Various Photos |
Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall (now, Atomic Bomb Dome) This building was built in 1915. |
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Atomic Bomb Dome after the bombing (in November 1945) |
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The Dome was
designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. |
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Cenotaph for the A-bomb Victims (in Peace Memorial Park) The Japanese characters carved on the front of the chamber say, "Let all the souls here rest in peace; for we shall not repeat the evil". |
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View near First Hiroshima Prefectural Middle
School (now, Kokutaiji High School) after the bombing I was exposed to the A-bomb around here. |
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Scorched plain near Hiroshima University
of Literature and Science I went along the back of this university through severe fire on August 6. |
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Scorched plain around Takanobashi The Hiroshima Red Cross Hospital's building is on the left side of this photograph. At later years Atomic-bomb Survivors Hospital was established next to this hospital. |
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The police box at the west end of Miyuki
Bridge Relief operation was done in front of this police box. I rested in this police box for a while on August 6. (photograph by Yoshito Matsushige) |
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Monument to Tamiki Hara (Tamiki Hara is a so-called A-bomb poet.) |
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A-bombed Phoenix Trees transplanted to the Peace Memorial Park |
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Children's Peace Monument (Tower of Paper Cranes) This monument was inspired by Sadako Sasaki, a vivacious young girl suddenly struck down by radiation aftereffects. Sadako, two at the time of the bombing, developed leukemia about ten years later. Then she died in 1955. |
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Statue of Mother and Child in the Storm |
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(English) |