Takeso Shimoda Explained

Takeso Shimoda
Native Name:下田 武三
Native Name Lang:ja
Ambassador From:Japanese
Country:United States
Term Start:28 June 1967
Term End:September 1970
Predecessor:Ryūji Takeuchi
Successor:Nobuhiko Ushiba
Birth Date:3 April 1907
Birth Place:Tokyo, Japan
Death Place:Tokyo, Japan
Nationality:Japanese

was a Japanese diplomat who served as ambassador to the United States and a justice in the Supreme Court of Japan.

Career

Shimoda served as vice foreign minister (a bureaucratic appointment) within the Japanese Foreign Ministry.

He was involved in the revision of the 1951 Security Treaty Between the United States and Japan.[1]

Shimoda served as ambassador to the United States from 28 June 1967 until September 1970.[2] He was a signatory of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons on 3 February 1970.[3]

From 12 January 1971 until 2 April 1977, he served as a justice in the Supreme Court of Japan.[4]

Baseball career

He was commissioner of Nippon Professional Baseball from March 1979 until 1985. His predecessor, Toshi Kaneko, resigned after a trade scandal.[5]

Personal life

Shimoda had a wife, Mitsue, a son, and two daughters.[1]

Shimoda died from heart failure on 22 January 1995 in Tokyo.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Takezo Shimoda . 28 November 2019 . . The Associated Press . 23 January 1995.
  2. News: Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969-1976, Volume XIX, Part 2, Japan, 1969-1972 - Office of the Historian . 28 November 2019 . history.state.gov.
  3. The Department of State Bulletin . 1970 . 62 . 228 . 28 November 2019 . Office of Public Communication, Bureau of Public Affairs . en.
  4. Web site: 裁判所|Former Justices . www.courts.go.jp . 28 November 2019.
  5. News: Nakashima . Leslie . Japanese baseball commissioner Takeso Shimoda has established himself as... . 28 November 2019 . United Press International . 8 September 1982 . en.
  6. News: Takezo Shimoda, Former Envoy, 87 . 28 November 2019 . The New York Times . The Associated Press . 23 January 1995.