Hiroshima

Hiroshima is the Japanese city the United States struck with the first atomic bomb on August 6, 1945, a Manhattan Project weapon that helped force Japan's surrender, ended World War II, and opened the nuclear age that shaped Cold War foreign policy.

Verified for the 2027 AP US History examLast updated June 2026

What is Hiroshima?

Hiroshima is the Japanese city where the United States dropped the first atomic bomb ever used in war, on August 6, 1945. The bomb was the product of the Manhattan Project, the secret wartime research program that put American scientific and industrial power to work building a weapon nobody had seen before. Three days later a second bomb hit Nagasaki, and Japan surrendered shortly after, ending World War II.

For APUSH, Hiroshima is more than a single event. It's the hinge between Period 7 and Period 8. The CED credits Allied victory partly to technological and scientific advances (KC-7.3.III.D), and the atomic bomb is the clearest example. But the bombing also created the world Unit 8 lives in, where Americans debated the morality of nuclear weapons, the size of the nuclear arsenal, and the growth of the military-industrial complex. President Truman's decision to use the bomb remains one of the most debated choices in American history, weighing a quick end to the war against the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians.

Why Hiroshima matters in APUSH

Hiroshima sits at the seam between Unit 7 (Topic 7.13, World War II) and Unit 8 (Topics 8.7 and 8.15). Under APUSH 7.13.A, it's a direct effect of the causes of Allied victory, since the bomb came from the technological and scientific mobilization the CED highlights (KC-7.3.III.D). Under APUSH 8.7.A, it sets up the military and diplomatic responses of the Cold War, because the essential knowledge specifically says Americans debated the merits of a large nuclear arsenal and the military-industrial complex. And under APUSH 8.15.A, it's evidence for how the period 1945-1980 reshaped national identity, with the US asserting global leadership in an uncertain nuclear world (KC-8.1). If you can explain Hiroshima as both an ending (of WWII) and a beginning (of the nuclear age), you're doing exactly the cross-period thinking the exam rewards.

How Hiroshima connects across the course

Manhattan Project (Unit 7)

The Manhattan Project is the cause and Hiroshima is the effect. The secret program built the bomb, and Hiroshima is where the CED's point about winning the war through 'technological and scientific advances' became horrifyingly concrete.

Nagasaki (Unit 7)

Nagasaki was bombed three days after Hiroshima, on August 9, 1945. Together the two bombings pushed Japan to surrender, and on the exam they're almost always discussed as a pair when the Truman decision debate comes up.

Cold War (Unit 8)

Hiroshima proved the US had the bomb, and once the Soviets got one too, the arms race was on. The Unit 8 debates over a large nuclear arsenal and the military-industrial complex all trace back to August 1945.

Battle of Okinawa (Unit 7)

Okinawa's brutal casualty counts convinced many American planners that invading the Japanese home islands would cost enormous numbers of lives. That projection is the core of the traditional argument for using the bomb instead of invading.

Is Hiroshima on the APUSH exam?

Multiple-choice questions tend to test Hiroshima two ways. First, as cause and effect within WWII, like a stem asking which technological development most contributed to Allied victory in the Pacific and altered the postwar power structure (answer: the atomic bomb). Second, as the start of an ongoing debate, like a question asking what tension the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings reflect in American foreign policy. That second type is really a Unit 8 question wearing a Unit 7 costume. No released FRQ has used 'Hiroshima' verbatim, but it's strong evidence for LEQs and DBQs on the effects of WWII, the origins of the Cold War, or continuity and change in America's world role from 1945 to 1980. The key skill is using it as a turning point. Don't just narrate the bombing; explain what it ended and what it started.

Hiroshima vs Nagasaki

Hiroshima came first (August 6, 1945) and Nagasaki second (August 9, 1945). Hiroshima gets remembered as the moment the nuclear age began, while Nagasaki's significance is that it was the second strike that, combined with the Soviet declaration of war on Japan, pushed Japan to surrender. On the exam, name the right city for the right date and treat them as a paired event when discussing Truman's decision.

Key things to remember about Hiroshima

  • Hiroshima was the first city ever attacked with an atomic bomb, struck by the United States on August 6, 1945, three days before Nagasaki.

  • The bomb came out of the Manhattan Project, which is the APUSH example of winning WWII through technological and scientific advances (KC-7.3.III.D).

  • The bombings helped force Japan's surrender and ended World War II, making Hiroshima a classic turning-point piece of evidence for essays.

  • Hiroshima opened the nuclear age, which set up the Unit 8 debates over the nuclear arsenal and the military-industrial complex (APUSH 8.7.A).

  • Truman's decision to drop the bomb is a major historical debate, weighing the estimated cost of invading Japan against the mass death of Japanese civilians.

  • Hiroshima works as a bridge between Period 7 and Period 8, so it's strong evidence in continuity-and-change questions about America's role in the world.

Frequently asked questions about Hiroshima

What was Hiroshima in APUSH terms?

Hiroshima is the Japanese city the US hit with the first atomic bomb on August 6, 1945. In APUSH it marks both the end of World War II (Topic 7.13) and the start of the nuclear age that shaped Cold War policy (Topic 8.7).

Did the Hiroshima bombing end World War II by itself?

Not by itself. Japan surrendered after Hiroshima, the Nagasaki bombing on August 9, and the Soviet declaration of war on Japan all hit within days of each other. On the exam, treat Hiroshima as part of a chain of events, not a single knockout blow.

How is Hiroshima different from Nagasaki?

Hiroshima was bombed first, on August 6, 1945, and Nagasaki second, on August 9, 1945. Hiroshima symbolizes the start of the nuclear age, while Nagasaki was the second strike that helped push Japan to surrender.

Why is Hiroshima in both Unit 7 and Unit 8?

It happens in 1945, the last year of Period 7, but its biggest consequences play out in Period 8. The bomb that ended WWII also started the nuclear arms race and the debates over the military-industrial complex that the Unit 8 CED highlights.

Was Hiroshima the result of the Manhattan Project?

Yes. The Manhattan Project was the secret US program that developed the atomic bomb, and Hiroshima was its first wartime use. Pairing the two is an easy way to show the cause-and-effect reasoning APUSH 7.13.A asks for.