His Wikipedia entry was just updated:
Ed died in his home on 12 February, 2009, after a long illness.
He was happy and his usual grouchy self until the end.
Here's a You Tube video of his place in Los Alamos, The Black Hole. And a December 2008 story about his legacy in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Hugh Gusterson.
His obituary, sent by his daughter Barbara, is pasted complete below.
The County of Los Alamos or the State should find a proper site for the obelisks.
Edward
Bernard Grothus, of Los Alamos, died of cancer at home, at peace and
surrounded by love on February 12, 2009. He was born June 28, 1923 in
Clinton, Iowa. His family moved permanently to Davenport, Iowa in 1930.
Following graduation from high school, he traveled extensively by ship
and motorcycle. He attended the University of Iowa where he (most
importantly) learned to play bridge and made lifelong friends. He
eventually followed his father’s trade as a machinist, the trade that
brought him to Los Alamos in 1949. “Working at the Lab,” he said,
“gave me an education that I could get nowhere else.” He met Margaret
Jane Turnquist playing bridge in Los Alamos. They were married in 1951.
In 1952 he began working at the Lab’s R-Site where he was a link in the
process for making "better" atomic bombs. By 1968, he had become an
antiwar activist and was an alternate delegate for candidate Eugene
McCarthy at the notorious Democratic Convention in Chicago. He left
LASL in 1969 when his conscience could no longer tolerate his role in
nuclear bomb development. Since then, because of his singularity in
speaking out against the nuclear mission of the Laboratory, he became
the most interviewed and photographed person in Los Alamos.
Ed was a hardworking and successful entrepreneur who invested in
“things.” A child of the depression who extolled thrift and hated
waste, he established the Los Alamos Sales Company in 1951 to buy and
resell things--mainly surplus equipment from the Los Alamos
Laboratory. For many years the company operated as a catalog business,
selling to universities world-wide. He typed and mimeographed pages
that were assembled into catalogs by his children who also assisted
with mailing, packing, and shipping.
Ed took an active interest in the community. When the government began
to plan a subdivision for individual owners to develop, Ed got
involved. He helped name the streets on Barranca Mesa and purchased the
lot on which he built the first adobe home in Los Alamos. He took great
pride in his plans and designs for the house, seeking to make it as
durable, functional and maintenance free as possible. Nearly 60 years
later, the house remains a testament to his attention to detail. Ed
was a founding member of the do-it-yourself home builders association
known as “The Nailbenders.” Later, in a new area known as Pajarito
Acres, he was the first to build a home with the intention that it
would be a rental property. When government houses came onto the
market, he bought and sold those too, and upon his exit from the
Laboratory, he and Margaret used proceeds to purchase The Shalako Shop
which they operated for thirty years.
In 1973, he purchased the Grace Lutheran Church property which he first
called “The Omega Peace Institute” and later named “The First Church of
High Technology.” In 1976, he acquired the adjacent “Mesa Market”
property, which remained a grocery store for two years. When the
grocery operation ceased, the Los Alamos Sales Company began moving
things into the building. In recent years, the operation became known
as “The Black Hole,” because “everything went in, and not even light
could get out.” The business is well-known to set-decorators,
artists, inventors and tinkerers, and tourists from around the
world. He worked at the business six days a week until his illness
forced him to slow down in late 2008. He never stopped thinking about
the business despite his physical absence from it.
Ed refused to abandon The Black Hole during the forced evacuation of
Los Alamos in 2000 when the government-set fire devastated the mountain
landscape and burned more than 400 residences. The fire burned up to
the foundation of the Black Hole, but Ed’s vigilance kept the fire from
consuming it. He was arrested after the fire passed and was sentenced
to community service for “refusing to obey a police order.” He had
predicted such a disastrous immolation and had encouraged the County to
build a perimeter road as a fire barrier. He strongly fought the use
of salt on snowy streets because of its killing effect on trees and the
subsequent erosion of soil and further environmental degradation.
Grothus was most known for his antiwar and antinuclear activism. He was
a frequent writer of “Letters to the Editor” and in 1966 wrote “An Ode
to a Leader, Misleading,” dedicated to President Johnson. In it he
wrote “. . .search and destroy, ignoble duty . . .” His motto became
“Semper Fabricate, Numquam Consumite" or “Always Build, Never Destroy.”
As an early Obama supporter, Ed was pleased to note in his inaugural
address that President Obama said, “. . .people will judge you on what
you can build, not what you destroy.” Despite his antiwar and
antinuclear stance, he never called for the closure of the Laboratory.
He said the Lab should stop making things useful only for killing, but
he supported a mission for scientists to more efficiently harvest the
energy of the sun, the infinite power source.
Grothus designed and commissioned two granite obelisks to mark the
explosion of the first atomic bomb. The obelisks were quarried and
carved in China, then shipped to Los Alamos in December 2007. The
obelisks are white granite and are designed to sit on black bases,
“doomsday stones,” engraved with text in 15 languages that describe the
“most significant man-made event in human history.” Important to him
among the messages engraved in the stone was, “No one is secure unless
everyone is secure.” When erected, each monument will weigh over 39
tons and stand nearly 40 feet tall. At the time of his death, Grothus
remained optimistic that the obelisks would find a home.
He was featured in numerous international magazine and newspaper
articles and stories on national radio and television. He has appeared
in various historical books, as a character in novels and, thanks to a
variety of international artists, in theaters, galleries and music
productions. He also has a significant presence on the internet. He was
the subject of two documentaries including “Atomic Ed and the Black
Hole,” by filmmaker, Ellen Spiro, broadcast on HBO. He was also the
subject of investigations by the FBI and Secret Service on several
occasions.
In 2006 he received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Indigenous
World Uranium Summit for his work to promote a Nuclear-Free Future. In
2007, he was humbled to be the first non-Native American to receive the
prestigious Alan Houser Memorial Award from the Houser family at the
annual Governor’s Awards in the Arts for the State of New Mexico.
He was proud of his family with whom he enjoyed traveling, working,
exchanging thoughts and opinions and sharing challenges and successes.
Ed’s deafness, “my only problem,” was a cruel burden, not just for
him. A voracious reader and life-long learner, his intellectual
curiosity and interest in ideas, “things” and world events remained
strong even as cancer consumed all his energy. “Dying,” he said, “is
not very exciting.”
The eldest of eight, he was predeceased by his parents, Edward Theodore
Grothus and Regina Hebinck Grothus, his son Theodore, his grandson
Preston Edward Burns, and his brother Joseph Grothus. He is survived by
Margaret, his wife of 57 years, his children Barbara Grothus of
Albuquerque, NM; Tom Grothus (Wendy Slotboom) of Seattle, WA; Susan
Burns of Albuquerque, NM; and Mike Grothus (Heidi) and their children,
Casey and Michelle Grothus of Niwot, CO. He is also survived by three
sisters, three brothers, and their extended families. Loved and
admired by many, despised by a few, he will not soon be forgotten.
Friends may visit DeVargas Funeral Home at 623 N. Railroad Avenue in
Espanola, NM from 1:00 to 5:00 on Sunday, February 15. There will be a
private interment at Guaje Pines Cemetery. A memorial service will be
announced at a later date. Peace begins in the heart. Life is short.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that you remember Ed by
spending precious time with your loved ones.
Thank you for your kind words, Coco. My family had no part in creating his Wiki entry, though we occasionally update and correct it.
He was not a grouch nor was he grouchy at the end. That will be corrected.
Posted by: bg | Saturday, February 14, 2009 at 03:18 AM