Steve Rohrer

author

Steve Rohrer

Known for detailed government-era histories of U.S. nuclear testing, this writer helped document Project Trinity and other mid-20th-century atomic test operations. The surviving public record is thin, but the work remains a useful doorway into the history of America’s early nuclear age.

1 Audiobook

Project Trinity, 1945-1946

Project Trinity, 1945-1946

by Carl R. Maag, Steve Rohrer

About the author

Publicly available sources identify Steve Rohrer as a coauthor of several historical and reference works connected to the U.S. Defense Nuclear Agency's Nuclear Test Personnel Review program. His name appears on Project Trinity, 1945-1946, written with Carl R. Maag, as well as other titles about nuclear test operations and background materials for the CONUS volumes.

Those books focus on documenting the first U.S. atomic test and later weapons-test programs in a factual, research-driven way. Rather than a widely documented literary figure, Rohrer seems to be known mainly through these specialized government-linked historical publications.

Because reliable biographical information about his personal life and career is scarce in the sources I found, it is safest to describe him as a researcher or historical coauthor whose published work centers on the record of U.S. nuclear testing.