I didn't know he passed away, that's really too bad. The assignment he was given definatly changed the course of history as we have come to know it, but then...all of the individuals involved with the Mahatten Project did their part to change history. I would sincerely hope nobody "protest" at his funeral, or anything, because that's just obsurd. He was merely doing his job, it wasn't his decsion to drop the bomb. I think the title "hero" is tossed around too much nowadys, I'm not saying he wasn't a hero, i believe that the ones who didn't make it back are the real hero's....but his service to our country, to us, to all of the soilders that didn't have to storm the mainland of Japan and face certain death, he is a hero to them. Truman might have made the decsion, but he risked his life flying the plane there and back.
I can't imagine what it would be like to go through what he went through, even missions where they just dropped convential ordinace over a target...with all of the flak exploding around you, and enemy fighters. My great Grandpa's brother was a belly gunner on a B-17 in the war. I can't think of the squadron number, but i want to say 400 something, 425th maybe....i donno there were two more widely known ones...but i digress...B-17 crew's where required to fly 25 missions, after which i believe they could either go home, or they were taken off the front lines. It was kind of like the movie "Missisippi Belle", except his crew didn't make it back, they were shot down over France on their 25th mission. My grandpa has some of his personal effects including his bombers jacket, and the flag that was drapped over his coffin. Unbelievable the things that they went through.