Surrender Deck
On Sunday morning, 2 September 1945, representatives of the warring nations gathered aboard the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay to formally end World War II. General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, opened the proceedings at 9:02 am and Foreign Minister Mamoru Shigemitsu stepped forward to sign the Instrument of Surrender on behalf of the Emperor of Japan and the Japanese government. General Yosijiro Umezu followed as representative of the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters. General MacArthur then stepped forward to accept Japan’s surrender on behalf of all the Allied Powers and Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz signed as witness for the United States. Representatives of the Republic of China, United Kingdom, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Australia, Canada, France, the Netherlands, and New Zealand each signed. Twenty-three minutes later, the Second World War came to a close.
The Surrender Plaque, installed in October 1945, marks the spot where the surrender table was located and also indicates the ship’s coordinates in Tokyo Bay during the ceremony.
DID YOU MO?: USS Missouri was chosen as the site of the Surrender Ceremony by President Truman, former Missouri Senator whose daughter had christened the ship at her launching in 1944.
The Surrender Plaque, installed in October 1945, marks the spot where the surrender table was located and also indicates the ship’s coordinates in Tokyo Bay during the ceremony.
DID YOU MO?: USS Missouri was chosen as the site of the Surrender Ceremony by President Truman, former Missouri Senator whose daughter had christened the ship at her launching in 1944.