On 6 September, Colonel Bernard Theilen arrived in
Washington, D.C. with the Allied copy of the Instrument and other documents, including a copy of
Hirohito's 15 August rescript and the
full powers credentials for Shigemitsu and Umezu, all three of which were stamped with the
State Seal of Japan. Following a ceremony led by General
Jonathan Wainwright, the documents were then exhibited at the
National Archives, along with regional instruments of surrender signed after the
Missouri ceremony,
in the Philippines (September 3),
in Korea (September 9), and
in South-east Asia (September 12). On October 1, 1945, the documents were formally received (
accessioned) into the holdings of the National Archives. The Japanese copy of the Instrument is at the Diplomatic Archives of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan in Tokyo, and was last publicly displayed in 2015, as part of an exhibition marking the 70th anniversary of the signing. A replica version of the Japanese copy can be viewed at the archive's gallery, and at the
Edo-Tokyo Museum in
Tokyo. MacArthur was instructed to make 11 full-sized
watermarked facsimiles of the instrument for distribution among the Allied nations. These were bound in blue leather. Two of the personal facsimiles, given to Colonel
LeGrande A. Diller and Filipino Major General
Basilio Valdes, were bought in the late 20th century by
Kenneth W. Rendell for
The International Museum of World War II in
Natick, Massachusetts,
Signing pens As witnesses, American general
Jonathan Wainwright, who had surrendered the
Philippines, and British
lieutenant-general Arthur Percival, who had
surrendered Singapore, received two of the six pens used by MacArthur to sign the instrument. Wainwright's pen was donated to the
West Point Museum at the United States Military Academy. Percival's pen was donated to the
Cheshire Military Museum. The pen of MacArthur's aide
Courtney Whitney was used by MacArthur and returned to him afterwards. The Whitney family still owns this pen. All of the pens used by MacArthur were black, except the last, which was bright red and went to his wife. A replica of the red pen, along with copies of the instrument of surrender, is in a case on
Missouri by the plaque marking the signing spot. MacArthur left two black pens that he signed with on the table for others to also sign with if they desired. The British signatory, Admiral Bruce Fraser, also signed the instrument with these two black MacArthur pens but tried to copy MacArthur's gesture of giving pens to Wainwright and Percival by giving these pens to his two witnesses. After the ceremony, MacArthur's aides immediately retrieved these two pens from Fraser's witnesses and returned them to MacArthur. American General
Jimmy Doolittle reportedly whispered to everyone around him, “I see the British are still
lend-leasing our equipment.” The
MacArthur Memorial currently has these two black
Waterman pens. The red
Parker pen that was owned by MacArthur's wife was stolen from her later. Nimitz signed the instrument with two pens. One of these pens, which belonged to his Chinese neighbor and close friend, is now in the
Nanjing Museum in Nanjing, China. The other one is now in the
United States Naval Academy Museum. ==Gallery==