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Captained by John Maury, it arrived in Honolulu around 9 o'clock in the morning, on February 8, [[1885]], carrying 944 Japanese immigrants, having left [[Yokohama]] roughly two weeks earlier. They included 311 men, 67 women, and 42 children from [[Yamaguchi prefecture]], and 140 men, 43 women, and 39 children from [[Hiroshima prefecture]], and 99 people from Tokyo, with the remainder originating from [[Kanagawa prefecture|Kanagawa]], [[Okayama prefecture|Okayama]], and [[Wakayama prefectures]].<ref>These statistics, as well as tables of the ages of the passengers, and the number who were couples, families, or single individuals, can be found in Odo and Sinoto, 39-40.</ref>
 
Captained by John Maury, it arrived in Honolulu around 9 o'clock in the morning, on February 8, [[1885]], carrying 944 Japanese immigrants, having left [[Yokohama]] roughly two weeks earlier. They included 311 men, 67 women, and 42 children from [[Yamaguchi prefecture]], and 140 men, 43 women, and 39 children from [[Hiroshima prefecture]], and 99 people from Tokyo, with the remainder originating from [[Kanagawa prefecture|Kanagawa]], [[Okayama prefecture|Okayama]], and [[Wakayama prefectures]].<ref>These statistics, as well as tables of the ages of the passengers, and the number who were couples, families, or single individuals, can be found in Odo and Sinoto, 39-40.</ref>
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Also arriving in Hawaii aboard the ship were Irwin, his wife and daughter, and [[Nakamura Jiro|Nakamura Jirô]], Japan's first consul to the [[Kingdom of Hawaii]], accompanied by his wife, and [[kazoku|Viscount]] [[Torii Tadafumi]], who was to work at the consulate as well. Another of the ship's passengers, [[Nakamura Joji|Nakamura Jôji]], was to go on to become the inspector-in-chief of the Japanese section of the Hawaiian Bureau of Immigration.
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Also arriving in Hawaii aboard the ship were Irwin, his wife and daughter, and [[Nakamura Jiro|Nakamura Jirô]], Japan's first consul to the [[Kingdom of Hawaii]], accompanied by his wife, and [[kazoku|Viscount]] [[Torii Tadafumi]], who was to work at the consulate as well. Another of the ship's passengers, [[Nakayama Joji|Nakayama Jôji]], was to go on to become the inspector-in-chief of the Japanese section of the Hawaiian Bureau of Immigration.
    
The journey from Yokohama is said to have been relatively uneventful, and all 944 immigrants made it to Hawaii healthy, with a minimum of illnesses or problems during the voyage, with the exception of one woman who suffered a miscarriage during the trip, but arrived herself in good health. In addition, an infant was discovered on board after the ship departed Yokohama, who does not seem to have belonged to any of the adults on board. Upon arrival, the immigrants signed labor contracts with individual plantation companies, underwent medical examinations, and spent ten days in quarantine on Sand Island in Honolulu Harbor before being able to enter Honolulu proper.
 
The journey from Yokohama is said to have been relatively uneventful, and all 944 immigrants made it to Hawaii healthy, with a minimum of illnesses or problems during the voyage, with the exception of one woman who suffered a miscarriage during the trip, but arrived herself in good health. In addition, an infant was discovered on board after the ship departed Yokohama, who does not seem to have belonged to any of the adults on board. Upon arrival, the immigrants signed labor contracts with individual plantation companies, underwent medical examinations, and spent ten days in quarantine on Sand Island in Honolulu Harbor before being able to enter Honolulu proper.
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