After last month’s nuclear scare,  it’s hard to imagine anyone in Hawaii  — let alone thousands of people — looking forward to a nuclear explosion.

But that’s exactly what happened in the summer of 1962, when Hawaii had a very different kind of .

Just a few months before the Cuban Missile Crisis, the United States conducted a series of high altitude nuclear tests off Johnston Island, a coral atoll about 800 miles west of Oahu.

Newspaper photographers captured the afterglow of the blast from Punchbowl. newspapers.com / Pipi Wakayama/ The Honolulu Advertiser

People in Hawaii were so excited to witness the blast that hotels in Waikiki planned watch parties, families lined up in parks and on beaches to find a good viewing spot, and newspapers printed viewing guides.

“It’s sort of a testament to American propagandists, that you could turn such a destructive force into visual majesty in a way that would get celebrated,” says , a historian and associate professor at the

Travel back in time with Civil Beat’s to hear about the detonation from one of the reporters who covered the tests, and a beauty pageant contestant who made headlines for opposing them.

Listen to the episode below, or the show in iTunes.

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