Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Cut Out of Rising Sun from WWII Japanese Zero

All items240681 of 244736Thai Buddha Head Found on Jungle Floor 1963Royal Hawaiian ladies garment
3
Love it
3
Like it

scottvezscottvez likes this.
packrat-placepackrat-place loves this.
ThriftyGypsyThriftyGypsy likes this.
tlmbarantlmbaran loves this.
stepback_antiquesstepback_antiques loves this.
VikingFan82VikingFan82 likes this.
See 4 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 14 years ago

    erikblair
    (2 items)

    In WWII my Grandfather was in the Pacific and in 1944 he cut this small 3 inch by 1.5 inch piece from the Rising Sun emblem of a wrecked Japanese Zero. My Grandfather was a Commodore in the Navy and he was in the Phillipines and was brought to the site of the downed airplane in July of 1944. The back is metallic color, and the metal is thin, but strong.
    I wonder if there are a few of these out there, what they're worth and any more information you might know about the subject?

    Comments

    1. FlyingAce FlyingAce, 14 years ago
      I have a smaller similar piece of blue colored metal with a scratched inscription from Iwo Jima. It came from a WWII veteran's estate along with Japanese bullets. The metal looks like reinforced aluminum, as does yours.
    2. stepback_antiques stepback_antiques, 14 years ago
      Erik, check out the piece I have on my show and tell. I never saw another until now.
      Mike
    3. scottvez scottvez, 13 years ago
      This was a typical souvenir item.

      I'd document what you know about the item along with information on your grandfather. If possible, I'd have your grandfather sign a statement about the item.

      These are popular collectables. Documentation/ provenance will add to the value.

      They usually bring in the $100- $300 range depending on size and the documentation.

      I have a piece of a zero along with a photo album that has a WW2 photograph of the soldier with the exact same piece of the zero.

      Scott

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.