Edwin O. Reischauer oral history interview
- Date
1979-11-01
- Main contributors
Reischauer, Edwin O. (Edwin Oldfather), 1910-1990; Mayo, Marlene J.
- Summary
-
Oral history interview with Edwin O. Reischauer conducted by Marlene Mayo on November 1, 1979. Edwin O. Reischauer (October 15, 1910 - September 1, 1990) was an author, scholar, diplomat, professor, and leading expert on East Asian affairs. He was born in Tokyo, Japan, to American Presbyterian missionaries. In his youth, Reischauer moved back and forth between Japan and the U.S. with his family. He attended Oberlin College, where he received a BA in 1929, and Harvard College, where he received an MA in 1932 and a PhD in 1939. From September 1943 until the end of the War, Reischauer was a major and then a lieutenant colonel in Army Intelligence, supervising the liaison between G2, the Intelligence Section of the Pentagon, and the work in Arlington Hall, where Japanese radio intercepts were decrypted. After the war, Reischauer was a member of the State Department's State-War-Navy Coordinating Committee (SWNCC), where he drafted the first policy on Korea and participated in the planning for the occupation of Japan. In the interview, Reischauer describes the training of recruits at Arlington Hall, the conditions in Japan during a four-month Cultural and Social Sciences mission in 1948, and reflects on the roles of the Emperor and of General Douglas MacArthur in postwar Japan, among other topics. Reischauer returned to Harvard, where he taught Far Eastern languages and Japanese history for over 40 years, retiring in 1980. From 1961 to 1966, he served as the United States Ambassador to Japan. Edwin O. Reischauer passed away at the age of 79.
- Publisher
University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
- Genre
Oral histories
- Subject
Japan--History--Allied occupation, 1945-1952
- Locations
Japan; Massachusetts; Cambridge
- Collection
Postwar Japan
- Unit
Special Collections and University Archives
- Language
English
- Rights Statement
- In Copyright
- Terms of Use
Collection may be protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. To obtain permission to publish or reproduce, please contact the University of Maryland Libraries at http://www.lib.umd.edu/special/contact/home.
- Physical Description
Recording: 02:19:00 (audio cassette; mp3); Transcript: 68 pages (PDF)
- Notes
This oral history interview is part of the Marlene J. Mayo oral histories. A guide to the full collection of Marlene J. Mayo oral histories is available in our archival collections: http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/42478.
Accession 2009-209-GWP
An interview transcript is available.
- Other Identifier
Filename: prange-087579
Access Restrictions
This item is accessible by: the public.