− | The ''Morrison'' was an American ship which arrived in [[1837]], seeking to repatriate a number of castaways, and was driven away by cannon fire, in accordance with the [[Edict to Repel Foreign Vessels]] issued in [[1825]]. | + | The ''Morrison'' was an American ship which arrived in [[1837]], seeking to repatriate a number of castaways, and was driven away by cannon fire, in accordance with the [[Edict to Repel Foreign Vessels]] issued in [[1825]]. This was the only time that Japanese took violent action in the name of this Edict.<ref>Constantine Vaporis (ed.), "Sizing up the Foreign Threat: Aizawa Seishisai's ''Shinron'' (New Theses, 1825)," ''Voices of Early Modern Japan'', Westview Press (2012), 119.</ref> |
| The ship, captained by D. Ingersoll, was operating out of [[Macao]] and carried a number of American missionaries, as well as three Japanese castaways. The Westerners included the American missionaries [[Samuel Wells Williams]] and physician [[Peter Parker]], as well as German missionary [[Karl Gutzlaff]].<ref>Yamaguchi Eitetsu, "Okinawa? Changing Times?" Plenary Panel, East-West Center International Conference in Okinawa, Pacific Hotel, Naha, September 18, 2014.</ref> The three Japanese men, named Kyukichi, Iwakichi, and [[Yamamoto Otokichi]], had come ashore in the Pacific Northwest in [[1834]], where they were enslaved by a Native American group, then turned over to a captain of the Hudson Bay Company, who allowed them to make their way to England and to China before finally heading for Japan aboard the ''Morrison''. | | The ship, captained by D. Ingersoll, was operating out of [[Macao]] and carried a number of American missionaries, as well as three Japanese castaways. The Westerners included the American missionaries [[Samuel Wells Williams]] and physician [[Peter Parker]], as well as German missionary [[Karl Gutzlaff]].<ref>Yamaguchi Eitetsu, "Okinawa? Changing Times?" Plenary Panel, East-West Center International Conference in Okinawa, Pacific Hotel, Naha, September 18, 2014.</ref> The three Japanese men, named Kyukichi, Iwakichi, and [[Yamamoto Otokichi]], had come ashore in the Pacific Northwest in [[1834]], where they were enslaved by a Native American group, then turned over to a captain of the Hudson Bay Company, who allowed them to make their way to England and to China before finally heading for Japan aboard the ''Morrison''. |