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Thomas
Blake Glover
1838-1911
In
his native Northeast of Scotland Thomas Blake Glover is virtually
unknown, however in his adopted country of Japan he is revered
as a national hero - one of the founding fathers of modern Japan.
Thomas
Blake Glover was born at 15 Commerce Street, Fraserburgh on
June 6, 1838 and lived at the same address for the next six
years. His father, an Englishman, had served as an officer in
the Royal Navy, later becoming the Chief Coastguard in Fraserburgh,
the Coastguard house stood just around the corner from the cottage
in Commerce Street. Glover's mother was a Scot through-and-through,
she was from Fordyce in Banffshire.
In
1851 the family moved to Bridge of Don, Aberdeen but Glover
would soon move again. After leaving school he began working
for a trading company and travelled the world. He was successful
as a merchant trading in ships and weapons in Japan during the
1860's, at that time a politically unstable and violent corner
of the world. He settled in Nagasaki, his house was built in
1863 and remains the oldest western style building in Japan.
The battleship Mikasa in dock. Like much of the Japanese navy
by the end of the 19th century she had been built in Britain.
Glover became a prominent individual and helped the samurai
to topple their military leader, the Shogun, restoring the Emperor
to his throne. At this time he helped in the industrialisation
of Japan.
He was responsible for commissioning three warships for the
Japanese navy from Aberdeen shipyards, subsequently he established
his own shipbuilding company which later grew into the industrial
giant Mitsubishi. He was responsible for introducing the first
railway locomotive into Japan as well as establishing the country's
first mechanised coal mine. He also organised the education
of many young Japanese abroad, mostly in Britain.
Glover
married a woman called Tsura, the daughter of a samurai, who
many believe was the inspiration for Puccini's opera - Madame
Butterfly, since she habitually wore the emblem of a butterfly
on her clothes.
Glover
was not only the first to introduce much western technology
to Japan but was also the first non-Japanese to be presented
with the Order of the Rising Sun - one of the country's top
honours. He died in 1911, aged 73.
Glover's
house in Nagasaki is now the centrepiece of "Glover Garden",
Western Japan's top tourist attraction with almost 2 million
visitors each year. The site of Glover's birth has not fared
so well. During the Second World War the Luftwaffe scored a
direct hit on 15 Commerce Street - the site to this day remains
empty, although plans have been put forward to rebuilt the cottage
at a cost of £375,000 and turning it into a tourist attraction.
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