Good morning, Whitewater.
Thursday will be sunny with a high of seventy-four.
Whitewater’s Police & Fire Commission meets tonight at 6:30 PM.
On this day in 1945, the existence of a Japanese proclamation of surrender is made public:
…an official announcement of Japan’s unconditional surrender to the Allies is made public to the Japanese people:
Even though Japan’s War Council, urged by Emperor Hirohito, had already submitted a formal declaration of surrender to the Allies, via ambassadors, on August 10, fighting continued between the Japanese and the Soviets in Manchuria and between the Japanese and the United States in the South Pacific. In fact, two days after the Council agreed to surrender, a Japanese submarine sank the Oak Hill, an American landing ship, and the Thomas F. Nickel, an American destroyer, both east of Okinawa.
In the afternoon of August 14, Japanese radio announced that an Imperial Proclamation was soon to be made, accepting the terms of unconditional surrender drawn up at the Potsdam Conference. That proclamation had already been recorded by the emperor. The news did not go over well, as more than 1,000 Japanese soldiers stormed the Imperial Palace in an attempt to find the proclamation and prevent its being transmitted to the Allies. Soldiers still loyal to Emperor Hirohito repulsed the attackers.
That evening, General Anami, the member of the War Council most adamant against surrender, committed suicide. His reason: to atone for the Japanese army’s defeat, and to be spared having to hear his emperor speak the words of surrender.
The emperor’s recording to his people was broadcast the next day, on 8.15.1945.
Today, a geography question from Google-a-Day:
After centuries of being passed between Genoa, France and Sardinia what European country was finally granted sovereignty in 1861?