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Yamashita Yoshiaki - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yamashita Yoshiaki

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yamashita Yoshiaki
Yamashita Yoshiaki
In this Japanese name, the family name is Yamashita.

Yamashita Yoshiaki (山下 義韶, 16 February 186526 October 1935, also known as Yamashita Yoshitsugu), was the first person to have been awarded 10th degree black belt (jūdan) rank in Kodokan judo. He was also a pioneer of judo in the United States.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Yamashita was born in Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan. His father was of the samurai class.[1] As a boy, Yamashita trained in the traditional (koryū) Japanese martial arts schools of Yōshin-ryū and Tenjin Shin'yō-ryū jujutsu.[2] In August 1884, he joined the Kodokan judo dojo of Kano Jigoro (嘉納 治五郎 Kanō Jigorō, 1860–1938), as its nineteenth member. He advanced to first degree black belt (shodan) rank in three months, fourth degree (yondan) ranking in two years, and sixth degree (rokudan) in fourteen years.[1] He was a member of the Kodokan team that competed with Tokyo Metropolitan Police jujutsu teams during the mid-1880s,[3][4] and during the 1890s, his jobs included teaching judo at the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy and Tokyo Imperial University (modern University of Tokyo).[1]

[edit] Introducing judo to America

Commander Takeshita Isamu at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in 1905.
Commander Takeshita Isamu at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in 1905.
President Theodore Roosevelt, 1904
President Theodore Roosevelt, 1904

In February 1902, a Seattle-based railroad executive named Samuel Hill decided that his 9-year-old son, James Nathan, should learn judo, which he had apparently seen or heard about while on a business trip to Japan. In Hill's words, the idea was for the boy to learn "the ideals of the Samurai class, for that class of men is a noble, high-minded class. They look beyond the modern commercial spirit."[5] Hill spoke to a Japanese American business associate, Masajiro Furuya,[6] for advice. Furuya referred Hill to Kazuyoshi Shibata, who was a student at Yale University. Shibata told Hill about Yamashita, and on July 21, 1903, Hill wrote a letter to Yamashita, asking him to come to Seattle at Hill's expense.[7] On August 26, 1903, Yamashita replied, writing that he, his wife, and one of his students (Saburo Kawaguchi) would leave for Seattle on September 22, 1903.[8]

The ship carrying the Yamashita party docked in Seattle on October 8, 1903.[9] A week later, on October 17, 1903, Yamashita and Kawaguchi gave a judo exhibition at a Seattle theater that Hill had rented for the evening. Attendance was by invitation only, and guests included Sam Hill's mother-in-law, Mary Hill (wife of railroader J.J. Hill), Senator Russell Alger, and assorted sportswriters.[10] Afterwards, Hill took the Yamashita party east to Washington, D.C., where Mrs. Hill and young James Nathan were then living. Meanwhile, the favorable publicity surrounding the event caused Japanese Americans living in Seattle to start their own judo club, known as the Seattle Dojo.

Soon after arriving in the District of Columbia, Yamashita visited the Japanese Legation, and in March 1904, the Japanese naval attaché, Commander Takeshita Isamu, took Yamashita to the White House to meet President Theodore Roosevelt.[11] Roosevelt practiced wrestling and boxing while in the White House, and he had received jujutsu jackets from William Sturgis Bigelow[12] and jujutsu lessons from J. J. O'Brien, a Philadelphia police officer who had studied jujutsu while living in Nagasaki.[13][14][15] Roosevelt was impressed with Yamashita's skill, and during March and April 1904, Yamashita gave judo lessons to the President and interested family and staff in a room at the White House.[16][17] Subsequently, at other locations, Yamashita and his wife Fude gave lessons to prominent American women, to include Martha Blow Wadsworth (sister of Kindergarten pioneer Susan Blow), Hallie Elkins (wife of Senator Stephen Benton Elkins), and Grace Davis Lee (Hallie Elkins' sister), and their children.[18]

In January 1905, Yamashita got a job teaching judo at the U.S. Naval Academy. There were about 25 students in his class, including a future admiral, Robert L. Ghormley.[19] The position ended at the end of the school term, and Yamashita was not rehired for the following year.[20] When President Roosevelt heard of this, he spoke to the Secretary of the Navy, who in turn told the Superintendent of the Naval Academy to rehire Yamashita.[21] Consequently, Yamashita's judo was taught at the Naval Academy throughout the first six months of 1906.[22]

[edit] Later life

At the end of the 1906 academic year, Yamashita left the United States for Japan.[23] On July 24, 1906, he participated in a conference in Kyoto that had been called for the purpose of standardizing judo forms (kata) that could be taught in Japanese public schools. Subsequently, he was employed as a judo teacher at Tokyo Higher Normal School (東京高等師範学校 Tōkyō Kōtō Shihan Gakkō?).[17] An example of Yamashita's teaching method is the advice:[24]

Always try to think of improvement, and don't think that you are too good. The latter is very easy to do while learning judo.

From the 1910s until the mid-1930s, Yamashita often attended judo tournaments and exhibitions.[25] His last major public appearance was probably the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the Kodokan, an event which took place in November 1934. British judoka Sarah Mayer described Yamashita's participation as follows:[26]

One of the Imperial Princes was present and the Emperor sent a present of money. A speech was read from the Prime Minister and the Minister of Education delivered a long oration. All the famous Judo men were there and there was a rather touching scene when Mr. Yamashita, the oldest pupil, came forward. He has lost his voice with advancing years and another man had to read his speech for him, but as he stood facing Prof. Kano I could not help thinking of the long years that these two men, now so old, had struggled to make Judo popular, and what a wonderful day it must be to them to have lived to see such an amazing achievement. Famous men demonstrated beautiful Kata when the speeches were over and Prof. Kano had dedicated three trees to his three teachers, and comic relief was provided by a match between me and Mr. Samura,[27] who was good enough to get the worst of it.

His ultimate promotion to 10th dan was posthumous.[27]

[edit] Video footage

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Tomita, Tsuneo. "Histoire du Judo," Revue Judo Kodokan, November 1962, v. 12:5.
  2. ^ Sol, Kim. "Part 8: Kodokan Becomes an Organization."[1]
  3. ^ Abel, Laszlo. "The Meiji Period Police Bujutsu Competitions: Judo versus Jujutsu," JMAS Newsletter, December 1984, v. 2:3, pp. 10-14.
  4. ^ Muromoto, Wayne. "Judo's Decisive Battle: Great Tournament between Kodokan Judo's Four Heavenly Lords and the Jujutsu Masters." Furyu, v. 3.[2]
  5. ^ Tuhy, John E. Sam Hill: The Prince of Castle Nowhere. Beaverton, Oregon: Timber Press, 1983, p. 71.
  6. ^ Gary Iwamoto, "Rise & Fall of an Empire", International Examiner, September 6, 2005.
  7. ^ Letter from Sam Hill to Y. Yamashita dated 21st Jul 1903, in Maryhill Museum of Art collection.
  8. ^ Letter from Y. Yamashita to Sam Hill dated 26th August, 1903, in Maryhill Museum of Art collection.
  9. ^ "List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the U.S. Immigration Officer at Port of Arrival," SS Shinano Maru, October 8, 1903, in National Archives and Record Administration microfilm roll M1383, "Passenger and Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at Seattle, Washington, 1890-1957," Roll 2 (Apr. 17, 1900, SS GOODWIN - Jan. 17, 1904, SS TOSA MARU).
  10. ^ Seattle Post-Intelligencer, October 25, 1903.
  11. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore. Theodore Roosevelt's Letters to His Children, Joseph Bucklin Bishop, ed. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1919, pp. 113-114.
  12. ^ Brousse, Michel and David Matsumoto. Judo in the U.S.: A Century of Dedication. Berkeley, California: North Atlantic Books, 2005, pp. 23-24.
  13. ^ New York World, October 26, 1902.
  14. ^ Anonymous. "Training the Helpless Flapper to Fight Her Own Battles," Literary Digest, August 27, 1927, p. 47.
  15. ^ Earns, Lane. "Nagasaki Kyoruchi no Seiyojin (Westerners of the Nagasaki Foreign Settlement)".[3]
  16. ^ New York Sun, April 17, 1904.
  17. ^ a b Svinth, Joseph R. "Professor Yamashita Goes to Washington."[4]
  18. ^ "Jiu-Jitsu for Women," Sandow's Magazine, December 7, 1905, with annotations by Joseph R. Svinth.[5] Despite what one sometimes reads,[6] Grace Davis Lee was not related to General Robert E. Lee.
  19. ^ Army and Navy Journal, March 25, 1905.
  20. ^ Sweetman, Jack. The U.S. Naval Academy: An Illustrated History, 2d edition, revised by Thomas J. Cutler. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Academy Press, 1995, p. 269.
  21. ^ Memorandum from Charles J. Bonaparte, Secretary of the Navy, to Chief, Bureau of Navigation, dated November 3, 1905, in US Naval Academy archives.
  22. ^ Letter from Superintendent of Naval Academy to Chief of Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, dated May 4, 1906, in US Naval Academy Archives.
  23. ^ Letter from Imperial Japanese Embassy to the Bureau of Navigation, The Navy Department, dated December 19, 1906, in US Naval Academy archives.
  24. ^ "Do's and Don'ts in Learning Judo by Yoshiaki Yamashita," JudoInfo.com.[7]
  25. ^ For a description of such an event in Kobe in 1925, see Frank O'Neill, "The Brown Man in the Field of Sports," The Ring, November 1925, p. 19.
  26. ^ Letter from Sarah Mayer to Gunji Koizumi dated November 27, 1934.[8][9]
  27. ^ a b Ohlenkamp, Neil. "Profiles of Kodokan 10th Dan Holders." judoinfo.com. Last modified January 7, 2006. Retrieved on April 10, 2007.


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