New member - I need your help re Dai Ichi Hotel in Tokyo - 1946

Post
janel90
Cadet
It's about my Mom, a German civilian in Tokyo - 1935-1948 --
 
I'm hoping someone on this forum can assist me. I'm looking for any information about the Tokyo Dai Ichi Hotel when it was used for GHQ/SCAP Field Grade Officer housing for the US occupation forces in Tokyo. My family history has it that my mother was hired by a US Army Col. Joseph Muldoon to manage the basement snack bar in that hotel sometime during 1946. (and to distribute the rationed liquor!) She was 21 years old at the time, and spoke German, English and Japanese (that’s why she was hired, I suppose).
 
Our oral family history suggests an extraordinary life for my mother, Helga Hofmeier Kiderlen. Born in 1925 in Germany, her father was a published pediatrician (the family story is that he was a doctor to the Goebbels children in Berlin at one time). Her parents divorced when she was 3. Her new stepfather and mother sailed for Japan in late 1931, leaving her for several years with relatives in Munich when she was only 6. Her stepfather, who had originally been selling Mercedes in Tokyo, was eventually asked by German Ambassador Eugen Ott to work in the German Embassy’s Naval Attache office as Paymaster/Purchasing Agent under Admiral Paul Wenneker and he started work there in the mid-30s.
 
Mom followed to Japan at age 10, on a steamship from Hamburg to Tokyo in 1935 - strangers hired to accompany her. She lived as a German in Japan, from 1935 to 1948. Little food, terrible times and, as a "gaijin", always on the wrong side. She was on the train to her best friend Ulla Ott's (daughter of the German Ambassador to Japan) birthday party when the train was stopped for Doolittle’s Raid, and everyone was told to take shelter. As she was only a very naive 17 years old, she tells me that she and her friends went to a nearby ice cream shop for a snack until the bombing was over (!!!). Geez Louise!!
 
She survived her family home being burned to the ground during the March 10, 1945 fire-bombing of Tokyo, and was again on the train when the Emperor spoke to his public after Hiroshima. Her family had their summer house in Hakone, near where she met her first American GIs staying at the Myano****a Hotel. She met my Dad, a Cajun from Louisiana, on a blind date in Tokyo very soon after his arrival in Japan as part of the USAF occupation troops in early 1947.
 
Mom's parents were repatriated to Germany in mid-1947, and Mom accepted sponsorship by an American Army officer, Lt Col John Watson, and family to come to the US on their dime, but work out that payment as the nanny for their two little boys. (I still have the original "contract" they all signed in January 1948.) She sailed alone into San Francisco in February 1948, surprised to find nothing bombed. She spent 1948 as a nanny for the Watson family. In December of that year, Dad finished his tour of duty in Japan, arrived in San Diego, paid off her indenture and married Mom three days later.....and then took her to his home in the bayous of Louisiana to "meet the parents", then to Omaha, to his next PCS assignment. After one year at Offutt AFB, she then returned to the bayous for one year, alone with me, an infant, while Dad went on an unaccompanied tour for one year to the nuclear testing site of Eniwetok Island. She became a naturalized US citizen while in LA. I still have the original newspaper articles from the local paper.
 
I continue to be amazed at her life - first as the child of an affluent and intellectual family, then as a German in Japan during the war, then working as a nanny, then living as "one of those bad Germans" in very conservative small bayou town in Louisiana on her own with an infant. Although I've heard many, many of her stories, I still am surprised at the resilience, poise, and lady-like class she retained throughout her life.
 
Because of all the above, I'd like to compose a bit of written family history, but need to verify the Dai Ichi story. Can you point me in a direction that might help me with some specifics/photos/info re US military history/Dai Ichi Hotel/officer housing/basement snack bar during 1946 Tokyo?
 
The Holy Grail would be to find someone who actually remembers/knew of the young blonde German girl who worked at the Dai Ichi Hotel basement snack bar.
 
I know it's a very long shot, but I'm trying anyway!
 
Sincere thanks for any help or direction you might be able to offer me ---
 
Jane Lang
Scott Burris
Benevolent Dictator
Re:New member - I need your help re Dai Ichi Hotel in Tokyo - 1946
This is a bit outside our area of focus, and I suspect a really difficult quest.
 
I would contact USF-Japan (www.usfj.mil) and see if they might be able to point you to something.   Be brief, but include your key facts.  An eager public affairs officer, or unit historian might get interested.
 
I'd also check published works on the occupation of Japan, and carefully scan the footnotes and sources for potential resources.
 
Best of luck,
susank
Group Member
Re:New member - I need your help re Dai Ichi Hotel in Tokyo - 1946
Hi Jane-
I agree with Scott that you might find more leads from a ground forces forum.  I did a little looking around this morning because your mother's story is so interesting to me.  I did find a record of her arrival at San Francisco in 1948: 
 
Name: Helga Hofmeier Arrival Date: 14 Feb 1948 Age: 22 Birth Date: abt 1926 Birthplace: Frankfurt, Germany Gender: Female Ship Name: President Mackinley Port of Arrival: San Francisco, California Port of Departure: Yokohama, Japan Last Residence: Japan Friend's Name: Albert Watson Archive information (series:roll number): M1410:396  
Having said that about looking at ground units, the first lead I found is a member of an air force unit who was in the vicinity at the time.
http://www.beatitudescampus.org/pubs/roadrunner-extra/RRE-2011-11.pdf  check out page 5.
 
But you might have more success looking for the army units based there at the time:
http://www.discovernikkei.org/en/resources/military/368/ a gentleman with an Army Engineer service company who might know of the snack bar.
 
You might want to check out the website on which this link is posted.
http://generalmacarthurshonorguard.com/uploads/Fall_2010.pdf
I would not be surprised if some of these men knew of the hotel and its snack bar.
 
Good luck in your search. 
Susank
shooshoobaby
Air Force Brat
Re:New member - I need your help re Dai Ichi Hotel in Tokyo - 1946
Jane -
The 5th Air Force was stationed in Tokyo during
that time. If all else fails , you could put an AD in
The Air Force Times and Retired Officer Magazine.
Mike
 
janel90
Cadet
Re:New member - I need your help re Dai Ichi Hotel in Tokyo - 1946
You are all wonderful!  Thank you so much for all the good ideas!
Scott - I sent an email (short and to the point) to the Public Affairs office at usfj.  Waiting for a reply.
Susank - I'd already posted on the DoolittleRaider forum, thinking some of them may have eventually ended up in Tokyo.  No joy.....yet.  I'll now check out your other site suggestions!  (Oh - I had already found mom's name on the manifest of the McKinley.  Interesting to me that her race was listed as Aryan.)
shooshoobaby - I'll see what I can find by scoping out the 5th AF.
 
Many thanks --
Jane
 
janel90
Cadet
Re:New member - I need your help re Dai Ichi Hotel in Tokyo - 1946
Oh susank -- I just had a lovely telephone conversation with 93 year old Capt Ken Dehoff who wrote that great article about his stay at the Dai Ichi in late 1945!!  So nice and chatty on the phone, told me a bit more about the hotel, but sadly has no photos and was there just a few months before mom started working there.....but thanks to you I had a chance to visit with him just a bit!  I can hardly wait to tell mom!!!  And this surely means there are others like him out there and someone, someone may remember her or have a photo of the snack bar or the hotel
 
Thanks again!!
 
Jane