Who was Tsutomu Yamaguchi, and how did he survive both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings?

Who Was Tsutomu Yamaguchi, And How Did He Survive Both The Hiroshima And Nagasaki Atomic Bombings?

Tsutomu Yamaguchi is the only person officially recognized by the Japanese government as a nijyuu hibakusha (“double bombed person”). His story is a harrowing testament to both extreme misfortune and incredible survival instincts.

He didn’t just survive two nuclear blasts; he survived them while being at ground zero for both.


The Two Explosions

Yamaguchi was a 29-year-old naval engineer for Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. His survival was a result of split-second reactions and, frankly, a series of near-impossible coincidences.

August 6, 1945 | 8:15 AM

Yamaguchi was on his last day of a three-month business trip. He was walking to the shipyard when the “Little Boy” bomb detonated 3 kilometers away. He saw the flash, dove into a ditch, and was blown into a potato patch. He suffered ruptured eardrums and severe upper-body burns.

  • The Return to Nagasaki

August 8, 1945

After spending a night in a dugout shelter, he navigated the ruined city to the train station. Despite his injuries, he boarded a train full of refugees headed to his hometown: Nagasaki.

  • Nagasaki: The Second Blast

August 9, 1945 | 11:02 AM

Yamaguchi was at the Mitsubishi office reporting to his supervisor. Ironically, he was mid-sentence, describing the “single bomb” that destroyed Hiroshima—which his boss didn’t believe—when the “Fat Man” bomb detonated 3 kilometers from the office.


How He Survived

Yamaguchi attributed his survival to his training and a bit of luck:

  • The “Duck and Cover” Instinct: In Hiroshima, he saw the magnesium flash and instantly dove. This prevented him from being vaporized or blinded by the initial thermal radiation.
  • Topography: In Nagasaki, the hilly terrain of the city and the specific layout of the Mitsubishi office helped shield him from the full force of the shockwave, though he was again badly burned.
  • Medical Resilience: He suffered from acute radiation poisoning (losing his hair and falling into high fevers), but he eventually recovered and lived to be 93 years old.

The Bitter Irony: After surviving the first atomic bomb in human history, Yamaguchi took a train 300 kilometers south to what he thought was the safety of his home, only to arrive just in time for the second (and last) nuclear attack in history.

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