZread videos.

  • @cdservices4753
    @cdservices47534 ай бұрын

    I was stationed at INL (once NRTS, once INEL, and I think once INEEL) with the Navy at one of the prototypes out there when the story of SL-1 was still a mainstay of bar room conversations. And congratulations on getting all of the technical details right, as well as many of the theories as to how this happened! But I also have to congratulate you on somehow finding all of this detail on the initial siting of NRTS and how Idaho Falls was selected to be the administrative headquarters. We were always told that it was all Hyman Rickover, who supposedly pushed all of the initial siting based upon what he needed for the USS Nautilus prototype. All of your info on the Navy's gunnery testing site is correct . . . . and many of the buildings where the Navy either built or refurbished 16" gun barrels for the WWII battleships were still standing in Pocatello where I lived. We were told that what became NRTS met Rickover's specific recommendations for distance to the nearest population centers and that the geography was favorable to "trapping" atmospheric contamination in that area in the event of an accident. That could very well have been true, as we would get airborne radiation alarms consistently during temperature inversions at the site. But your detailed descriptions of the government machinations behind the Idaho siting sounds far more realistic. Good job!

  • @jennywight9119
    @jennywight91197 ай бұрын

    I grew up in Pocatello and still live in Idaho. I was definitely aware of the INEL, but I never knew what actually happened there! Great video, nice to see my humble little state get some attention 😊

  • @SidJones-fz7uc
    @SidJones-fz7uc6 ай бұрын

    I live in Idaho falls but never knew the history here thanks for the video

  • @colombiananarchy
    @colombiananarchy4 ай бұрын

    I went to college in Rexburg, just 30 minutes away from Idaho Falls. I did not know this and this is so fascinating to learn.

  • @Humandriver5280
    @Humandriver52805 ай бұрын

    Check out Rocky Flats in Arvada, Colorado. It was a plutonium trigger plant. The cleanup was a joke. Furthermore, the surrounding area was never cleaned.

  • @OfTheDuck1
    @OfTheDuck13 ай бұрын

    Hey, I'm the grandson of one of the nuclear submarines' researchers' grandson. (what a mouthful) Just wanted to say that this is a cool video. Fun fact, I got one of those nuclear paint watch, (That is broken) from him. It is a really cool piece of history and, this video was really eye opining for what I didn't know.

  • @aaronring4704
    @aaronring47047 ай бұрын

    When I went through the Navy’s nuclear training program, the “best” prototype stories came from guys (I was in one of the last classes to go through before women were admitted into the program) who had gone through Idaho Falls!

  • @MCLuviin

    @MCLuviin

    6 ай бұрын

    Any you may share?

  • @tkirkwood3366
    @tkirkwood33667 ай бұрын

    I had no idea that this took place! Thanks.

  • @anguswong2138
    @anguswong21387 ай бұрын

    24:22 I was not expecting you to describe it like this LMAO

  • @Giply_
    @Giply_3 ай бұрын

    My grandfather who passed away from liver cancer in 2005 was a navy guard for this experiment! It’s super cool learning about it and I always wish I could ask him about it

  • @EC237T5
    @EC237T52 ай бұрын

    The quality of your Videos in Awesome

  • @Jimifan57
    @Jimifan577 ай бұрын

    I lived there as a Navy man back in the '70s and worked on the S5G-3 experimental reactor. Loved the town, but hated the job.

  • @RoninClips333
    @RoninClips3335 ай бұрын

    Man if you make these videos 15-20 minutes longer. You will have 1M subs by next December. No doubt. Keep it up! Amazing work!

  • @moamab4541
    @moamab45417 ай бұрын

    You are absolutely making an incredible work i don't know how but the only thing I know that those videos takes a big amount of time and effort to create I don't wish software but i think aftereffects am I right? If so that's mean that it takes money also so thanks for the videos even if those words isn't enough

  • @jimmyhooper9280
    @jimmyhooper92805 ай бұрын

    I graduated from the A1W prototype class in 1974. Though a Navy base SL1 was an Army project.

  • @superman60201
    @superman602017 ай бұрын

    All my friends dads worked for EG&G in Idaho Falls. It was easy to tell who worked at the sites vs. the townies. An interesting thing was I used to deliver newspapers for the Post Register when I was a kid, I would see the Navy servicemen waiting for their transport to the reactor sites for training each morning. All piled into a big charter bus each day.

  • @joinjen3854

    @joinjen3854

    3 ай бұрын

    What were the differences between the site workers vs " the townies"?

  • @superman60201

    @superman60201

    3 ай бұрын

    @@joinjen3854 at that time in the 80s you could tell by the nicer cars, houses on the other side of town, and that they had early early shifts. I lived by the Temple and that area only had a few INL engineers but you could tell.

  • @SIRZCURSE
    @SIRZCURSE6 ай бұрын

    It's ridiculous that this channel doesn't have at least 2 million subscribers

  • @Diptera_Larvae
    @Diptera_Larvae7 ай бұрын

    It’s a great day when Imperial drops a video!

  • @PlayingWithFireOutdoors
    @PlayingWithFireOutdoors6 ай бұрын

    I was there a week ago, thanks for the info.

  • @darthtrucker489
    @darthtrucker4897 ай бұрын

    Both a gripping and illuminating tale. Thanks for compiling and posting. Great content channel.

  • @Xeemix
    @Xeemix7 ай бұрын

    Good stuff, you got my subscription.

  • @zane2343
    @zane23437 ай бұрын

    Great video, I live in arco, the first town powered by atomic power. And most of the stuff here I didnt even know! If i try, i can get this video put in the newspaper.

  • @t0irc114

    @t0irc114

    7 ай бұрын

    You have to be the only Arco resident in this comment section!! It just seems like it gets smaller every coming year. This does make me wonder if you have ever painted on the number hill?

  • @zane2343

    @zane2343

    7 ай бұрын

    @@t0irc114 I haven’t graduated yet, but both of my parents did.

  • @nuclearTANK
    @nuclearTANK3 ай бұрын

    Wow i never knew about this about Idaho falls, I've been there the times as a kid when i lived in Elko,NV

  • @Madds5150
    @Madds51505 ай бұрын

    The INL! I've done work there before, very neat place! So is EBR-1 across the highway from it. ARCO was actually the first place ever powered by nuclear power 😀

  • @thenorthernphilosopher
    @thenorthernphilosopher7 ай бұрын

    IMPERIAL is a top 1 visual narrator on the platform right now.

  • @amineab3361
    @amineab33617 ай бұрын

    Bro may i know the software you are using and the course that you take because you style is amazing

  • @Nhankindredmain
    @Nhankindredmain5 ай бұрын

    HOW DO YOU ONLY HAVE 141K SUBS, U DESERVE WAYYY MOREEEEEE

  • @mumblety
    @mumblety7 ай бұрын

    Whenever I drive by the site I get a sense of wonder. Not only because of the reactors there, but all the top secret military activities that happened there. I've also seen some weiiirrrd stuff out there while hiking. I can help but wonder if it's somehow related to the site. Btw if you go by Arco be sure to stop by Pickle's Place.

  • @t0irc114

    @t0irc114

    7 ай бұрын

    Ive been to the pickle! Its literally the most american restaurant ever inside, i assume that you've seen the 666 submarine and the number hill too?

  • @LoppyZ.
    @LoppyZ.4 ай бұрын

    I live in this town and the first town to actually get powered my nuclear energy by the SL-1. Arco, Idaho. Midway point from challis and Idaho falls, or Boise to Idaho falls

  • @jamest2401
    @jamest24017 ай бұрын

    I loved your little wordplay on “nuclear families”. That was a nice touch. By the way, I really hope your channel takes off! Your content is truly top notch, and I love your narration. I’m an American, but am somewhat of an Anglophile, and I’ve always been drawn to British produced documentaries. People like David Starkey, Lucy Worsley, Suzannah Lipscomb, etc. And thanks to KZread, I’ve been introduced to 'Time Team'; a show which ran for 20 years and we neither hide nor hair of it here in the States. I guess they thought we were a bunch of rubes and wouldn’t be interested in our own history.😉😆

  • @TravelChannelOne
    @TravelChannelOne2 ай бұрын

    Bravo..Bravo...hats off...amazing narration...fuel rods....cadmium.....uranium 235....all into one cohesive story....👏👏👏

  • @jedpeeler4199
    @jedpeeler41992 ай бұрын

    I travelled through the Atomic City area in the 1970s and 1980. I never saw so many dead jackrabbits in my life! The road was carpeted for miles with their bodies and fur.

  • @MushieMushie420
    @MushieMushie4207 ай бұрын

    commenting for algorithm, amazing high quality video as always. this channel will hit 1M within the next year

  • @ethanstout8226
    @ethanstout82266 ай бұрын

    I grew up 30 minutes north of IF. Lol in Idaho state history they taught us that Arco was the first atomic powered city. I had no idea IF had anything to do with the INEEL. For reference I've been to Arco twice, I've spent hundreds od days in IF.

  • @IMPERIALYT

    @IMPERIALYT

    6 ай бұрын

    Arco was the first to be powered by the site - but Idaho Falls was the headquarters of the facility. That’s what I meant by it being the “first atomic town”. But perhaps poor wording on my part

  • @afrozen10-02
    @afrozen10-027 ай бұрын

    Had to look it up and yeah it’s SL-1. Ho’boy. Kyle Harris has a great video on the actual reactor failure if anyone is curious.

  • @VIEW5551
    @VIEW55517 ай бұрын

    Im from Arco and I heard this story alot as a kid, I was literally just telling my inlaws (they're from Poky) they never heard of this story. Then this awesome channel and just as great video get recommended to me! Cant wait to show this to them to fill in the holes from what I could remember. A few bits of info that may clear up things from other comments: Arco may have lost the bid for the HQ but was the first as we say "city" lit by atomic power (for 15 minutes) The site has gone by many names and you can age people by what they call it but it went from INEEL>INEL>INL No the area was not desolated after this event. The site employees many people under even more contractors. A pastime of Arco schoolchildren is leaving offerings to the local irradiated cryptids, in hope that they will visit justice upon the Idaho Falls chamber of commerce, in retribution for robbing their future of growing up in a prosperous Arco! Also check out the beautiful scenery at the Craters of the Moon!

  • @haydenanderson245
    @haydenanderson2456 ай бұрын

    What a great channel!

  • @RituPepper
    @RituPepper7 ай бұрын

    Loved the video! If anything, I'm a bit sensitive to audio quality and yours seems to have very pronounced consonants. I'd recommend looking into a D-Esser 👍

  • @IMPERIALYT

    @IMPERIALYT

    7 ай бұрын

    Ah damn sorry, I went over the audio with a de-Esser, looks like it wasn’t aggressive enough

  • @Thomasj27
    @Thomasj277 ай бұрын

    Thank you for covering my home town. For anyone interested, there is a museum outside of Idaho Falls that showcases a nuclear airplane engine. Fallout potatoe edition lol!

  • @boringnoninterestingname65
    @boringnoninterestingname653 ай бұрын

    The INL (Idaho national laboratory) is still based out there aswell and is working on the newest generation of Fusion technologies.

  • @manuelacosta9463
    @manuelacosta94637 ай бұрын

    There's quite the amount of towns in the US that have been abandoned due to environmental disasters and toxic spills alongside mining. This is one that's been obscure on my radar.

  • @user-cc7vx7sw4z

    @user-cc7vx7sw4z

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s not abandoned. It still hosts a national lab

  • @hb-mek

    @hb-mek

    7 ай бұрын

    not abandoned, infact INL (what the site is currently called) is now going through a hiring scheme hiring up to 2000+ new employees + building a bunch of new reactors and Idaho Falls is going through some of the quickest growth in america growing approximately 4% each year

  • @devinosland359

    @devinosland359

    7 ай бұрын

    INL is a very large employer in the region and idaho falls is still extremely successful. It's the 4th largest city in idaho behind the big 3 which all are over 100,000

  • @whoawhoapop1984
    @whoawhoapop19844 ай бұрын

    That ambulance is at our local fire department here in blackfoot. I have a KZread video of it driving in our state fair parade.

  • @simonnygaardjensen1367
    @simonnygaardjensen13677 ай бұрын

    Another great video! Any chance that you are comming to Nebula at some point? Would love to support you there!

  • @czarodziejpieczarki
    @czarodziejpieczarki7 ай бұрын

    Amazing video ❤❤❤

  • @MJGOAT
    @MJGOAT7 ай бұрын

    As an Idahoan whenever Idaho is mentioned I get excited

  • @ivaniliev929
    @ivaniliev9297 ай бұрын

    what software do you use for the editing animation and effects

  • @Yee20234
    @Yee202347 ай бұрын

    love u man keep going

  • @roterotevideo
    @roterotevideo7 ай бұрын

    Please make a making of video because I want to learn how to make some of these incredible compositions. ❤ just wow.

  • @devinosland359
    @devinosland3597 ай бұрын

    Also worth mentioning that there is a town actually called atomic city, its not far from the site and was the first city powered entirely by nuclear power. It was used to house of of the workers from the site and i believe theres still like 100 residents that live there. Im not sure if its powered by the reactors however

  • @t0irc114

    @t0irc114

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah there is hardly anything left of Atomic city nowadays :/. We go thru it to get out to the Big Southern Butte. Besides their raceway (Which is still falling apart) The rest of the town is pretty much composed of a few dilapidated trailer houses. The last business (to my knowledge) there closed a couple years back, it was some kind of a bar im pretty sure.

  • @adamdetweiler5269

    @adamdetweiler5269

    6 ай бұрын

    The reactor shut down in like 1996, so no. No longer nuclear powered.

  • @cdservices4753

    @cdservices4753

    4 ай бұрын

    I had to jump in! The "city" you refer to--Atomic City--was someone's idea of how to best cash in on the National Reactor Testing Station being developed out there in the desert. Whomever it was laid out a few streets, housing sites, and mobile home spots just outside the boundary of the federal land purchase for NRTS and close to the main gate off the road from Idaho Falls. It did, in fact, have a great dive bar which should have done a lot more business than it actually did--given its proximity to the all of those reactors. Maybe people were in such a hurry to get back to Idaho Falls, Pocatello, and Blackfoot they'd just blow by it. However, "Atomic City" wasn't the town you're thinking of that technically received power from one of the grid connected reactors at NRTS. That was almost certainly Arco, Idaho on the west side of what is now INL. There are a few signs bragging about that honor. When I was assigned as a staff instructor for the Navy at the A1W nuclear training prototype at what was then INEL, I was a member of the unofficial "house band" that would play at the bar in Atomic City on Friday nights. A major honor I once listed on my resume!

  • @verdagarner5112

    @verdagarner5112

    2 ай бұрын

    Arco Idaho was the first city lite Atomic Power not Atomic city

  • @alexmonamochamuch2652
    @alexmonamochamuch26527 ай бұрын

    What an awesome video! This is on par with the quality of a Mustard video!

  • @leemartin366
    @leemartin3667 ай бұрын

    There was no redundancy in protocol to prevent this incident. This is why we have redundancy. This is also why we don’t just choose an average person for the job. We try to instill safety in order to acquire somebody who trusts the system fact that there wasn’t any trust in the system so you had to hire somebody who didn’t really care.

  • @planescaped
    @planescaped7 ай бұрын

    Working on early nuclear reactors before all the kinks are worked out would be terrifying. If anything goes wrong, fixing it would not only be very difficult, but likely fatal to the person doing it.

  • @SisterSunny
    @SisterSunny7 ай бұрын

    jesus CHRIST this video gave me chills.

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