Nakahama Manjirō
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, also known as John Manjirō (or John Mung), was one of the first
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the n ...
ese people to visit the
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and an important translator during the Opening of Japan.*


Voyage to America

During his early life, he lived as a simple
fisherman A fisher or fisherman is someone who captures fish and other animals from a body of water, or gathers shellfish. Worldwide, there are about 38 million commercial and subsistence fishers and fish farmers. Fishers may be professional or rec ...
in the village of Naka-no-hama,
Tosa Province was a province of Japan in the area of southern Shikoku. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "''Tosa''" in . Tosa bordered on Awa to the northeast, and Iyo to the northwest. Its abbreviated form name was . In terms of the Gokishichidō syst ...
(now Tosashimizu, Kōchi Prefecture). In 1841, 14-year-old Nakahama Manjirō and four friends (four brothers named Goemon, Denzo, Toraemon, and Jusuke) were fishing when their boat was wrecked on the island of Torishima. The American whaleship '' John Howland'', with Captain William H. Whitfield in command, rescued them. At the end of the voyage, four of them were left in
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; however Manjirō (nicknamed "John Mung") wanted to stay on the ship. Captain Whitfield took him back to the United States and briefly entrusted him to neighbor Ebenezer Akin, who enrolled Manjirō in the Oxford School in the town of
Fairhaven, Massachusetts Fairhaven (Massachusett: ) is a town in Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States. It is located on the South Coast of Massachusetts where the Acushnet River flows into Buzzards Bay, an arm of the Atlantic Ocean. The town shares a harbor wi ...
. The boy studied English and navigation for a year, apprenticed to a
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, and then, with Whitfield's help, signed on to the whaleship ''Franklin'' (Captain Ira Davis). After whaling in the South Seas, the ''Franklin'' put into Honolulu in October 1847, where Manjirō again met his four friends. None were able to return to Japan, for this was during Japan's period of isolation when leaving the country was an offense punishable by death. When Captain Davis became mentally ill and was left in Manila, the crew elected a new captain, and Manjirō was made boatsteerer (harpooner). The ''Franklin'' returned to
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in September 1849 and paid off its crew; Manjirō was self-sufficient, with $350 in his pocket. Manjirō promptly set out by sea for the California Gold Rush. Arriving in
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in May 1850, he took a steamboat up the
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, then went into the mountains. In a few months, he found enough gold to exchange for about 600 pieces of silver and decided to find a way back to Japan.


Return to Japan

Manjirō arrived in Honolulu and found two of his companions were willing to go with him. (Toraemon, who thought it would be too risky, and Jusuke, who died of a heart ailment, did not voyage back to Japan.) He purchased a whaleboat, the ''Adventure'', which was loaded aboard the bark ''Sarah Boyd'' (Captain Whitmore) along with gifts from the people of Honolulu. They sailed on December 17, 1850, and reached
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on February 2, 1851. The three were promptly taken into custody, although treated with courtesy. After months of questioning, they were released in
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and eventually returned home to Tosa where Lord Yamauchi Toyoshige awarded them pensions. Manjirō was appointed a minor official and became a valuable source of information. In September 1853, Manjirō was summoned to
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(now known as
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), questioned by the shogunate government, and made a '' hatamoto'' (a
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in direct service to the
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). He would now give interviews only in service to the government. In token of his new status, he would wear two swords, and needed a surname; he chose ''Nakahama'', after his home village. In 1861, Manjirō was ordered to join the shogunate's expedition to the
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, on which he acted as an interpreter.


Service as ''hatamoto''

Manjirō detailed his travels in a report to the Tokugawa Shogunate, which is kept today at the Tokyo National Museum. On July 8, 1853, when Commodore Matthew Perry's
Black Ships The Black Ships (in ja, 黒船, translit=kurofune, Edo period term) was the name given to Western vessels arriving in Japan in the 16th and 19th centuries. In 1543 Portuguese initiated the first contacts, establishing a trade route linking ...
arrived to force the opening of Japan, Manjirō became an interpreter and translator for the Shogunate and was instrumental in negotiating the
Convention of Kanagawa The Convention of Kanagawa, also known as the Kanagawa Treaty (, ''Kanagawa Jōyaku'') or the Japan–US Treaty of Peace and Amity (, ''Nichibei Washin Jōyaku''), was a treaty signed between the United States and the Tokugawa Shogunate on March ...
. However, it appears that he did not contact the Americans directly at that time. In 1860, Nakahama Manjirō participated in the
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. He was appointed translator on board ''Kanrin Maru'', Japan's first screw-driven steam warship, purchased from the Dutch. Due to Japan's former policy of isolation, the crew had little experience on the open ocean, and during a storm, her Captain Katsu Kaishu, Admiral Kimura and much of the crew fell ill. Manjirō was put in charge and brought the ship to port safely. In 1870, during the Franco-Prussian War, Manjirō studied military science in Europe. He returned to Japan by way of the United States. He was formally received at Washington D.C., and he took advantage of this opportunity by traveling overland to
Fairhaven, Massachusetts Fairhaven (Massachusett: ) is a town in Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States. It is located on the South Coast of Massachusetts where the Acushnet River flows into Buzzards Bay, an arm of the Atlantic Ocean. The town shares a harbor wi ...
to visit his "foster father", Captain Whitfield. Eventually, Manjirō became a professor at the Tokyo Imperial University.


Legacy

Manjirō apparently used his know-how of western shipbuilding to contribute to the effort of the Shogunate to build a modern navy. He translated Bowditch's American Practical Navigator into Japanese, and taught English, naval tactics and whaling techniques. He allegedly contributed to the construction of the ''Shohei Maru'', Japan's first post-seclusion foreign-style warship. Manjirō was married three times and had seven children. In 1918, his eldest son, Dr. Nakahama Toichirō, donated a valuable sword to Fairhaven in token of his father's rescue and the kindness of the town. It continued to be displayed in the town library even during World War II when anti-Japanese sentiment was very high. After the sword was stolen in 1977, a replacement was gifted in 1982 and is still on display at the library. Among his accomplishments, Manjirō was probably the first Japanese person to take a train, ride in a steamship, officer an American vessel, and command a trans-Pacific voyage. There is a statue of Nakahama Manjirō at Cape Ashizuri, on Shikoku. However, his grave, formerly at the Zōshigaya Cemetery in Tokyo, was destroyed by American air raids in
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
. In Fairhaven, the Manjirō Historic Friendship Society renovated William Whitfield's home to include a museum dealing with the Manjirō legacy.* Minor planet 4841 Manjiro is named after him. Many books have been published about Manjiro's life and journey such as ''Heart of a Samurai'' by Margi Preus, ''Born in the Year of Courage'' by Emily Crofford, and ''Shipwrecked! The True Adventures of a Japanese Boy'' by Rhoda Blumberg. A Manjiro Festival, sponsored by the Whitfield-Manjiro Friendship Society, is held in Fairhaven in early October of odd numbered years.


See also

* Hasekura Tsunenaga, one of the first recorded Japanese to reach the Americas, in 1614 * Tanaka Shōsuke, one of the first recorded Japanese to reach the Americas, in 1610 * Christopher and Cosmas, one of the first recorded Japanese to reach the Americas, as early as 1587 *
Otokichi , also known as Yamamoto Otokichi and later known as John Matthew Ottoson (1818 – January 1867), was a Japanese castaway originally from the area of Onoura near modern-day Mihama, on the west coast of the Chita Peninsula in Aichi Prefectur ...
, a famous Japanese castaway to the British and American controlled Oregon Territory in 1834 *
Moriyama Einosuke was a samurai during the Tokugawa shogunate, and an interpreter of Dutch and English. He studied English under Dutch merchants and Ranald MacDonald. He was called upon to assist shogunate officials during the "Manhattan Incident" of 1845, dur ...
, another translator in the negotiation with Perry *
Ranald MacDonald Ranald MacDonald (February 3, 1824 – August 24, 1894) was the first native English-speaker to teach the English language in Japan, including educating Einosuke Moriyama, one of the chief interpreters to handle the negotiations between C ...
, the first teacher of English in Japan (Moriyama Einosuke was one of MacDonald's students in Nagasaki in 1848) * Shimazu Nariakira * Joseph Heco, the first Japanese person to be naturalized as a United States citizen, in 1858 * '' Pacific Overtures'',
Stephen Sondheim Stephen Joshua Sondheim (; March 22, 1930November 26, 2021) was an American composer and lyricist. One of the most important figures in twentieth-century musical theater, Sondheim is credited for having "reinvented the American musical" with sho ...
and John Weidman's unconventional musical about the arrival of the
black ships The Black Ships (in ja, 黒船, translit=kurofune, Edo period term) was the name given to Western vessels arriving in Japan in the 16th and 19th centuries. In 1543 Portuguese initiated the first contacts, establishing a trade route linking ...
in Japan. Manjiro is a major character in it, although his story is highly dramatized.


References


Further reading

*
Donald R. Bernard, "The Life and Times of John Manjiro"
* " Heart of a Samurai" A novel closely based on the true story of Manjiro Nakahama. {{DEFAULTSORT:Nakahama, Manjiro 1827 births 1898 deaths 19th-century Japanese translators 19th-century sailors Castaways Hatamoto Japanese translators Japanese sailors Meiji Restoration Members of the Japanese Embassy to the United States People from Kōchi Prefecture People from Tosa Domain People of the California Gold Rush Shipwreck survivors