150803-hiroshima-aftermath-12p_7b60cbe2619912a12592539c8b2895c8.nbcnews-ux-2880-1000 2On May 27, 2016, the President of the United States, visited the city of Hiroshima, where he spoke these words: “Seventy-one years ago, on a bright cloudless morning, death fell from the sky and the world was changed.

797063-hiroshima-la-veritable-histoire

   A flash of light and a wall of fire destroyed a city and demonstrated that mankind possessed the means to destroy itself….Their souls speak to us. They ask us to look inward, to take stock of who we are and what we might become.”

Less than two months after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, a young American 1st Lieutenant Infantry Officer was sent on a detail to the devastated city. On his return to Tokyo, this combat veteran, wrote his younger brother a poignant letter describing what he saw and felt.

E0D98E80-D3CA-4D66-8D36-712FA7FD8F1B@fios-router.home

This letter was discovered in 2013, after the death of its recipient. (Click image to read)

Japan ltr 102 Japan ltr 103

 

G_ScudderThe author of this letter, George “Buzz” Scudder, of Philadelphia, never spoke of his experience in Hiroshima to his children.

He only mentioned that, had the bomb not been used, there was a good probability he would have been killed with the inevitable invasion of the Japanese Islands.

Months of intense combat prior to the Japanese surrender had fostered a passionate enmity for his enemy.  He discovered during the occupation,  a begrudging admiration for a people and culture he had once considered contemptible.

In time, he came to respect Japan. However, no matter how many years passed, he was never comfortable with the idea of driving a Japanese car.


© Scudder Association Foundation, All rights reserved

0 Comments

0 Comments

Related Posts

Two Scudders Who Dearly Need To Be REMEMBERED

Two Scudders Who Dearly Need To Be REMEMBERED

Nathaniel Scudder was a physician and patriot leader during the Revolutionary War. He served as a delegate from New Jersey to the Continental Congress, He wrote a series of impassioned letters to New Jersey leaders urging the adoption of the Articles, and when New Jersey’s legislature approved them in November 1777, he signed them for the state at Congress. Scudder dropped his medical practice to serve in the military, and he led a regiment in the Battle of Monmouth in June 1778.

read more
Creating a Multi-racial Democracy, The Scudders of Hawaii

Creating a Multi-racial Democracy, The Scudders of Hawaii

The first Scudders to Hawaii grew up in India in the 1860s and 70s. As children of the second generation of American Scudder Protestant missionaries in British India, their parents were doctors and teachers offering alternatives to the Hindu caste system and Islamic fundamentalism with the teachings of Jesus. Scudder involvement in India continues to this day.

read more
Skip to content