![]() In backyard celebrations, shirtless veterans drank celebratory toasts in the warm sunlight. In Honolulu, marching bands, parades, ticker tape, and blowing papers filled the streets. In San Francisco, parades celebrated that troops would soon return home through that city. In thousands of small towns like North Platte, Nebraska, similar scenes included fireworks, confetti, and impromptu parades down Main Street. In New York City’s Times Square, sailors climbed lampposts to unfurl American flags as ticker tape rained down upon the throngs gathered to celebrate the war’s end. The United Kingdom announced that its official V-J Day would be the next day, August 15, 1945, and Americans exuberantly joined in that day’s merriment, too. As soon as the news of Japan’s surrender was announced on August 14, celebrations erupted across the United States. Truman announced from the White House that the Japanese acceptance met the terms laid down at the Potsdam Conference for unconditional surrender. Then, on August 9, the United States dropped a second atomic bomb over Nagasaki, ultimately killing approximately 70,000.įinally recognizing that victory was impossible, the Japanese government accepted Allied surrender terms without qualifications on August 14, 1945. Two days later, the Soviet Union declared war on Japan. On August 6, the United States dropped the first atomic bomb over Hiroshima, ultimately killing as many as 140,000 people. But before the invasion was to take place, the most destructive war in history came to a shattering and rapid end. The battles for Iwo Jima and Okinawa during the first half of 1945 were marked by spectacular carnage, and Americans were chastened by the knowledge that Japan had never surrendered to a foreign power and that no Japanese military unit had surrendered during World War II.Īfter Okinawa fell to US forces on June 22, 1945, an invasion of the Japanese home islands was set to begin. But there were ominous signs that Japan’s fierce resistance would continue. As the fighting ended in Europe, US troops were drawing a noose around the Japanese home islands. The Allied celebrations on Victory in Europe Day (V-E Day), on May 8, 1945, were subdued by the knowledge that war raged on in the Pacific.
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