Difference between revisions of "Nakatani Shinshichi"

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*''Japanese'': [[中谷]]新七 ''(Nakatani Shinshichi)''
 
*''Japanese'': [[中谷]]新七 ''(Nakatani Shinshichi)''
  
Nakatani Shinshichi was a farmer from Jigozen-mura, [[Hiroshima prefecture]], who was commissioned to build a Taiko-bashi (Drum Bridge) for the [[1894]] [[San Francisco]] Midwinter Fair.
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Nakatani Shinshichi was a master carpenter who was commissioned to build a Taiko-bashi (Drum Bridge) for the [[1894]] [[San Francisco]] Midwinter Fair.
  
He sold his family's rice fields to be able to afford the construction of the bridge and bell tower gate (''shôrômon''), which remain today a part of the [[Hagiwara Tea Garden]]. Shinshichi's son remained in San Francisco for nearly fifty years, working to try to earn the funds to re-purchase the family's fields.
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Originally from a peasant family from Jigozen-mura, [[Hiroshima prefecture]], he sold his family's rice fields to be able to afford the construction of the bridge and bell tower gate (''shôrômon''), which remain today a part of the [[Hagiwara Tea Garden]]. Shinshichi's son remained in San Francisco for nearly fifty years, working to try to earn the funds to re-purchase the family's fields.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 11:15, 25 September 2013

The Shôrômon (Bell Tower Gate) at the Hagiwara Tea Garden in San Francisco, built by Nakatani Shinshichi.
  • Born: 1846
  • Died: 1922
  • Japanese: 中谷新七 (Nakatani Shinshichi)

Nakatani Shinshichi was a master carpenter who was commissioned to build a Taiko-bashi (Drum Bridge) for the 1894 San Francisco Midwinter Fair.

Originally from a peasant family from Jigozen-mura, Hiroshima prefecture, he sold his family's rice fields to be able to afford the construction of the bridge and bell tower gate (shôrômon), which remain today a part of the Hagiwara Tea Garden. Shinshichi's son remained in San Francisco for nearly fifty years, working to try to earn the funds to re-purchase the family's fields.

References

  • Plaque on-site at the Hagiwara Tea Garden, San Francisco.