Advanced Search
-
Japanese officials aboard the USS Missouri (BB-63) in Tokyo Bay, Japan, 2 September 1945
Scene from the Japanese Surrender Ceremony aboard the USS Missouri (BB-63).
-
Japanese oil dump burning, Tinian, 1944
Photograph. Large column of smoke rising from a burning Japanese fuel dump. Official caption on front: "Jap oil dump burns on Tinian Island.
-
Japanese oil refinery bombed on Honshu Island, Japan, 1945
Photograph. Aerial photograph of the Otake Oil Refinery being bombed by American forces.
-
Japanese oil refinery burning, Java, 1944
Photograph, aerial. Large column of black smoke rising from a burning Japanese oil refinery.
-
Japanese oil supplies burn in the background during battle for Kwajalein Island in February 1944
Japanese oil supplies burn in background; Japanese landing craft in foreground. "W-CPA-44-108-BA. 2/4. Cordray.
-
Japanese palace complex, Tokyo
Photograph, aerial. Japanese palace complex.
-
Japanese patrol torpedo boats being bombed by a U.S. Navy plane, Kyūshū Island, Japan, June 1945
Photograph. Aerial photograph of anchored Japanese patrol torpedo boats being bombed by a U.S. Navy plane. Official Caption: "Rome.
-
Japanese pilots in the back of a military police jeep on a tarmac, Japan, 1945
Photograph. Two Japanese pilots sitting in the back of an American military police jeep while an interpreter speaks with a Japanese delegate.
-
Japanese plane wreckage strewn across a beach. Dutch Harbor. 1942
Photograph. Japanese plane wreckage strewn across a beach. Ships in the harbor and distant shores visible in the background.
-
Japanese planes fail to hit targets during raid off Guam in July 1944
508.Photograph.
-
Japanese planes flying through clouds of antiaircraft flak off the coast of Iwo Jima, Japan, 1945
Photograph. Japanese planes flying through clouds of antiaircraft flak; spray from bullets visible on water surface.
-
Japanese police officer leaving his station, Japan, 1945
Photograph. Uniformed Japanese police officer walking past two lines of armed United States Marines as he leaves his station.