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[[Image:Shirokiyalogo.JPG|right|thumb|300px|A sign for the sole remaining Shirokiya location, in Honolulu's Ala Moana Shopping Center.]]
*''Founded: [[1662]], [[Omura Hikotaro|Ômura Hikotarô]]''
*''Japanese'': 白木屋 ''(Shirokiya)''

Shirokiya is a Japanese department store company which traces its origins back to [[1662]]. Though one of the oldest Japanese department store companies still extant, today it no longer operates any locations in Japan - a Shirokiya department store in Honolulu, Hawaii is the only one remaining under that name.

Shirokiya was originally established as a lumber and textiles shop in Kyoto, sometime around 1654; its founder, [[Omura Hikotaro|Ômura Hikotarô]], was around 17 or 18 years old at that time, and had moved to Kyoto from [[Omi province|Ômi province]], where he grew up.

Despite this earlier origin, the company's history is generally traced to 1662, when Shirokiya Hikotarô, as he had already come to be known, opened a draper's shop (textile store / dry-goods and sundries shop) on [[Nihonbashi]]-dôri, in the center of the most major commercial district of [[Edo]]. Hikotarô died in [[1689]], passing on the company to a son, and the company continued to survive, and expand. Like [[Mitsukoshi]] (founded [[1673]]) and certain other major Edo stores, Shirokiya appears in numerous ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' woodblock prints, easily recognizable by the depiction of the Shirokiya logo on ''[[noren]]'' (curtains) hanging outside the shop.

The original store, located on a major avenue just south of the Nihonbashi bridge, eventually developed into a modern department store, opening a modern-style storefront on a corner property in [[1901]]. This building was renovated around [[1910]], but was ultimately lost in the 1923 Great Kantô Earthquake. Shirokiya rebuilt, and spawned a subsidiary called Tokyo Telecommunications Research Institute, or ''Tôtsûken kaisha'' (東通研会社), which produced a wide variety of electronics, including the first electric rice cooker, sold under the Shirokiya brand. ''Tôtsûken'' eventually split from Shirokiya, and was later renamed SONY.

In 1956, Shirokiya was absorbed by the Tôkyû corporation, which today remains a major presence with its department stores, private railroad lines, and other businesses. Three years later, in 1959, the first Shirokiya department store in Hawaii was opened. The original Nihonbashi Shirokiya location closed in 1999, followed by all other locations in Japan under the Shirokiya name (though Tôkyû department stores remain strong today). The department store opened in 1959 in Honolulu's Ala Moana Shopping Center is the only one remaining today under the Shirokiya name, and in 2012 is celebrating the 350th anniversary of the 1662 founding of the original Nihonbashi store.

[[Image:Shirokiya350.JPG|center|thumb|600px|A detail from an ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' woodblock print, depicting the Shirokiya storefront. Note the store's name in ''kanji'' 白木屋 and ''kana'' 志ろきや, along with the store's logo.]]

==References==
*"Ômura Hikotarô" 大村彦太郎. ''Gôshô hyakunin'' 豪商百人. ''Bessatsu Taiyô'' 別冊太陽. Winter 1976. p52.
*"[http://www.oldtokyo.com/shirokiya-department-store.html Shirokiya Department Store]." OldTokyo.com. 2003-2008.
*"[http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Tokyu-Department-Store-Co-Ltd-Company-History.html Tokyu Department Store Co., Ltd. - Company History]. FundingUniverse.com.

==External Links==
*[http://www.shirokiya.com Shirokiya Honolulu official website]
*[http://maps.google.com/maps/place?cid=14064546096066284026&q=Shirokiya+Inc.,+Honolulu,+HI&hl=en&ved=0CBgQ-gswAA&sa=X&ei=97IlT7ucH4TX8QbD372RBA&sig2=Rb6WY7NNArOq4cmU58TK1A Shirokiya's Honolulu location on Google Maps]

[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Meiji Period]]
[[Category:Historic Buildings]]
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