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A lithograph in the Narrative depicting
a Buddhist funeral procession in Shimoda...
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...has
a counterpart in a Japanese sketch of the American funeral
procession for marine private
Robert Williams, who died of illness during Perry’s second
visit.
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So great was the impression left
by the death of Private Williams that the famous “Black
Ship Scroll” painted in Shimoda in 1854 included a drawing
of the inscription on his tombstone.
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In all, four Americans with the
Perry mission died and were buried in Japan. One of
Heine’s most
evocative illustrations depicts Americans
and Japanese at a burial ceremony in a hillside cemetery in Shimoda.
The American fleet is visible at anchor in the harbor.
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A rare 1855 daguerreotype captured
the four American graves in Shimoda (still there today). The
photograph—evocative in its own way—highlights the
romanticism of Heine’s vision.
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Death,
as it happened, became an occasion for unanticipated expressions of
mutual respect.
When several of Perry’s
crew died while in Japan, the Japanese not only agreed to allow the
deceased to be buried on Japanese soil, but also had Buddhist priests
participate in the funeral service. The respect the Americans
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showed to
the dead clearly helped weaken the Japanese stereotypes of Americans as
“southern barbarians” and “foreign devils.” At the same time,
the American tolerance of Buddhist participation in the rites of interment
offers a striking contrast to more invidious popular evocations of the
Japanese as “heathen.”
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William Heine: Japanese funeral in Shimoda and 1854 rendering of the harbor
at Shimoda “from the American Grave Yard” (detail) from the
official Narrative. Funeral procession of Private Williams, by Tohohata (Osuke), 1854 Shiryo Hensanjo, University of Tokyo. Inscription from Robert Williams’s gravestone in the 1854 “Black Ship Scroll,” Honolulu Academy of Art. Four American gravestones in the cemetery of Gyokusenji temple in Shimoda, daguerreotype attributed to Edward Kern, ca. 1855, George Eastman House. On viewing images from the historical record: click here. Black Ships & Samurai © 2008 Massachusetts Institute of Technology A project of professors John W. Dower & Shigeru Miyagawa Design and production by Ellen Sebring, Scott Shunk, and Andrew Burstein |