laitimes

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

Welcome to the old film time of the book, this group photo shared by all readers and friends today is from the old photos of the surrender of the Japanese army in World War II. Through this set of old photographs, we can look back at the images that have survived from this period of history. This photograph was taken in 1945, when the remnants of the Japanese 14th Front stationed in Luzon surrendered to the Americans, at a time when the Japanese troops were plagued by hunger and their supplies were no longer able to support the 40,000-strong troops.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photograph was taken in September 1945, when The commander of the Japanese 14th Front, Who had been retreating to fight the Americans in the mountains of the Philippines, took the japanese army out of the mountains to surrender to the Americans after the Japanese mainland announced surrender.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photograph was taken in September 1945, when the remnants of the Japanese 14th Front, who had been fighting for half a year in the valley north of Luzon, finally came out of the valley to surrender to the Americans after announcing their surrender on japanese soil.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photograph was taken at the end of August 1945 by five-star Admiral Douglas Douglas. When MacArthur arrived at the port of Tokyo, a press conference was held, and reporters in Japan eagerly asked MacArthur how he would handle the whole situation in postwar Japan.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photo was taken in September 1945, the island of Okinawa lost their homes and were required to live in the temporary settlement of the indigenous people, after they were brutally treated under the rule of the Japanese army, and at this time in the face of different languages of the U.S. army, their panic has not subsided, the old okinawan in the photo is full of haggard facial expressions, and all the damage caused by the war is perhaps the only one they know best.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photograph was taken in 1945 during the U.S. military station in Japan, a U.S. soldier and a Japanese woman walking on the streets of Yokohama, because Yokohama was bombed by the U.S. military at the end of World War II, we can see that the buildings on both sides of Yokohama Street are still in ruins at this time.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photograph was taken on September 10, 1945, when the Japanese 17th Front surrendered to the U.S. army, most of them police officers in the occupied territories.

Coloring old photos: Footage from the time of Japan's surrender in World War II How depressed it was when it was a rampant defeat

This photograph was taken on September 9, 1945, when the Japanese 17th Front in Seoul was inspected by soldiers of the U.S. 7th Infantry Division after completing the surrender ceremony, after which they would be escorted to a prisoner-of-war camp awaiting repatriation to the Japanese mainland. The Japanese army has always been known for its madness in World War II, but at this time they stood up straight in the face of the surrendered personnel, without the appearance of what they once had.

Read on