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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]].
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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''.
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