The Rosenberg Case
President Eisenhower's statement on the Rosenberg's
"I can only say that, by immeasurably increasing the chances of atomic war, the Rosenbergs may have condemned to death tens of millions of innocent people all over the world. The execution of two human beings is a grave matter. But even graver is the thought of the millions of dead whose deaths may be directly attributable to what these spies have done."
Treason
Could not be charged with this because the United States was not at war with the Soviet Union
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Established in 1943 as site Y of the Manhattan Project for a single purpose: to design and build an atomic bomb.
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
First American civilians to be executed for espionage and the first to suffer that penalty during peacetime.
Conspiracy to commit espionage
Official charges brought against Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
McCarthy Era
The era many thought the Rosenberg's got caught in. 1940s and early 1950s, hysteria over the perceived threat posed by Communists in the U.S. became known as
Confession of Greenglass.
The only direct evidence of the Rosenberg's involvement
Outcome of the Rosenberg case
Tried, found guilty, sentences to death in the electric chair.
Atomic bomb materials
Type of top-secret information the Rosenberg's were accused and convicted of passing to Soviets
David Greenglass
Was a machinist at Los Alamos, brother-in-law of Julius Rosenberg, said Julius asked him to pass highly confidential instructions on making atomic weapons to the Soviet Union.
Cruel and unusual punishment
What many people protested the death sentence was. That the Rosenbergs were the victims of a surge of hysterical anticommunist feeling in the United States.
September 1949
When the Soviets exploded their first atomic bomb (and effectively started the Cold War