Blakemore Foundation



The Blakemore Foundation was established in 1990 by Thomas and Frances Blakemore to encourage the advanced study of Asian languages and to improve the understanding of Asian fine arts in the United States.

Thomas Blakemore (1915-1994)

Born in 1915 in Sapulpa, Oklahoma, Thomas Blakemore graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1936 with an B.A. in physics, and received his law degree from its Law School in 1938.

A chance encounter with Walter Rogers of the Institute of Current World Affairs (also known as the Crane-Rogers Foundation) changed the course of his life.  The Institute offered the young American lawyer a grant to study comparative law at Trinity Hall College at Cambridge University in England (1938-1939), and then sent him to Japan to study Japanese language and law at Tokyo Imperial University (1939-1941) under the tutelage of Professor Kenzo Takayanagi.
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During World War II, Mr. Blakemore served as an Army captain with the Office of Strategic Services in China and returned to Japan at war's end as a Foreign Service Officer. He subsequently joined the legal division of General MacArthur's Allied Occupation staff, and from 1946 to 1949 worked on the review and revision of the major Japanese legal codes. Mr. Blakemore's English translation of the revised Japanese Criminal Code was published in 1950.

In 1950, he took and passed the three-day Japanese bar examination in Japanese, becoming the first foreign lawyer in the post-war period to be admitted to the practice of law with full courtroom status. As founder and senior partner of the firm of Blakemore & Mitsuki, he practiced law for 40 years in Japan with an emphasis on international legal matters.  He represented many of the leading American and European companies doing business in Japan.

In 1987 Mr. Blakemore was decorated by Emperor Hirohito with the Order of the Sacred Treasure Third Class for his contributions to Japan's legal system.

Active in the founding of Tokyo's International House of Japan, Mr. Blakemore served on its governing board until his retirement. As a Field Associate of the American Museum of Natural History, he organized and led expeditions for the Museum in search of specimens of a number of Asian mammals, including the Hokkaido bear, the kamoshika and the Iriomote cat.