

It is commonly buried underground and is made of steel, creating a temporarily live-able environment when it is too dangerous to go outside. In this guide, we’ll cover how bomb shelters work, how they’re built and reasons to consider getting one.Ī bomb shelter is a structure designed to protect you in the event of a nuclear disaster or attack, although it can also protect against various natural disasters and other dangers. That civilization grew soft and disappeared.” (p.Bomb shelters are one of those things we’ll hopefully never have to use, but having one gives us peace of mind that we’re prepared for the worst - whether it be a war, nuclear disaster or economic collapse. True, we have been and are living well “high on the hog.” One would without doubt find it necessary to go back into the ancient history of Greece to uncover any similar situation. Schaeffer writes in his article, "The Role of the Physician in a Nuclear Age", “As a nation we have grown soft. In Clinical Symposia, Frank Netter provides detailed illustrations of atomic fission and atomic fusion. While they do provide suggestions on how physicians should act in the case of nuclear attack, they go much further than pure medical instruction. Around the same time, the Southern Medical Bulletin also published a similar bulletin titled “Symposium: When Disaster Strikes!”.

Clinical Symposia devoted an entire issue in early 1962 to “Survival in Nuclear Warfare”. This detailed plan is not out of the norm as Fetter’s collection also contains a sampling of medical literature devoted to the danger of nuclear war. The study contains detailed plans of all possible shelter areas on Duke’s campus down to the number of lamps and circuits in each building. In the Bernard Fetter Papers, there is an Engineering Design Study for Fallout Shelter Areas at Duke University dated February 22, 1963.

These were sites “intended to give some protection against fallout radiation and other effects of a nuclear explosion, either an existing area such as a basement or tunnel, or a structure specially constructed for this purpose” (Dictionary of Energy, p. Consequently, many plans were made across the country for the building or preparation of fallout shelters. One thing that scared many Americas during the 1960s was the prospect of nuclear war.
