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Hi All,
Many of you know I collect artifacts, bits...of buildings, melted roof tiles, melted windows with wood in them, fused ceramic and metal, blasted electrical bits with aggregate...things from the Hiroshima Atomic Bombing. That blast stuff is very hard to authenticate. I also collect Survivor autographs - the closer to 1945 the better. Of the many signatures I have, even from this one man, and the many I have examined, this is the earliest yet by a full year. It's a man whose material I collect seriously.
Kiyoshi Kikkawa opened a "souvenir shop" near the Dome in mid-late 1951 and spoke and traveled and was a great proponent of peace. He helped to preserve the Dome. Shown below is him in the Red Cross hospital in 1946 or '47, the earliest signature I have seen, him after this still in the Red Cross Hospital (he left in April 1951 citing poor food and treatment), him signing his autobiography in his "Atomic Shop" near the Genbaku Dome 1953, the autobiography, signed and stamped, a rare snapshot from June,1952 showing him being photographed by solders - he had a badly flash-burned back with keloid formations I won't show here, and he would expose it ceremoniously for anyone who asked, and - a rare color slide of his shop in about 1954. Click to see entire image.
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That is very interesting. I think you are wise to still use the lead case. I suppose the number of survivors are dwindling down even though there would be those who were children. I know the Enola Gay pilot and crew signed for years.
Hi Scott, still living are approx 130,000 Hibakusha from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. About 11,000 Japanese Americans were in Hiroshima on Aug. 6th, with approx 3,000 returning to the US. The double survivors, nijū hibakusha, had the very bad luck of being in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Incredibly, this happened to some 150 people or so. I recall an American POW who survived Nagasaki because he was in a jail cell with thick concrete walls. I also recall an (American? English?) actress.
PS - Scott, the melted glass fragment Europium readings are for the fragment shown earlier. I thought this would post beneath that backlit image.
That is very interesting you wonder how much of these artifacts were removed from the site in the months and years following.
That is a good question. I think this will become clearer in the next few years as the last generation of people who collected this material pass on and the items get sold etc into the marketplace. Most of what I see are roof tiles - anything unbroken or unusual is very desirable - prices have risen a lot in just the last 4 years.
It occurred to me, the greenish color on one of my home electrical wire knobs likely indicates the presence of then melted copper wires? Make sense? These were exposed to the elements for perhaps 5-6 years. The wire knob to the left has a sheet rock nail fused to it so sufficient heat was certainly present.
I had just assumed the green color was from copper wire oxidation.
Well spotted!
That is a wonderful autograph with the early historic context of it. As you know I love ballpoint signatures and this is a very nice example.
Great pictures. Did Sasaki die in 1945?
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