Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, History museum in Peace Park, Japan.
The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum is a history museum in a modern building that displays artifacts, photographs, and documents related to the nuclear attack of August 9, 1945, and its aftermath. The facility includes a library, video screening area, bookshop, and multiple exhibition rooms that comprehensively cover the events and their impact.
The museum was founded in 1955 and moved to its current building in 1996, replacing the International Culture Hall as the primary repository for atomic bomb artifacts. This relocation allowed for a more comprehensive presentation of materials and better preservation of these important testimonies.
The museum displays personal belongings from victims and explains how these items create a lasting connection to the people who lived through the disaster. Visitors can understand how these objects help preserve the stories of those who experienced the tragedy.
The museum opens daily from 08:30 to 17:00 and sits within Peace Park, where you can easily walk to several other memorial sites. It is helpful to allow time for browsing the exhibition and video areas, as there is substantial material to explore.
The museum preserves a water tank from Keiho Junior High School that stood 800 meters from the blast hypocenter, illustrating how close destruction came to the school. This preserved piece of infrastructure stands as silent testimony to the force of the explosion and its reach into the surrounding area.
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