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Yamamoto Otokichi was one of three Japanese castaways, along with two men named Kyukichi and Iwakichi, who came ashore in the Pacific Northwest in [[1834]], and then journeyed to England, China, and elsewhere in their efforts to return home.
 
Yamamoto Otokichi was one of three Japanese castaways, along with two men named Kyukichi and Iwakichi, who came ashore in the Pacific Northwest in [[1834]], and then journeyed to England, China, and elsewhere in their efforts to return home.
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Their ship was somehow disabled just off the coast of Japan, floundering and floating all the way to the west coast of the United States. Found by members of the Makah Indian tribe, they were at first enslaved, then later turned over to a sea captain of the Hudson Bay Company. They were later allowed to make their way to England, and to China, in efforts to find their way back to Japan.
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Their ship was somehow disabled just off the coast of Japan, floundering and floating all the way to the west coast of the United States. Found by members of the Makah Indian tribe, they were at first enslaved, then later turned over to a sea captain of the Hudson Bay Company. They were later allowed to make their way to England, and to China, in efforts to find their way back to Japan. The group arrived in Japan in [[1837]] aboard the American ship ''Morrison'', a ship out of [[Macao]] carrying a number of American missionaries who were hoping to show goodwill by returning the castaways. Instead
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