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HomeMy WebLinkAboutSmithsonian "It's Over" ,..~~""'""-- , I 'i/I I~I 'j, ,II 'Ii IIi ~I Iii! Ii Ii I, !I :i :1 II I Ii Ij " : i I I {60 YEARSAGOJ , . We asked readers to tell us where they were and how they reacted to the news that World War II had ended. And what a response we got o - ~~/S-I I~:S- vv---- <L. ~ ~ ~~'~. . T~~7~W--~~ ~ ~~ ,--~. <J . HOMEFRONT ON V-] DAY, I was only 7 years old, but the memory.is crys- tal clear. We were living in a government housing project in Michigan, and there were virtually no men between ages 18 and 40 in that community of several hundred women and children. After \T..E Day, some dads had come home for ex- tended leaves, and the project was a happy place. Those with people fighting in the Pacific knew that we'd win over there, too, and when it finally happened, the place went nuts: uncontained joy reigned, and when my friend Bobby Phillips came running down the street, he hollered "Come with me!" I followed him to the project of- fice, where Bobby grabbed a lawn mower. He went out to the schoolyard and began cutting a huge V in the middle of the field. Some friends saw us, and they ran to get more mowers. By the time we were finished, the V we mowed in that field was almost 200 feet long and 150 feet wide. We pledged that the V would be kept mowed until our heroes came home and saw it, and through the winter of 1945, it was clearly visible, even when the snow fell. In 1957 I took my fiancee to show her where I'd spent an important decade of my life. As we walked across the schoolyard, I saw the V as clearly as if I'd just mowed it; she didn't see it at all. RICHARD F. MCHUGH GATLINBURG. TENNESSEE 52 Smithsonian AUGUST 2005 ON THE DAY World War II ended, I had but recently returned from serving with the 877th Signal Service Company, 9th Air Force Support Command, in Europe. Now on furlough, I was lunching with Mrs. Rhoda Chase, an old family friend, at a Chinese restaurant on Broadway, in Times Square, in New York City. As we ate, we casually watched the electric "moving" sign on the Times News Building, when we read: "PRESIDENT TRUMAN HAS ANNOUNCED JAPAN HAS SURRENDERED UNCONDITIONALLY THE WAR IS OVER." People in the restaurant were screaming with joy, hugging each other, and crowds were gathering in Times Square. Mrs. Chase, who also had a son in the Army, got up, ran to the bar, and bought me a fifth of Southern Comfort. "Get out of here, Howard," she said. "This is no time for a soldier to be sitting around chat- ting with an old lady. The war is over. Go celebrate, have fun." I took her advice. I celebrated, and here I am 60 years later, a husband, father and grandfather whose family in- cludes my German-born wife, whom I met while serving in Berlin during my second enlistment (1949-50), and a Japanese daughter-in-law; married to one of our sons, a Navy SEAL. My war is over. Life is good. HOWARD ELLIS MORENO VALLEY, CALIFORNIA FOR ME, the end of World War II did not mean rejoicing and dancing in the street. I was a young mother living in the town of Laurel, Mississippi, with two small children and very little food and money. My husband, Aubry, a fight- er pilot, was missing in action somewhere near Rome, Italy. It would be a whole year before he was officially declared "killed in action." The only news I ever finally received about his death was that he had been firing on German ve- hicles when he radioed that his plane had been hit. Aubry had left to go overseas without knowing for cer- tain that I was pregnant. I received many letters from him, but wished he knew that we had a second daughter, whom I named after him. Sadly, all my let- ters came back after his death in one package, unopened. During the anxious months of not knowing what had happened to Aubry, I focused on our two little girls, Mary and Aubrey. To help with our food problem, I planted a veg- etable garden. To make us smile, I planted lots of bright flowers. Each night I would go to bed ex- hausted from all the work, but knowing I had done the best I could do. Before falling asleep, I would thank God for helping us get through an- other day. Then I would look at my two daughters, peace- fully sleeping beside me, and know that no matter what happened, Aubry's brave and gentle spirit was with us;, ODEAN FONDREN HENDERSONVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA prized possession, a 13-year-old car, was full, he spilled a few ounces on the drive. For both my father and the owner, the most extravagant expression of celebration imaginable was to waste gasoline. The look between them and their silent handshake burned into my 8-year-old brain. FRED MCKEE BETTENDORF, IOWA IN 1945, I was working in a textile factory in Cambr~dge, Massachusetts. The factory had previously manufactured curtains but now was making U.S. Army coats and jackets. The bulk materials were cut into patterns; the seamstresses stitched the coats and jackets, and others folded them and prepared them for shipping. All of the women worked together, but I was specifically involved with the team folding and preparing the jackets for shipping. One of the things we always took it upon our- selves to do was to put cheery notes in the jacket pockets like "You are in our prayers," "We are thinking of you and your safe return," "We have not for- gotten you," and '~big thank you from all of us." We knew a soldier would find the note and perhaps it would brighten his day. After all, everyone knew someone in the Army. I remember August 15 very clearly. It was announced over the loudspeaker that the war was over. The hum from the sewing machines stopped, and everyone stood in shock. For a moment, there was complete silence. Then women started crying, screaming and hugging each other. Most of us went to the Boston docks to join other workers from around the city to rejoice. It's a day I will always remember! ANN FERRARA .JANUARIO LYNN, MASSACHUSETTS il DURING THE WAR, gasoline-rationing stamps were guard- ed as carefully as cash. One warm summer day, the few cars that traveled our country road were incessantly honking. Dare we hope? We turned on the radio and learned that it was true. The war was over. My father asked if I wanted to go for a ride with him, a rare treat. Of course I wanted to go. He drove a few miles to a country store and gas station. My father snapped his suspenders for emphasis when he told the owner to "fill 'er up. And spill a little." When our Above: After the war, planes on the assembly line (women riveting) were scrapped. Below: "Rationing stamps were guarded like cash," says McKee. I WAS II YEARS OLD when I learned that World War II was over. My family lived on a small poultry farm on the outskirts of town, in Santa Ana, California, the county seat of Orange County. At least four miles separated us from the center of town, those miles covered in lima bean fields, or- ange groves and berry farms. I remember that it was the Feast of Assumption and we had been to Mass that morning. Then the quiet of a warm summer afternoon was broken by the distant sounds of church bells, car horns, sirens, the startling whistle at the packing house; my first reaction to this strange combina- tion of sounds was confusion. Neighbors were few and far between on Edinger Road, where we lived, and my parents and I couldn't imagine what on earth was happening to cause all the noise. Instinctively, we walked toward the road, where I had spent so much time the past few years waving to the soldiers who were part of the daily traffic of Army convoys that made their way to and from the Santa Ana Army Air Base. But today it was a different type of convoy. We could hear the approach of cars with horns honking, and then we saw people hanging out the windows of the cars shouting, "The war is over, the war is over!" We waved, jumped up and down, and shouted back at the peo- ple in the cars. What wonderful news! What a great day! YSABELCOSTANZA RENTON, WASHINGTON 1 HEARD THE NEWS ofJapan's surrender on my car radio. I was on assignment as a Lockheed Aircraft resident in- spector in downtown Los Angeles. Of course, there was a lot of celebrating going on in the streets and a great feeling of relief. The other emotion was "now what"? I called my manager at Lockheed and was told that the plant would be shut down immediately to regroup and decide on what course to take. Aircraft production was immediately stopped and layoffs began. Planes were taken off the as- sembly line and taken outside to be scrapped. The storywas that they were cut up with radio, instruments, etc., still intact. Those days we're a mixture of joy; relief that the war was over, and some apprehension. CARL WILKINS SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA 1 WAS II YEARS OLD. I had three brothers serving in World War II, three brothers-in-law, other rela- tives and friends. During those years my mother and older sisters sent dozens of boxes of cookies and other foods to them. I remember one brother saying, "I knew that as soon as those Army boys saw my box, I would get only one cookie, iflucky; maybe two." I had an uncle and a cousin killed in World War II, and my sis- ter's brother-in-law was killed as a fighter pilot. Including my parents, we were a struggling farm family of 12 living in the far southeast corner of Nebraska along the Missouri River bluffs. Little did we know about soda pop and junk food. But every year, only on the Fourth of]uly; my father would bring home a wooden case of pop. Those wood- en cases came in handy! On a typical summer day; after we heard by radio that the war had ended, my father surprised us with a case of pop. Cream, strawberry; root beer and or- ange. There were six of us at home, so that meant that each of us got four bottles of pop. I chose one of each kind, and what a great and never-to-be-forgotten celebration we had! LILA MEYERKORTH SHUBERT, NEBRASKA and our 6-year-old son resided with me. Peoria erupted in celebration at the news the war was over, but my cousin, whose husband was stationed in Europe, her 2-year-old son, my husband's mother, my son and I attended services at the Episcopal Church across the street from the federal building where the Selective Service offices were located. Our prayers for my husband's safe return were not real- ized. His body and those of the members of his crew were found in December 1945. MARY E. HILL DUNCAN ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO Lockheed plants were camouflaged; Wilkins and his wife. Patricia. MY PARENTS had taken us from Queens, New York, for the second consecutive year, to Baiu's, a small boardinghouse in the Middletown area of the Catskills. We spent my father's vacation there relax- ing, reading, swimming and eating country cooking. I would be 10 in two months. I remember Mr. Bain decapitating the chickens we would eat for supper and singing the Rodgers and Hammerstein Broadway hit "If I Loved You" in a pleas- ant, unassuming baritone. It was a quiet time, when I learned you could drink goat's milk right out of the goat. But one afternoon, as I was swinging in the old tire hung from the very tall tree on the sloped front lawn, some cars, maybe four or five in ten minutes, went by blowing their horns on the state highway before us. A couple of the drivers waved flags. And the af- ternoon quietly sank toward dinnertime. Later, I told my parents about the cars and the flag-wav- ing. They told me the war was over. At dinner, some of the guests mentioned it to each other, but there were no con- versations about it. I think the adults I was with had been expecting the war to end soon. There was no celebration, only; it seems, quiet relief, and a willingness to put those fears into the past. ON JULY 16, 1945, at 8:45 p.m., I received a telegram that my husband, Staff Sgt. Harry R. Hill, a radio operator on a B-29, had been missing in action following an air raid over Shikoku,]apan, on]uly 3,1945. I was employed as the chief clerk at one of the Selective Service Boards in Peoria, Illinois. My husband's mother FRANCIS HENNINGER CHESAPEAKE, VIRGINIA AUGUST 2005 Smithsonian 55 )1 .( II I I !' I" I I I WITH APPROXIMATELY 70,000 other ex-combat troops from Germany, mostly riflemen, I was in one of the niuner- ous "cigarette" camps, temporary tent cities, called Camp Lucky Strike, on the dry mud flats outside Le Havre, France. We were awaiting shipment to the States for a 30-day leave prior to invadingJapan. The weather was fine, the food was better than K rations, and German POWs did the chores. There was no mail in or out, no pay, no passes to Le Havre (too dangerous) and nothing to do each day, but nobody cared because it was a wel- come relief from combat duty. We knew neither the day nor the month. The daily routine consisted of waiting in line for two hours at the Red Cross tent to get two doughnuts and a cup of coffee. When the news came that theJapa- nese had surrendered after we dropped a superbomb, everybody was very happy, although a bit skeptical at first. It was hard to celebrate the occasion with two doughnuts and a cup of coffee. I WAS IN LONDON when the war ended. A few days before, two atom bombs had been dropped on two Japanese cities. The word "atom" bomb was beyond our comprehension. I happened to be on furlough at the time. We were waiting to be deployed to the Pacific Theater. I had spent several months in France and Germany prior to the Ger- man surrender. London went wild at the news of the Japanese surrender. People poured into the streets. It seemed like everyone was singing and danc- ing. Riding down the street, standing in an open car, was Winston Churchill, flashing his famous "V for Victory" sign and puffing on his ever-present cigar. Three or four of us decided to leave Trafalgar Square and make our way over to Buckingham Palace. A huge throng had gathered outside the palace. Every half hour or so, the royal family would come out onto the balcony. At that time, the royal family consisted of King George and Queen Elizabeth and their children, Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret. As they waved, a EUROPEAN THEATER DENIS N. HUSTON OCEAN SHORES, WASHINGTON 56 Smithsonian AUGUST 2005 ----""-----' "-' -~ .~_...._- - -....... -....~~- - -~... deafening roar went up froll?- the assembly below. When all the celebrations had ended, we thought about our next happy occasion: landing on the shores of the good ole USA. URBAN FLANDERS CINCINNATI, OHIO THE FOLLOWING is cOp'ied from a letter I wrote my fi- ancee (now my wife) on August 15, 1945, from Aschaffen- burg, Germany: My Dearest Briny Marlin, The war is over. Peace is once again covering the world. However, I can't feel elated. I'm happy to know the day I will become a civilian again is coming soon, but I don't know whether I'll be coming home for a while. So please don't stop writing, and please don't expect me home for a few months at least. Meanwhile, here is how we spe1Jt VJ Day: First, it rained all day. Second, we are all so interested in what will happen to our outfit that the news didn't cheer us much. Third, two of our men are beingpunished and have walked around the athletic field all day carryingfull field packs and rifles in the rain. Fourth, I worked all day with the medical officer. I looked into 200 mouths and throats, checkingfor tonsillitis, etc. I feel like a lot of fellows now that the job we had to do is done. we want to quit and come home soon to continue what we started before the war. '., I had another letter from Mom today, so I hope mail will con- tinue to come through. I'm still praying that God will let us come together SOON so we can enjoy a movie, cake, ride, swim, talk and logfire together. Maybe I could even talk you into one of those wonderful kisses you used to give me!! Need I tell you - I'll be loving you. Always. Dick RICHARD HAGERMAN WENDELL, IDAHO FOR ME, August 15, 1945, was the day my father returned from prison camp. It was the day when, for my family, World War II was finally over. I was a 9-year-old boyliving with my mother in a small town in the Bavarian Forest in Germany. We had moved in with my aun.t after our house in Peenemiinde had been destroyed in a 600-bomber air raid, which missed killing us by the narrowest of margins. My father, a PhD in physics, had been one of the scientists who worked with Wernhervon Braun on the,German rocket project. Later, he rejoined von Braun's team as part of the US. space program and became a US. citizen. In May 1945, a few days after our part of Germany had been overrun by US. forces, my father had been confined in anAmerican internment camp. When he was released inAu- gust, he weighed only 95 pounds. He was thin and gray as a ghost. I barely recognized him as he came shuffling down our street, leaning on a stick, his clothes in tatters, the soles of his shoes patched with cardboard held together by twisted wire. In the weeks before my father's return, I had heard news- casts on my aunt's radio of new and terrible bombs that had been dropped somewhere. But it meant very little to me. For me, the war was over because my dad, though sick and weak, had returned and our family was once again united. WERNER H. HENGST SOMERS, NEW YORK I WAS ON MY WAY to Miami for redeployment toJapan. I'd been home on leave after a month's recovery from malnour- ishment and blood poisoning resulting from five months as a prisoner of war, captured during the Battle of the Bulge. When I heard the news of the war ending, I was flooded with emotion. It would be so rewarding to be back on American soil, helping Mother run Dad's jewelry business. Dad had suffered a fatal heart attack while I was in Eng- land heading to my European Theater assignments. As a prisoner of war during the winter of 1945, I was forced to walk whole sections of Germany with my fellow Allied prisoners. My head had been shaved, as were most of the officers', to make us readily recognizable. The only clothes I had for the five frigid months were the ones on my back when I was captured. After liberation, I was sent to Camp Lucky Strike, in France, where the doctors pulled my in- fected thumbnail and gave me shots of penicillin for a week to combat the blood poisoning. My recuperating ex-POW buddies and I were fed an eggnog-type liquid to soothe our tender, malnourished stomachs until we could handle turkey soup and white bread. Upon arrival in America, we were each given a carton of milk; it tasted heavenly. It was so good to be home! HAROLD NEHMER CROSWELL, MICHIGAN Nehmer: Five frigid months walking in one set of clothes. PACIFIC THEATER I WAS A SOLDIER in the US. Army Signal Corps on the US. Navy troopship General R.E. Callan in the Caribbean Sea, due to go through the Panama Canal the next day, en route from Marseilles, France, to Pearl Harbor. I had 18 months in Italy, France and Germany, five Bronze Stars, and knew we were to go on the invasion of the home islands of Japan. My feeling was one of surprise and relief and extreme thankfulness when I heard the war was over. I did not think that I had enough luck to survive the European war and then Japan also. We cheered in elation and called for the Callan to fire her guns. "Wear them out, you don't need them now," which she did in salute. HARRY E. HECKMAN MCMECHEN. WEST VIRGINIA I WAS ONE OF 203 MARINES imprisoned in North China on December 8,1941, by the Japanese. I and several of my Marine colleagues were sent to Japan and put to work at the Yawata Steel Mill. On August 14, 1945, a company interpreter came to our shop and told us to "get our gear and line up." We were marched to an assembly area and loaded into open- gondola rail cars. We sat there until 12 noon, when the em- 58 Smithsonian AUGUST 2005 peror's surrender speech was broadcast over their PA system. We had no word as to what was happening. After the emperor's speech, we were transported to our camp, Fukuoka camp no. 3, about six or seven miles away. Two or three days passed. Still no word. Rumors were flying among the 1,400 prisoners. Some thought we might be moving. Others thought an invasion might have begun. A few more days passed, and the Japanese guards disappeared. I and my colleagues were cautiously optimistic. After a couple more days, a fleet ofB-25s flew over our camp. Then, a B-29 dropped barrels of food and clothing. Nowwe knew that we were going home, and each of our lives took on a higher sense of hope and feeling of blessedness. MARION GUYNN OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA ON AUGUST 15, 1945, aJapanese officer entered my cell in a prison in Hokkaido and said, "Soon there will be peace. Soon you will be relieved [sic}." As the impact of the state- ment took hold, I had a vague feeling that my over three- month ordeal as an American POW of the Japanese might actually end with my going home, rather than my death. I was a navigator/bombardier in the 11th Air Force, 77th Bomb Squadron, flying out of Attu in the North Pacific. We had been bombing factories and ships on Shumshu Is- land and were captured after our B-25 crashed, May 19, 1945. Our entire crew of six survived, but three were later lost while being transferred by Japanese ship to Japan. The ship was torpedoed by an American sub, The rest of us were moved from one prison to another, never knowing if we would survive the day. By the time we arrived in Hokkaido, we were ill, malnourished and feeling hopeless. The news of the end of the war dredged up the remaining ounces of hope in my benumbed mental state, but there was also some trepidation generated by rumors that we would all be shot before the liberating forces reached us. The reality was that our treatment improved to a degree, and we were allowed to bathe and shave. We were even taken into town, where we were given some money with which to buy what very little was available. I firmly believe that this date marked a rebirth for me. Had the end of the war come much later, I am convinced I would not have survived to mark the event. MILTON E. ZACK LAGUNA WOODS, CALIFORNIA AUGUST 15, 1945, dawned hot and humid in the Philip- pines. I was stationed at San Miguel North as part of the WAC [Women's Army Corps} group that was with General MacArthur's headquarters. We were cryptanalysts working onJapanese codes. Unfortunately, I had gotten "jungle rot" on my foot while in New Guinea. It had gotten so bad that I had to go to the hospital at Clark Field. About noon we heard loud voices in the next ward. Then a fellow came in our ward and shouted, "The war is over! The Japanese have surrendered!" There was silence as we thought about what we had heard. Of course, home was uppermost in our minds. Yet it didn't seem right to celebrate when so many of us wouldn't be going home. Our silence was in remem- brance of our fellow soldiers, and in thankfulness to God that this terrible war was over. MARY "GINNY" BLAKEMORE .JOHNSTON WINCHESTER, VIRGINIA , " ;: ~ 8 < , " , ~ ~ ~ >. ;:; >. " IN SPRING 1945, our family evacuated from Tokyo to Toyama, some 150 miles to the northwest. Two weeks later, another daily air raid, with incendiary bombs, turned the Ginza District, in downtown Tokyo, into piles of debris and dead bodies. That summer I turned 14. Soon, the newspaper reported the total destruction of Hiroshima. The enemy had deployed a new type of bomb, an official report said. Rumors were that only one plane and one bomb had done the damage. Why so much de- struction from a single bomb? Why was it not challenged by our fighters? We were doubly afraid. Then Nagasaki was struck to the same horrible degree. Is this the end for us? Fear ruled. Then a notice went around: the emperor will address the nation over the radio at noon on August 15. Be sure to listen. He spoke haltingly in an obscure, courtly way, but the message was obvious-the war was over, no more fighting. This meant that: 1. I no longer had to work in a factory, 2. I could go back to school full-time, and 3. We didn't have to shade the light any longer. My school building had been destroyed. A dormitory for former factory workers served as a temporary facility. There was no heat or air conditioning. The next several years were very bleak. Food and fuel were scarce. My father died from pneumonia in 1945. In 1947, I quit school and started working at a U.S. Naval Base in Yokosuka. I was the sole wage earner for a family of six. I returned to school, taking night classes from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., Monday through Saturday. In 1954, angels smiled on me, and I enrolled at the Uni- versity of Oregon. I cannot thank enough the generosity of the late George and Edith Woodrich and the state of Ore- gon for four years of scholarship. YASUO ISHIDA ST, LOUIS, MISSOURI DURING THE ENTIRE Japanese occupation of Korea (1910-1945), my father, who had been educated in America (Brown University, class of 1905), refused to learn to speak Japanese and to change our family name to aJapanese ver- sion, as every Korean was required to do. But we children, born during the occupation, learned to speak Japanese fluently and did our best to behave like Japanese at our school, where we were taught entirely by Japanese instructors. Every morning at school assembly, the image of the I I Japanese emperor would be un- I veiled, and we would bow our I heads deeply and recite our oath of allegiance in ancientJapanese. As World War II was nearing its end, army recruiters insisted that even my brother, who was lying in a hospital with tuberculosis, enlist in the Japanese Army. At the first opportunity, Father hid my brother, me and our younger siblings in a mountain house near Seoul. One lazy summer afternoon, my brother was listlessly picking out a tune at the piano half-listening to the radio. He suddenly stopped and motioned for us to come over. From the radio came a very faint voice speaking in archaic Japanese that we could hardly understand, like the emper- or's decree we recited at school. Oh my, it was the emperor speaking. The emperor was telling us he could no longer bear the sufferings of his subjects and that the war was over. Our parents and other grown-ups erupted in jubilation, while we children began to weep at the incredible fall of the Rising Sun. UN-.JIN PAIK ZIMMERMAN BRYN MAWR. PENNSYLVANIA AUGUST 2005 Smithsonian 59 II 1 I HAD BEEN STATIONED with the Navy in the Admiralty Islands for 15 months late inJuly 1945 when a buddy of mine and I met a B-29 pilot who was on his way home from Tinian, his airbase in the Mariana Islands. He excitedly told of the top-secret activity there. "The base was crawl- ing with brass," he said. "It was something big involving B- 29S that could end the war!" He was right. The atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki soon followed, signaling that the war was about to end. Within days, we met an enter- prising airman who had returned from his home in Australia with a bottle of Haig and Haig Scotch he wished to sell for $35. Anticipating the war's end, we needed a potent drink to celebrate with, so de- spite its outrageous cost and that we both detest- ed scotch, we eagerly accepted his offer. On August 15, shouting and cheering roared throughout our entire base. Ships at anchor began blasting their horns. The war was over! Time to break out our scotch. That night, seated in the back of a GMC truck, we happily and endlessly toasted the war's end. Several hours later, two big surprises awaited us. First, we found ourselves cold sober. Second, the real- ization hit us that we had been duped. Our high-priced scotch was nothing but a skillfully needled, highly watered- down version from Australia. GENE MCDERMOTT ALLENTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA I WILL ALWAYS REMEMBER August 15, 1945. I was a gun- ner on a B-29 called "Dottie's Baby." I was stationed on Guam in a bombardment wing whose sole purpose was to bomb oil plants inJapan. All of our missions were at night. August 6 and 9, atom bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The aircrews in our wing were excited because we hoped we would not have to fly any more missions. We thought the Japanese would surrender; they didn't. August 14, we had to go again. This time we were going on the longest mission we had ever pulled: a refinery in northern Japan. (It took I2 to 14 hours to fly from Guam to Japan and back.) We got to our target sometime early in the morning of the 15th. We were at 12,000 feet and saw no Japanese fighters and very little flak. We dropped our bombs and left the target. Our number four engine quit. Our pilot said, "We are going to make an emergency landing at Iwo Jima." (A lot ofB-29 crews were saved by being able to land on I wo Jima; we can thank the Marines for that.) As we were heading there, our navigator told us that he had heard a radio transmission from San Francisco. The Japanese had agreed to surrender unconditionally! We landed at Iwo Jima August 15. We were told it was the last mission of World War II. We were very happy! .JOHN MOON RENTON, WASHINGTON 60 Smithsonian AUGUST 2005 I SERVED ABOARD the USSPennsylvania from January 1942 to September 1946. This ship participated in amphibi- ous operations from Attu to the Philippines and earned a Navy Unit Commendation for its action. We heard rumors in early August 1945 that the Japanese Empire was near surrender, but we didn't have the slightest clue when this would occur. Much of the U.S. fleet was clos- ing in on the Japanese mainland. On August 12, my ship, along with other warships and sup- port vessels, was anchored in Buckner Bay, Okinawa, awaiting orders for the "Big Push." That night a 10neJapanese torpedo plane hit and badly damaged our ship. Twenty officers and enlisted men lost their lives. When the ceasefire oc- curred on August 15, there was not much to celebrate, since the ship's crew was still occupied repairing the damage. Certainly, we were glad the war was over, but we had lost ship- mates and mourned their passing. What made it doubly sad was that we had endured much action prior to the surrender without casualty to ship or crew. Yet less than three days before the ceasefire, a last- gasp effort by a lone warrior of the empire nailed us. , HENRY O. WENDLER CORONA, CALIFORNIA ON AUGUST 15, my ship was offshore Honshu,Japan's main island. The news of the emperor's surrender speech was gratefully received. We were also pleased that our new president, HarryTruman (from Missouri), thought the ideal place for the surrender ceremony was the battleship Missouri, my ship. Toward the end of August, the Missouri, the British ship King George Vand a number of other ships entered Sagami Wan, a large bay just south of Tokyo Bay. Tides pointed our ' anchored ships toward Mount Fuji, majestically rising in the distance. When the sun set behind Fuji, we played the "Star-Spangled Banner." It was one of the most moving moments of my life. A few days before the September 2 surrender ceremony, we put into Tokyo Bay (all mine-swept) and anchored out. On the big day, our foredeck held the Allied leaders and Mr. Shigemitsu, for Japan. Afterward, squadrons of Navy planes came roaring over, at low level, followed by massed Air Force planes. We knew the war was over! It was something not to be forgotten. D. M. DE LANCEY SAN MATEO, CALifORNIA o