is the daughter of Harold and Beverly Agnew. She graduated from Los Alamos High School in 1962.
Nancy Chapman (nee Agnew, 1944–)
was born in Italy to parents Enrico and Laura Fermi. She spent part of her childhood in Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project, and she later studied at the University of Iowa and the University of Chicago, where she earned a doctorate in organizational psychology.
Nella Fermi (1931–1995)
was the principal of Los Alamos High School in 1950. By 1953, had been promoted to superintendent of Los Alamos Schools, a position he held until 1955.
Lewis Allbee
was born in Canada but became a naturalized American citizen. She worked as a member of support staff at Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project, and she was the wife of Canadian physicist Darol Froman, who from 1951 to 1962 served as deputy director of Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory.
Ethel Froman (1908–1978)
is the son of Harold and Beverly Agnew. He graduated from Los Alamos High School in 1967.
John Agnew (1949–)
arrived in Los Alamos with her husband, Harold, in 1943. During the Manhattan Project, she worked in J. Robert Oppenheimer’s office and was physicist Robert Bacher’s secretary. After the war, Agnew served on the New Mexico Board of Education. She was also a painter whose works were displayed in local galleries.
Beverly Jackson Agnew (1919–2011)
earned his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan and was a physicist at Los Alamos, where he authored a paper on heavy ion fusion. He also was involved with Los Alamos’ Little Theatre group. Sawyer was the son of physicist Ralph Sawyer. In 1946, Ralph Sawyer served as chief civilian scientist for Operation Crossroads, which comprised the United States’ second and third nuclear tests.
George Sawyer (1922–2011)
was the only child of a Scotch-Irish stonecutter. A student of physicist Enrico Fermi, Agnew joined the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos in 1943 as a physicist. From 1970 to 1979, he served as Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory’s third director.
Harold Agnew (1921–2013)
was a civil engineer who worked for the Zia Company, which for several decades managed both the Laboratory and the town of Los Alamos. He was president of the Los Alamos School Board in 1957.
Richard Crook (1903–1997)
was the wife of chemist Max Roy. In 1946, she was the librarian at Los Alamos’ Mesa Public Library, and she served on the Los Alamos County Commission’s school budget board in 1949. In 1957, she became the first woman to serve on a Los Alamos jury.
Viola “Vi” Roy
won the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics. Fermi left his native Italy that same year to escape discriminatory laws that affected his wife, Laura, who was Jewish. From 1944 until the end of 1945, Fermi served as associate director of the Manhattan Project.
Enrico Fermi (1901–1954)
was born in New Jersey and worked on the Manhattan Project at the University of Chicago’s Metropolitan Laboratory. He later worked at Los Alamos with his wife, Jane Hamilton Hall, on Clementine, the world’s first fast reactor, and went on to serve for 20 years as head of Los Alamos’ Reactor Division. Jane Hamilton Hall was best known as the Laboratory’s first female assistant director, having served in that role from 1955 to 1970.
David Hall (1915–1998)