V J Day


The term has been applied to both the day on which the initial announcement of Japan's surrender was made in the afternoon of August 15, 1945 (August 14 North American date), as well as the date the formal surrender ceremony was performed in Tokyo Bay, aboard the battleship USS Missouri on September 2, 1945.
In Japan, the day is usually known as Shuusen-kinenbi, which literally means the "memorial day for the end of the war"; the official name for the day is however "the day for mourning of war dead and praying for peace". This official name was adopted in 1982 by an ordinance issued by the Japanese government.
The day is commemorated as Liberation Day in Korea and some other nations.


Surrender


Allied military personnel in Paris celebrating the Japanese surrender.

A little after noon Japan standard time on August 15, 1945, Emperor Hirohito's announcement of Japan's acceptance of the terms of the Potsdam Declaration was broadcast to the Japanese people over the radio. Earlier the same day, the Japanese government had broadcast an announcement over Radio Tokyo that "acceptance of the Potsdam Proclamation coming soon," and had advised the Allies of the surrender by sending a cable to U.S.

Truman via the Swiss diplomatic mission in Washington, D.C. On August 15 & 16 some Japanese soldiers, devastated by the surrender, committed suicide; over 100 American prisoners of war were also executed. In addition, many Australian and British prisoners of war were illegally executed in Borneo, at both Ranau and Sandakan, by the Imperial Japanese Army.
Since Japan was the last Axis Power to surrender and V-J Day followed V-E Day by three months, V-J Day marked the official end of World War II.


The Japanese representatives aboard the USS Missouri at the Surrender of Japan.

The formal Japanese signing of the surrender terms took place on board the battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on September 2, 1945, and at that time Truman actually declared September 2 to be V-J Day.
In Australia and most other allied nations, the name V-P Day was used from the outset.
V-J Day
VJ Day, San Francisco's Market Street 1945
The Canberra Times of August 14, 1945 refers to VP Day celebrations, and a public holiday for VP Day was gazetted by the government in that year according to the Australian War Memorial. Approximately one-fourth of the Japanese civilian population died resisting the invasion, often in mass suicides organised by the Imperial Japanese Army.

July 26: Potsdam Declaration is issued.

Truman tells Japan, "Surrender or suffer prompt and utter destruction."
July 29: Japan rejects the Potsdam Declaration.
August 2: Potsdam conference ends.
August 6: An atomic bomb, "Little Boy" is dropped on Hiroshima.
August 8: USSR declares war on Japan, operation of August Storm
August 9: Another atomic bomb, "Fat Man" is dropped on Nagasaki.
August 15: Japan surrenders. Date is remembered as "V-J Day" or "V-P Day" and described as such in newspapers in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
September 2: Official surrender ceremony; President Truman declares September 2 officially "V-J Day".

November 1:Scheduled commencement of Operation Olympic, the allied invasion of Kyushu.
March 1, 1946: Scheduled commencement of Operation Coronet, the allied invasion of Honshu.

Famous photograph


The famous Life magazine photograph taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt.

One of the most famous photographs ever published by Life, V–J day in Times Square was shot in Times Square on August 14, 1945.
V-J Day
Dwight R. Hutton (W7HB) Ham Radio, VJ Day. Pearl Harbor
Alfred Eisenstaedt was in the square taking candids when he spotted a sailor "running along the street grabbing any and every girl in sight. I turned around and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse." Eisenstadt was very gratified and pleased with this enduring image, saying: "People tell me that when I am in heaven they will remember this picture." The participants in the kiss were never confirmed by Eisenstaedt.

Life, however, accepted nurse Edith Cullen Shain's claim to this honor in a handwritten letter to Eisenstaedt 35 years later. Over 20 men have claimed to be the sailor, but none has been positively identified.
Commemoration
United States
V-J Day is recognized as an official holiday in the U.S.
Victory Over Japan Day (V-J Day) - September 2, 1945
Famous VJ DAY Kissed Nurse With Young Marines At Call To Service Rally USS Midway
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