John K. Emmerson

John K. Emmerson Monument.

John Kenneth Emmerson (born 1908 or 1909—March 24, 1984, Stanford, California) was a United States Diplomat, and specialist on Japan and Northeast Asia.[1]

Early life

Emmerson was a native of Canon City, Colo. He earned degrees from the Sorbonne, Colorado College and New York University. He served in Taiwan, and Japan before World War II.[2] Before the war, he served under Ambassador Joseph Grew in Tokyo.[3]

World War II

On Oct 1944, Emmerson was sent to Yenan in China to interrogate Japanese prisoners of war captured by Chinese communists. In Yanan, Emmerson met Sanzo Nosaka (who was using the alias Susumu Okano at the time), leader of the Japanese Communist Party.[4]

Post-war

After the war, Emmerson returned to Japan as an adviser to Gen. Douglas MacArthur[5] Emmerson was attached to the Political Adviser's Office (POLAD). On October 5, 1945, Emmerson, along with E. Herbert Norman, drove to Fuchu Prison and met prominent Communists incarcerated there, including Tokuda Kyuichi, Shiga Yoshio, and Kim Chon-hae. Emmerson later served as deputy chief of mission in Tokyo under Ambassador Edwin O. Reischauer. Emmerson returned to Washington in February 1946.[6]

Emmerson was given the State Department's meritorious service award in 1954 and the personal rank of Minister in 1959. Emmerson left his last foreign post in 1966 when he was deputy chief of mission at the United States Embassy in Tokyo. He became diplomat in residence at Stanford University. He retired in 1968. Emmerson died in March 1984. at Stanford University Hospital after a stroke. He was 76 years old. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy McLaughlin; a daughter, Dorothy Louise Emmerson; a son, Donald Kenneth Emmerson; a sister, Theodora E. Sinden, and two grandchildren.[7]

Works

References

  1. "JOHN K. EMMERSON, U.S. DIPLOMAT,76". The New York Times. March 27, 1984.
  2. "JOHN K. EMMERSON, U.S. DIPLOMAT,76". The New York Times. March 27, 1984.
  3. Eiji Takemae (2003). Allied Occupation of Japan. A&C Black. pp. 152–240.
  4. Henry Oinas-Kukkonen (Mar 30, 2003). Tolerance, Suspicion, and Hostility: Changing U.S. Attitudes toward the Japanese Communist Movement, 1944-1947: Changing U.S. Attitudes toward the Japanese Communist Movement, 1944-1947. ABC-CLIO.
  5. "JOHN K. EMMERSON, U.S. DIPLOMAT,76". The New York Times. March 27, 1984.
  6. Eiji Takemae (2003). Allied Occupation of Japan. A&C Black. pp. 152–240.
  7. "JOHN K. EMMERSON, U.S. DIPLOMAT,76". The New York Times. March 27, 1984.

External links

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