Visual Materials
First landing of Americans in Japan, under Commodore M. C. Perry at Gore-Hama July 14th 1853
You might also be interested in

Passing the Rubicon
Visual Materials
Image of Lieutenant Silas Bent leading a boat of United States sailors through a group of Japanese boats in Tokyo Bay, Japan, during the United States Naval Expedition to Japan (the Perry Expedition) in 1853; Japanese men with spears in boats watch the American troops as they enter the harbor; U.S. naval ship and Japanese coastline visible in the distance.
priJLC_MIL_001460
Image not available
Souvenir of Japan
Visual Materials
A cloth portfolio containing twelve color lithographs with hand-colored details of Japanese dress, boats, symbols, and men of varying social and military classes. The portfolio cover title "Souvenir of Japan" is gilded. Titles of prints include: Japanese Peasant; Japanese Dressed in Chain Armer (Commanding Officer); Japanese Performing the "Ko-Tow"; Officers of the 2nd Rank; Two Grandees of Japan; Japanese Boatman; Japanese Officer; 2 Officers Saluting Each Other; War Boat; Merchant Vessel; Hats and Various Insignias of Rank; Standards Carried by Various War Boats & Socks and Sandals of the Lower Class. Many of the prints are signed "Lith. of J. Bien. 180 Broadway N.Y."
priPEF 12

Landing of the troops at Vera Cruz
Visual Materials
Image of American soldiers landing on the shores of Veracruz, Mexico, during the Mexican-American War; troops gather on the shore with cannons near a large American flag on a flagpole as more men disembark from ships and are ferried to shore in row boats; city of Veracruz visible in the distance.
priJLC_MIL_001260

Perry's victory on Lake Erie
Visual Materials
Image of the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812; American Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry stands with sword in hand and arm outstretched in a rowboat directing eight men, including one African-American man rowing; American and British war ships fire on each other in the background; dead and wounded men visible in the water in the foreground.
priJLC_MIL_001281
Image not available
Photograph album of a Japanese American soldier in the U.S. occupation forces in Japan
Visual Materials
A personal photo album compiled and annotated by a Japanese American serviceman who served in the U.S. occupation forces during the post-World War II occupation of Japan. The album begins with his departure from Hawaii to Japan in 1946, including one image of his old school, McKinley High School in Honolulu. In Tokyo, there are many photographs of fellow soldiers, as well as Japanese young men and women; buildings and landmarks; parks; and army buildings. Two images of a large building are described as General Douglas MacArthur's headquarters in Tokyo, and there is one image of him walking out of the building. Besides Tokyo, the soldier is seen in Kamakura and Otake, near Iwakuni, where he may have been stationed later. Of note are a few images of building destruction in Hiroshima, 1947, in the aftermath of the atomic bombing. At the back of the album are many single and group portraits of Japanese residents, possibly family members or acquaintances in Iwakuni and Otake. The album has handwritten captions in English, with occasional captions written in Japanese.
photCL 667

The attack on the barrier forts near Canton, China, by the American Squadron, Commodore James Armstrong, Nov 21st 1856
Visual Materials
Image of the attack on the barrier fort near Canton (now Guangzhou), China, by the United States ships San Jacinto, Portsmouth, and Levant during the Second Opium War; two ships visible at center with soldiers in smaller boats heading to shore; Canton coastline with small buildings and scattered Chinese people visible in background.
priJLC_MIL_001293