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Okla-homey
7/8/2009, 06:31 AM
July 8, 1853 Commodore Perry sails into Tokyo Bay

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156 years ago on this day in 1853, Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry, representing the U.S. government, sailed into Tokyo Bay, Japan, with a squadron of four US warships. For a time, Japanese officials refused to speak with Perry and attempted to ignore the Americans, but under threat of attack by the powerful American ships they accepted letters from President Millard Fillmore, making the United States the first Western nation to establish relations with Japan since it had been declared closed to foreigners two centuries before.

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Millard Fillmore (January 7, 1800 – March 8, 1874) was the thirteenth President of the United States, serving from 1850 until 1853, and the last member of the Whig Party to hold that office. He was the second Vice President to assume the Presidency upon the death of a sitting President, succeeding Zachary Taylor who died of what is thought to be acute gastroenteritis or hyperthermia (heat stroke). Fillmore was never elected President; after serving out Taylor's term, he failed to gain the nomination for the Presidency of the Whigs in the 1852 presidential election, and, four years later, in the 1856 presidential election, he again failed to win election as the Know Nothing Party and Whig candidate.

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Matthew Perry, Father of the American Steam Navy

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USS Mississippi, Perry's flagship.

Prior to Perry's expedition, only the Dutch and the Chinese had been allowed to continue trade with Japan after 1639, but this trade was restricted and confined to the island of Dejima at Nagasaki.

After giving Japan about nine months to consider the establishment of external relations, Commodore Perry returned to Tokyo with nine ships in March 1854. On March 31, he signed the Treaty of Kanagawa with the Japanese government, opening the ports of Shimoda and Hakodate to American trade and permitting the establishment of a U.S. consulate in Japan.

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Ugly American or "Turning Japanese"? Perry as he appeared to the Japanese.

Approximately six years after opening itself to US presence and trade and on the eve of the American Civil War, the first Japanese diplomats to visit a foreign power in over 200 years reached Washington, D.C. in April 1860, and remained in the U.S. capital for several weeks, discussing expansion of trade with the United States. Treaties with other Western powers followed soon after, contributing to the collapse of the shogunate and ultimately the modernization of Japan -- a fact which would be largely regretted in America on December 7th, 1941.

In less than 50 years following Perry's visit, Japan will have shrugged off its quaint yet medieval culture and replaced it with a more western-style, industrial society capable of fielding a huge and powerful army and air force and putting a mighty modern fleet to sea. It all began with an American naval officer's ultimatum.
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TUSooner
7/8/2009, 07:52 AM
In less than 50 years following Perry's visit, Japan will have shrugged off its quaint yet medieval culture and replaced it with a more western-style, industrial society capable of fielding a huge and powerful army and air force and putting a mighty modern fleet to sea. It all began with an American naval officer's ultimatum.

Is that an argument for US isolationism ?! ;)

walkoffsooner
7/8/2009, 08:05 AM
Does he work for Harley

King Crimson
7/8/2009, 08:46 AM
In less than 50 years following Perry's visit, Japan will have shrugged off its quaint yet medieval culture and replaced it with a more western-style, industrial society capable of fielding a huge and powerful army and air force and putting a mighty modern fleet to sea. It all began with an American

highly questionable, overly tidy statement IMO that sounds more like manifest destiny type thinking than a critical history.

WWII Japan may have been industrialized but it's social structure was (and i'll play nice here) not exactly one characterized by an emergent merchant class or entrepreneurship and/or social mobility. the medieval social relations and aristocracy (they DID have an emperor) were fairly intact. class mobility was a not a key feature. the big machines exist in a social context, they don't emerge fully formed from the head of Athena.

OklahomaTuba
7/8/2009, 09:08 AM
http://img228.echo.cx/img228/8205/perrytwoviews5xt.jpg
http://www.thewizofodds.com/.a/6a00e553e551d18834010536a5418c970b-500wi

Hmm...

yermom
7/8/2009, 09:37 AM
i guess that was kinda pirate like...

soonerscuba
7/8/2009, 09:47 AM
Gaijin Smash.

OklahomaTuba
7/8/2009, 09:47 AM
What's more interesting is what is happening in Japan in the last 20 years or so.

They have some pretty scary demographics over there. And their 20 year on again/off again economic stagflation is really starting to show. Some parts of Tokyo just look like hell these days.

badger
7/8/2009, 09:55 AM
"Buy American or Die"

Translation to modern terms...

:les:"CAKE OR DEATH!" [hairGel]

:D

The Remnant
7/8/2009, 10:09 AM
Then a century later another American writes their constitution.

OklahomaTuba
7/8/2009, 10:49 AM
And then came SPAM.

Seriously, they love the **** there, and I have no f'king idea why.

yermom
7/8/2009, 10:52 AM
Hawai'i too

OklahomaTuba
7/8/2009, 11:11 AM
Must be the poisons in the Pacific Ocean rotting people's brains and tastebuds away.

Infact, that would probably explain a lot actually.