− | Andô Tarô was the first Japanese Consul General appointed to the [[Kingdom of Hawaii]]. He arrived in Hawaii on February 14, [[1886]], aboard the ''City of Peking'', the third ship carrying officially authorized contract laborers [[Japanese immigration to Hawaii|immigrating to Hawaii]]. A Japanese consulate had been operating in Honolulu since [[1884]], but Andô acquired a new building in 1886 and moved the consulate there at that time. He also delivered to the Hawaiian government, upon his arrival, the [[Convention of Japanese Immigration]], signed by [[Inoue Kaoru]] and [[Robert Walker Irwin]] in Tokyo earlier that year, to be formally signed in Hawaii. | + | Andô Tarô was the first Japanese Consul General appointed to the [[Kingdom of Hawaii]] (though not the first Consul; he was preceded by [[Nakamura Jiro|Nakamura Jirô]]). He arrived in Hawaii on February 14, [[1886]], aboard the ''City of Peking'', the third ship carrying officially authorized contract laborers [[Japanese immigration to Hawaii|immigrating to Hawaii]]. A Japanese consulate had been operating in Honolulu since [[1884]], but Andô acquired a new building in 1886 and moved the consulate there at that time. He also delivered to the Hawaiian government, upon his arrival, the [[Convention of Japanese Immigration]], signed by [[Inoue Kaoru]] and [[Robert Walker Irwin]] in Tokyo earlier that year, to be formally signed in Hawaii. |
− | *Franklin Odo and Kazuko Sinoto, ''A Pictorial History of the Japanese in Hawaii 1885-1924'', Bishop Museum (1985), 27. | + | *Franklin Odo and Kazuko Sinoto, ''A Pictorial History of the Japanese in Hawaii 1885-1924'', Bishop Museum (1985), 27, 39. |