292

(JAPANESE WAR CRIMES TRIAL ARCHIVE)

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:5,000.00 - 7,000.00 USD
(JAPANESE WAR CRIMES TRIAL ARCHIVE)
An extraordinary archive of material pertaining to the 1946-1948 International Military Trial for the Far East, the trial of the major Japanese war criminals, including a large photograph showing each of the defendants and signed by each as well, along with a small section of the rope used to hang Premier Hideki Tojo, and many related documents and photographs. This archive was assembled by Judge Edward H. Dell, legal advisor to the General Secretary of the trial. The signed photograph measures 17" x 6" b/w, bearing bust portraits of each of the 26 defendants and signed in English by 24 of them, including: TOJO, DOIHARA, HASHIMOTO, HATA, HIRANUMA, HIROTA, ITAGAKI, KIDO, KIMURA, SHIMADA, SUZUKI, TOGO, UMEZU, KAYA, HOSHINO, MUTO, ARAKI, OKA, MINAMI, SATO, SHIGEMITSU, MATSUI, OSHIMA and KOISO. Vertical fold at center, some soiling, with contrast of just a few signature marginally light, in original frame. Also included is a 1 7/8" section of hemp rope taped to Dell's envelope, with a typed D.S. by Official Executioner CHARLES REXROAD stating: "I hereby certify that this section of rope is a portion of the rope used to execute ex-Premier Hideki Tojo 0001 hrs 23 Dec. 1948", dated Feb. 13, 1948. Also included is a typed transcript of Dell's letters to his wife from Mar. 26 - June 8, 1948, 56pp. 4to., describing preliminary meetings on the indictments, meetings with judges, opinions and comments, the arrest of Togo, seeing MacArthur, and so on; Dell's manuscript notes on Japan and Japanese culture, a group of 15 10" x 8" b/w photos showing judges and prisoners including one showing Dell reading the indictment to the court; a group of 76 5" x 4" b/w photos showing the trial in session, judges, prosecutors, defendants, and so on, all identified, some bearing manuscript notes; a group of 21 8" x 10" b/w Signal Corps photos of individual defendants as they stand to hear their verdicts, 5 14" x 11" press photos showing prisoners, judges, Tojo, and so on; a printed court room seating diagram, Dell's permanent pass for the entirety of the trials; a spectator's pass; and various Japanese postcard photographs, some used for propaganda purposes. This important archive, in overall very good condition, would be nearly impossible to assemble today.