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January 22nd, 2009
The third issue of the newsletter, Fall 1989, introduced its distinctive title of Gates Ajar. It comes from page 98 of MacDonald’s autobiography where he wrote: “… I came thus to play my humble part in the drama of ‘Gates Ajar,’ of west and east, in the world of the Pacific.” Below are listed memorable activities as reported in the newsletters.
1989 – 1990
– FOM held a seminar in Portland. Principal speaker was Jean Murray Cole, Canadian author and editor and also the great-great granddaughter and biographer of Ranald’s father, Archibald McDonald. Sharing the podium was David Hansen, curator at Fort Vancouver Historic Monument.
– Vice-chairman Stephen Kohl reported on his year in Japan during which he visited with Japanese FOM members in Tokyo, Nagasaki, and Rishiri.
– A four page bibliography of Ranald MacDonald materials in English was published.
1991
– A second edition of MacDonald’s autobiography was published by Oregon Historical Society Press with a grant from Epson Portland Inc. It featured an introduction by Donald Sterling and an epilogue by Jean Murray Cole.
– Gift copies of MacDonald’s autobiography were sent to 110 major libraries in U.S., Canada, and Japan.
1992 – 1993
– Members participated in bicentennial of Capt. Robert Gray’s discovery of the Columbia River by sponsoring Pacific Rim friendship awards.
– Bruce and Mark Berney visited MacDonald places, making valuable contacts in Lahaina, Tokyo, Nagasaki, Sapporo, and Rishiri Island.
– Mas Tomita reported on his trip to Toroda to see Ranald’s grave.
1994
– FOM co-sponsored with Oregon Historical Society a chartered bus trip from Portland to Spokane and Republic, WA to attend a ceremony at Ranald’s grave to mark the centennial of his death. Many letters of greetings were read, such as from Washington Gov. Mike Lowry, Hokkaido Prefecture Gov. Yokomichi, and Consul General Masaki Saito. OHS head Chet Orloff gave a talk, and bagpipes played for the assembled crowd from the Ferry County Historical Society of Republic, WA. Author Frederik Schodt of San Francisco was aboard, planning a book on MacDonald. At Spokane, Ed Tsutakawa (d. 2006) gave us a tour of the Ranald MacDonald Building at Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute.
– Hosted a film crew from TV / Nagasaki which was making a documentary on Ranald’s life.
– Hosted five FOM Japan members at dinners in Astoria and Vancouver, and Yuji Aisaka who visited later. They told of the unveiling of the Ranald MacDonald monument at Nagasaki.
– Mas Tomita represented FOM at the rededication of the Sea Drifters (Sankichi) Monument at Fort Vancouver.
1995
– Traditions begun: birthday luncheon in Astoria, followed by placing a floral tribute at birthplace monument.
– Statue of Ilchee, Ranald’s aunt, erected by City of Vancouver, Washington.
– Mas Tomita attended US-Japan Friendship exchanges held by the Cascade Council of Boy Scouts and the Hyogo Scout Council, Boy Scouts of Nippon at the Japanese Sea Drifters (Sankichi) Monument at Fort Vancouver and visits the Ilchee statue.
1996
– FOM grieved for the loss of our leader, Mas Tomita, who died in July 1996 of congenital hepatitis.
– Charter member Steve Kohl became chairman.
1997
– Jo Ann Roe’s book Ranald MacDonald: Pacific Rim Adventurer was published by Washington State University Press. She was an FOM charter member who attended the monument dedication. The book is particularly good with Canadian sources.
1998
– Charter member Jim Mockford, former high school Japanese language teacher, became chairman. A maritime historian, Jim is also active in the group which preserves the tall ship Lady Washington. On June 27 he led an FOM group reenactment on the Lady Washington of Ranald’s leaving his whaling ship to become a castaway. Jim also became editor of Gates Ajar.
– 150th anniversary tour of MacDonald’s teaching in Japan, Sept. 10 to 23. Ken Nakano, (Seattle) guided four other FOM members (Fred Schodt, San Francisco; Atsumi Tsukimori McCauley, Spokane; Massie Tomita and May Tomba, Seattle) to Tokyo, Sapporo, Rishiri, Matsumae, Mihama, and Nagasaki.
1999
– Canadian author Peter Oliva won a prestigious literary award for his novel City of Yes (McClellan & Stewart, Toronto) which recounts MacDonald’s experience.
2000
– FOM members, especially Atsumi Tsukimori McCauley, participated in the erection of an interpretive sign at Ranald MacDonald’s Grave State Park, 18 miles northwest of Curlew Lake.
– Vancouver Volkssporters named a volkswalk for Ranald MacDonald.
2001
– Ferry County had a Ranald MacDonald Day. A seminar included Eiji Nishiya, curator of Rishiri museum; Jean Murray Cole, Atsumi Tsukimori, and Fred Schodt. The day continued with a picnic, parade, barbecue, and a country western dance.
2002
– Jim Mockford created an FOM display at Multnomah County Library, Portland OR, and at the public library in Battleground, Washington.
2003
– FOM Japan member Yuji Aisaka went to Australia and uncovered information about Ranald’s boxing prowess.
– Jim Mockford presented a lecture about Ranald MacDonald at Joyo City, Japan, sister city of Vancouver, Washington.
– Frederik L. Schodt’s book Native American in the Land of the Shogun was published by Stone Bridge Press (The dust cover features MacDonald’s face as found on his monument in Nagasaki).
2004
– OHS hosted Ranald’s 180th anniversary with a seminar featuring Prof. Yumiko Kawamoto, lecturer at Waseda University, and Frederik Schodt.
– Gifts of books, 100 copies of Jo Ann Roe’s and 100 copies of Fred Schodt’s, were sent to libraries throughout the U.S., Canada, and Pacific islands. (See Winter 2007 Gates Ajar for complete list.)
2005
– Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission selected Ranald’s (OHS) autobiography for inclusion in Oregon State Library’s centennial “100 best history books.”
2006
– Consul General of Japan in Portland & Mrs. Akio Egawa visited Astoria for Ranald’s 182nd birthday celebration.
– “Who Is Ranald MacDonald” seminar held in Honolulu. Panelists included Dr. Kawamoto, Schodt, and Honolulu historian Dwight Damon.
– Tokyo Broadcasting’s “Discover the World’s Mysteries” (Sekai Fushigi Hakken) filmed Ranald’s story in Astoria and was seen by millions of viewers.
– Consulate General of Japan in Seattle sponsored Jim Mockford’s lectures about
Ranald MacDonald at the 30th Annual Seattle Cherry Blossom and Japanese
Cultural Festival.
2007
– The Economist, with a circulation of 1.3 million, featured an article about Ranald on Dec. 19. (See Winter 2008 Gates Ajar.)
2008
– Charter member Masaru “Mas” Yatabe, vice-president of the Azumano Group in Portland, was appointed to be new chairman of FOM.
– Atsumi Tsukimori published a bilingual story of MacDonald for children, Unsung Hero, featuring illustrations by Mariko King.
– Ranald MacDonald enthusiasts from Holland circumnavigated the world. Fred Dijs and Josje-Marie Vrolijk visited sites in Long Island NY, Toroda, Astoria, Vancouver, Rishiri, Nagasaki, etc.
2009
– Mas Yatabe visited Nagasaki to see MacDonald sites and meet FOM Japan leaders, including Dr. Obama.
– Fred Schodt received Japan’s “Order of the Rising Sun” award.
2010
– 200 Unsung Hero books were sent to eighty elementary schools in Nagasaki.
– Mas Yatabe visited Rishiri Island.
– Mas Yatabe helped create the FOM website.
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October 6th, 1998
150th Anniversary of MacDonald’s Trip to Japan Celebrated in 1998 — FOM Members Tour Japan in September
1998 has been an active year for Friends of MacDonald and one that was full of events including Ranald MacDonald’s birthday luncheon held in Astoria on February 3rd., an educational outreach at the Japan-America Society of Oregon’s “Glimpse of Japan Workshop” in May, a sailing adventure and historical reenactment on board Lady Washington in June, and a members’ tour of Japan in September.
These highlights – among a calendar of conferences, lecture programs and book presentations – provide more news than can be fully told in this newsletter. So we hope that readers will come to FOM events planned for 1999 and take part of the 150th Anniversary year of Ranald MacDonald’s stay in Japan.
In September a delegation of five FOM USA members set foot on Rishiri Island to view the place where Ranald MacDonald set foot in Japan as an intentional castaway in 1848. The tour was organized by Mr. Ken Nakano who led the 1998 adventure from Hokkaido to Nagasaki in the footsteps of MacDonald.
Participants included: Atsumi Tsukimori of Spokane, Fred Schodt of San Francisco, Massie Tomita and May Namba of Seattle, and FOM tour adviser and tour leader Ken Nakano. FOM is especially grateful to Ken for his efforts at organizing a most successful trip to Japan.
FOM is also deeply grateful for the warm welcome our members received from so many friends during their tour of Japan. For a first-hand account of the trip see the story by Atsumi Tsukimori inside this newsletter.
*****
MacDonald’s Castaway Arrival Reenacted on Board Lady Washington on 150th Anniversary
On June 27th, 1848, as the whaling ship Plymouth lay off the coast of Hokkaido, Japan, a young adventurer named Ranald MacDonald launched a small boat from the ship and sailed toward Japan. He intended to arrive as a castaway in order to enter a feudal kingdom where no foreigners were allowed and foreign trade was outlawed by the Tokugawa Shogun. But MacDonald was convinced that the Japanese people would welcome him and so he equipped his boat “Little Plymouth” with provisions for thirty days and carried books for purpose of teaching the Japanese about the world from which he came. . . 150 years later, on June 27, 1998, the scene was reenacted for members of FOM and passengers on the Lady Washington during the Saturday afternoon sail on Gray’s Harbor from Westport, Washington. Young Ranald MacDonald was portrayed by Captain Les Bolton, Executive Director of Grays Harbor Historical Seaport. Dressed in 19th century sea-faring attire, the bold adventurer climbed into the small boat “Little Plymouth” and rowed off for “Japan”. Then he rocked his boat and took on water so as to appear as a castaway as MacDonald actually did 150 years ago.
Departing from historical accuracy at the end of the day, Captain Bolton rejoined the ship to greet guests such as Consul Rikio Minamiyama and family from the Consulate General of Japan Seattle Office, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Berney from Astoria and Friends of MacDonald Chairman Jim Mockford with Cheryl and Jenny Mockford, too. A full charter of ship passengers joined in on the fun.
*****
JASO Glimpse of Japan Workshop
On May 1, 1998 the Japan America Society of Oregon (JASO) organized its Glimpse of Japan Workshop at the World Trade Center in Portland. FOM Chairman Jim Mockford presented “The Adventures of Ranald MacDonald” as one of the many workshops that students and teachers attended during the day. Because a large number of participants were Japanese language students, the presentation included an exploration of Ranald MacDonald’s study of Japanese. FOM has a copy of Kenji Sonoda’s publication , “Ranald MacDonald’s Glossary of English and Japanese Words” which was utilized as a resource for the Glimpse of Japan Workshop.
The annual event is attended by hundreds of students in the Portland area. Friends of MacDonald founder Mas Tomita enjoyed presenting the story of Ranald MacDonald at this event in 1994 and FOM was delighted to continue to participate in this informative and important educational program.
*****
ASPAC Conference
“Bridges: Early Ties Between Japan and the United States” was the title of a panel presentation by FOM members at the ASPAC ’98 Conference held at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington in June 1988. ASPAC is the Asian Studies on the Pacific Coast chapter of the Association of Asian Studies and the FOM panel was chaired by Dr. Stephan Kohl, Professor of Japanese Literature at the University of Oregon. FOM Chairman Jim Mockford discussed his paper, “Maritime Explorations of the Coast of Japan”, and was followed by Peter Morris who presented “MacDonald, The Intentional Castaway”. Dr. Kohl described the story of Japanese castaways whose adventure took place in 1815.
*****
NASOH Conference, Vancouver Heritage Lecture,
WSU-Nishinomiya Japanese Educators Program
The North American Society for Oceanic History (NASOH) invited FOM Chairman Jim Mockford to present his paper “Maritime Exploration of the Coast of Japan in the Late 18th Century” at the NASOH ’98 Conference held at the San Diego Maritime Museum in April. Mockford’s lecture was adapted to include the story of Ranald MacDonald’s Adventure in Japan. A presentation copy of Ranald MacDonald’s biography was presented to the Naval Historical Center. In September Mockford gave a lecture to the Vancouver heritage Program at the historic Marshall House on Officer’s Row, Vancouver, Washington. MacDonald was one of the first six students at the Fort Vancouver school in 1834.
In October Washington State University-Vancouver Branch Campus hosted educators from Nishinomiya, Japan. Mockford told Ranald MacDonald’s story in Japanese and accompanied the teachers to Fort Vancouver where they visited the Japanese castaway’s monument and toured the site where young Ranald MacDonald attended school. Only two months after MacDonald left for Canada in the spring of 1834 the three Japanese castaways arrived at the fort and attended school. It is said that their story influenced Ranald MacDonald to become a castaway in Japan.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
ATSUMI’S JAPAN TRIP REPORT~Participating in the Ranald MacDonald 150th Anniversary Tour
Ever since I read an article about “Explorer’s Smile Led to Japan Trade” in the local newspapers about five years ago, I was charmed by Ranald MacDonald. I visited Toroda, Washington right away (MacDonald’s grave site) and I have dreamed about a possible trip to see the historical sites which mark his legacy. This September, the dream came true.
This September I was lucky enough to be included in the 150th Anniversary trip to Japan organized by Ken Nakano and completed the two-week visit with wonderful memories and great satisfaction. Traveling from the northern tip of Hokkaido where Ranald MacDonald first landed to the southern tip of Kyushu where he spent most of his time teaching English was not an easy task. There was one ferry boat ride, one local airplane flight, many bullet train rides, not to mention two underground tunnels. It was a miracle to accomplish so much in so little time – despite the Northwest Airlines strike! I want to thank Ken Nakano for organizing and working hard through the entire trip.
There were four heart-warming meetings with Japan’s MacDonald Society in Sapporo, Rishiri, Tokyo and Nagasaki, and three other just as wonderful meetings including one organized by the Japan-America Society of Hakodate, one in Matsumae with Matsumae towns people, and another in the town of Mihama, Aichi, where the Japanese castaway Otokichi is remembered today. Our group of five, Ken Nakano and Massie Tomita, May Namba, Fred Schodt, and myself, felt as though we had known our Japanese hosts our whole lives.
We visited the actual landing site at Rishiri Island and then saw the town of Era in Matsumae where Ranald MacDonald spent 22 days before he was shipped to Nagasaki. Then we went to Nagasaki to see the spot where he lived for seven months and taught English. We also visited Ranald MacDonald’s original student Moriyama’s grave in Nagasaki. There are two other of Moriyama’s graves in Tokyo – one is “owned” by Moriyama’s son from his second marriage and this one now keeps Moriyama’s bones; the other is “owned” by Moriyama’s daughter from his first marriage. We visited all three and dedicated flowers. In Tokyo we paid a courtesy visit to the American Ambassador to Japan, The Hon. Tom Foley, and the Canadian Embassy. Then we attended a meeting with Tokyo Friends of MacDonald group including Torao Tomita and Akira Yoshimura.
In those two weeks in September I went to so many places and met so many wonderful people. O learned a lot about true friendship and I cried a lot when I departed from each place. I thank all the people I met who also love Ranald MacDonald, and Ken Nakano who made this dream trip come true. ~ Atsumi Tsukimori McCauley
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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March 20th, 1998
150th ANNIVERSARY RANALD MacDONALD TOUR OF JAPAN
Friends of MacDonald in Japan are organizing to host an unforgettable tour of Japan to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Ranald’s arrival in 1848. Unlike commercial travel packages, this event avoids luxury hotels and full-course dining. We can only promise that you’ll see more than MacDonald did in his travels in Japan, and know that the friendly faces you meet will keep their heads. FOM member Ken Nakano had built the following two-week itinerary which accommodates you if one week is all the time you can allow.
9/10 Leave Seattle on NWA. Cross International Dateline.
9/11 Fly from Kansai Airport on ANA to Sapporo
9/12 Free day in Sapporo to pamper your jet lag.
9/13 Sapporo bus tour. Party with local FOM members. All night train ride (sleeper available at additional cost) to Wakkanai (NW tip of Hokkaido).
9/14 Boat trip from Wakkanai to Rishiri Island, where MacDonald first made contact with Japanese people. Tour the island and party with local FOM group.
9/15 Return to Sapporo by boat and train.
9/16 1-week option travelers return to Seattle; 2-week travelers take train to Hakodate.
9/17 Ride bus or rental car for trip to Matsumae where MacDonald was kept for several weeks. Return to Hakodate.
9/18 Take train to Tokyo. Party with local FOM group.
9/19 Free morning. See Moriyama’s gravestone. If lucky, meet briefly with Ambassador Tom Foley. Stay second night in Tokyo.
9/20 Short train trip to Mihama, home port of the three Kichi sailors who were rescued by Hudson’s Bay Company and learned English at Ft. Vancouver. Spend night in Japanese style inn.
9/21 Take train to Nagasaki. Party with local FOM group.
9/22 Tour Nagasaki and stay second night.
9/23 Take train to Kansai airport and return to Seattle. Those who wish may stay in Japan longer and return by themselves.
HIGHLIGHTS:
~ Parties with local FOM groups. If you’ve never been a VIP before, here’s your chance!
~ Sapporo is sister-city with Portland, OR. It is Rishiri Island’s “county seat”.
~ Rishiri Island is a jewel. Two fishing villages share their pride in MacDonald’s story. You’ll see an impressive stone monument near Ranald’s landing place, and displays in the local museum, whose director, Eiji Nishiya, edits an FOM newsletter in Japan.
~ Matsumae; another fishing village. If you don’t see it now, chances are slim that you ever will, for, like Rishiri Island, it is off the beaten path.
~ Tokyo. Seeing the gravestone of Ranald’s favorite student, Moriyama, is a thrill. The hoped-for greetings from Ambassador Foley is an important symbolic event. Thanks to our Spokane members for the idea!
~ Mihama is well-known to our tour-organizer, Ken Nakano. He has worked closely with them in his projects of placing the monument to the three Kichi’s as Ft. Vancouver and establishing a relationship with the Washington cost Indians.
~ Nagasaki, where Ranald taught English, is well aware of his story. The original documents are in the Prefectural Library. The Nagasaki South Rotary Club recently erected a monument on the street in front of the house where Ranald’s hermitage was. You will see it.
As for cost, Ken says this is a low-budget tour. Round trip air to Japan is about $800. Utilize Japanese rail pass. Stay in business hotels near rail stations for $60 to $80 per day, avoid expensive Japanese meals. It is too soon to know the fare for air travel within Japan because of fluctuating exchange rates.
At present we think the group will be an intimate seven to twelve people. If you are the least bit interested in going, please contact Ken Nakano for more details. He will tell you when and how to register.
*****
AKIRA YOSHIMURA
Of authors who write historical fiction, James Michener may be the first to come to mind. Ask a reader of Japanese, and Akira Yoshimura may be ichiban. About a dozen years ago Yoshimura wrote a novel, Umi no Sairei (Festival of the Sea) based on the life of Ranald MacDonald. It was in a magazine that FOM co-founder Mas Tomita read a serialized version which inspired Tomita’s interest in Ranald. It refers to MacDonald’s birthplace correctly as Ft. George. Mas Tomita had no idea that Ft. George was another name for Ft. Astoria until Bruce Berney asked the Japanese businessman’s organization, Shokookai of Portland, to pay half the cost of the birthplace monument. not only did Tomita give support to the project, he telephoned Berney to say, “Let’s start a Friends of MacDonald organization.”
Now, you’ll be glad to learn that former FOM chairman, Dr. Stephen Kohl who teaches Japanese language and literature at the University of Oregon, has agreed with Yoshimura to translate Umi no Sairei. Some of us non-kanji readers are very eager for its publication.
A letter from our Kyoto correspondent, Yuji Aisaka, reports that Yoshimura has an article on MacDonald in the February 1998 issue of Captain [ カペタン ].
*****
MEMBERSHIP REPORT
Unpaid former members names have been purged from our database. Instead of 150 members – which we once claimed – we now can boast of about forty [many include spouses]. From Oregon, there are about 20; Washington, 14; and one each from Canada, Japan, Michigan, Georgia, California, and Indiana. Strangely, none are named MacDonald.
We need you, our members, to help recruit new members — others who are interested in Japanese friendship activities. Please ask for new membership packets (pamphlet, return envelope, a newsletter back copy, and two post cards). Write to Friends of MacDonald, c/o Clatsop County Historical Society, 1618 Exchange Street, Astoria, OR 97103.
*****
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Fifteen Clatsop County FOM members and friends met for lunch at Golden Star Chinese restaurant in Astoria on MacDonald’s birthday, February 3rd. Sharing the Happy Birthday song with Ranald, Bruce Berney was served a ball of sticky rice topped with a birthday candle. FOM secretary Mike Seaman spoke about his year as a student of Waseda University in the 1970’s and his former job of property manager for several Japanese corporations in Los Angeles. He now is commercial properties specialist for AREA Properties real estate firm in Astoria. Following lunch, they reconvened at the Birthplace Monument to leave floral offerings.
*****
WASHINGTON SECRETARY OF STATE
In September we received a letter from Washington Secretary of State Ralph Munro stating: “I do want you to know that we are actively pursuing the preservation of the cabin where Ranald MacDonald spent the closing days of his life. As you may know, it is located across the valley from the grave site in Northeastern Washington State. Our historic preservation people and our heritage resources people are now collaborating as to how we can best preserve this cabin. Although the building is pretty far gone, I believe we will be able to put together a program that will gain the support of the legislature.”
We wrote a letter of support, but as yet have not heard of any outcome. Washington members may wish to inquire. Munro’s phone number is 360-902-4151; his address is PO Box 40220, Olympia, WA 98504-0220.
*****
BOOK REVEALS STORY OF NORTHWEST ADVENTURER
Such was the headline of the review of Jo Ann Roe’s new book about Ranald MacDonald as featured in North American Post, the Seattle Japanese/English newspaper. its editor, Kamilla Kuroda McClellend attended the September FOM membership meeting at Portland where Jo Ann Roe was presented a framed copy of the cover of the book Ranald MacDonald: Pacific Rim Adventurer by Washington State University Press publicist Beth DeWeese. Jo Ann Roe reports the book is selling well. It is reviewed in the Fall 1997 issue of Oregon Historical Society Quarterly, pages 375-377. It notes that the author is a member of Friends of MacDonald. The book and the review together give our organization long-lasting, valuable publicity.
*****
HISTORICAL SOCIETY HONORS BERNEY
Clatsop County Historical Society presented a framed expression of esteem to Bruce Berney at its annual membership luncheon in January at Astoria Country Club. The Daily Astorian reported that : “Jeff Smith, executive director of the society said the award marked Berney’s work as a librarian, his efforts on historic preservation and his service on the society’s Friends of Ranald MacDonald committee, which promotes international understanding.”
*****
JIM MOCKFORD IS NEW FOM CHAIRMAN
Members attending the meeting in September selected Bruce Berney, chairman; Michael Seaman, secretary; and Barbara Peeples, publicist/recruitment. Unfortunately, two months later Bruce suffered sudden hearing loss. Unable to use the telephone, re resigned as chairman, but volunteered to continue being active as FOM archivist and membership clerk. Jim Mockford has agreed to be chairman during this meaningful 150th anniversary year. Formerly Japanese language teacher at Camas High School, he now is a Japanese affairs consultant working with high technology businesses. He and Mas Tomita were good friends and worked closely on many projects.
*****
>.>.>.>.> CHAIRMAN’S CORNER <.<.<.<.<
It was on June 27, 1848, as the whaling ship PLYMOUTH lay off the coast of Hokkaido, about five miles away from the nearest island, that Captain Edwards received the request from Ranald MacDonald to leave the ship. The had prepared for this adventure by rigging a small boat for sailing and stowing in it provisions for about thirty days: a quadrant for observations, a box of books, stationary, and a few clothes. Then into the launch stepped young Ranald, and while the crew shouted “God bless you Mac,” he dipped a small white flag in salute to the Stars and Stripes and parted ways from his friends for Japan.
This summer, on Saturday, June 27, exactly 150 years from the date that MacDonald’s adventure began, I would like to invite FOM members and friends to join in a reenactment of this historic passage on board the brig LADY WASHINGTON during its interbay sailing from Aberdeen to Westport, Washington. As the new chairman of FOM and a member of the Advisory Council of Grays Harbor Historic Seaport, I propose a cooperative project between these two historical societies with important ties to maritime history and early US-Japan relations. Further information will be forthcoming as we get closer to the date of our commemorative launching of MacDonald’s boat and salute to Ranald’s “Japan story of adventure!” To make an early reservation on the passenger list for the June 27 sailing, contact the Gray’s Harbor Historic Seaport office at 1-800-532-LADY.
~~ Jim Mockford, FOM Chairman
*****
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January 5th, 1997
___________________________________________________________________
***** THE PASSING OF A GREAT FRIEND *****
Masakatsu Tomita Remembered
Friends of MacDonald lost their best friend in July of 1996 when Masakatsu Tomita, Chairman of the Friends of MacDonald, died of lymphoma while still in his mid-forties.
Mas was a remarkable, complex individual; a far-sighted visionary with great intellect, an effective business executive, and also a man of uncommon sensitivity to people and place.
The enthusiasm which Mas devoted to Friends of MacDonald (he once said he intended to make the study of Ranald MacDonald his “life work”) led this tiny organization to accomplish a great deal within a few years.
Mas’s admiration for MacDonald, the thoughtful adventurer, seemed boundless; philosophically they were probably much akin. Mas first read of Ranald in a Japanese magazine article. References in it to “Ft. George” misled Mas, who did not realize that Astoria was once called Fort George. Some months later, a request for funds for a MacDonald monument in Astoria was discussed in a Japanese group to which Mas belonged.
Mas was swift to become involved in the project. He soon was named chairman of FOM and turned his tremendous energy to it.
(Meanwhile, Mas was also providing vigorous leadership to building Epson Portland Inc., the printer and computer plant which he brought to Oregon. It was Seiko Epson’s first such plant in the Americas. Mas fell in love with Oregon at first site – but he said later that it took him “two and a half years, seven trips to Portland” before ground was finally broken in the Sunset Corridor in 1985. Mas’s death came a decade to the day after the first printer rolled off Epson assembly lines in July, 1986.)
During his tenure as FOM chairman, FOM’s program included building an archive of MacDonald-related documents in English and Japanese; developing a bibliography of materials related to MacDonald and his era; participating in the erection of monuments in the U.S. and Japan; sponsoring seminars featuring notable speakers; providing support (which included a sizable donation from EPI) for the reprinting of Ranald’s Narrative by the Oregon historical Society; publishing a scholarly translation of MacDonald’s Glossary; producing a taped history; sponsoring an anniversary trip to Toroda, Washington, where Ranald died; newsletters, member events …
Mas paid frequent tribute to help from people at EPI and in FOM who worked with him to reach goals. Yet most of the goals were Mas’s dreams — and many of us who did work with him can only recall, with awe and admiration, the power of his intellect, of his inspiration and of his vision. FOM’s sympathies go to his family, friends and colleagues.
Sayonara, Mas … Sayonara.
~~ Barbara Peeples
__________________________________________________________________
My Turn by Bruce Berney
The Ranald MacDonald birthplace monument continues to be an important surprise to people visiting Fort Astoria on the corner of 15th and Exchange Streets in Astoria, OR. The City’s new cruise boat industry had brought hundreds of people on walking tours of downtown Astoria, and most of them find MacDonald’s adventure to be an interesting fact on which to reflect.
Ours is not the only MacDonald monument in the world. The first was the handsome gravestone erected at the cemetery at Toroda, near Republic, Washington. Next, Rishiri Island established an attractive wooden sign at the site of MacDonald’s first landing on an inhabited Japanese island. Lat year, the Rotary Club of Nagasaki erected a stone monument at the site where MacDonald taught. Later, a typhoon destroyed the Rishiri sign, so on October 23, 1996, a handsome stone monument was installed by the Rotary Club of Rishiri. Dedication ceremonies at monuments are always elaborate events with visiting historians, government dignitaries and Friends of MacDonald members and media coverage.
We extend our congratulations to Jo Ann Roe, a charter member of FOM, whose book Ranald MacDonald: Pacific Rim Adventurer, will be published in April or May by Washington State University Press. The book features an index, notes, bibliography and illustrations. The paperback edition will sell for $18.95, and the hardcover, $35.00. A major contribution to knowledge about MacDonald’s life, the recounting of his importance to British Columbia history is very rewarding. If you find it more convenient than a local bookstore, add $5.00 shipping/handling and order it from Clatsop County Historical Society gift shop.
Two years ago, we started as annual tradition of meeting at the birthplace monument on February 3rd at 11:30 a.m., then reconvening at a local restaurant for an informal FOM lunch. If you can’t come this year, put it on your calendar for next year. If you are coming from a distance any other tine, ask CCHS to line me up to be on hand to greet you. I always enjoy meeting other Friends of MacDonald!
*****
Many have given to the Friends of MacDonald, care of CCHS, in memory of “Mas”:
Mr. & Mrs. George I. Azumano
Ms. Eloise J. Barry
Mr. Bruce R. Berney
Mr. Hidekazu Fujimori
Mr. & Mrs. A. Funaki
Mr. Toru Hashinoguchi
Mr. Yuji Hirabayashi
Mr. Takanobu Ibori
Mr. Takayoshi Ito
Mr. Edward Y. Kawasaki
Mr. Steve Klein
Mr. Hiroki Komatsu
Mr. Allen R. Mann
Mr. Kenichi Minatoya
Mr. Akio Mitsuishi
Ms. Barbara C. Peeples
Mr. & Mrs. Haruhiko Takada
Ms. Genevieve Walker
Mr. & Mrs. Masashi Yabana
Mr. & Mrs. Masaru Yatabe
Mr. C. N. Winningstad
Mr. & Mrs. Michitaka Okamoto
Mr. & Mrs. Homer Yasui
Mr. M. Isono
Mr. & Mrs. Nobuaki Ishikawa
Mr. Stephen S. McConnel
Mr. Haruhiko Gyoda
Mr. Tsuyoshi Nagano
Mr. Tetsuhiro Yoshimoto
Mr. Manabu Yoshikawa
Mrs. Mas (Machiko) Tomita
Epson Corp.
Shokookai of Portland
*****
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October 18th, 1994
MACDONALD APPEARS IN RECENT BOOKS
Robert Brown and the Vancouver Island Exploring Expedition. Edited by John Hayman, Univ. of British Columbia Press, 1989. 204 pgs., $31.95
One of Ranald MacDonald’s ventures after he returned to land and the Canadian Northwest was his membership on the Vancouver island Exploring Expedition led by Robert Brown. Brown’s journal of the exploration, a 4 1/2 month criss-cross of the island as far north as Comox, reports the discovery of the Leech River gold fields and of a coal seem on Browns River.
The book, Volume 8 of the Recollections of the Pioneers of British Columbia, includes numerous references to Ranald as well as a picture of him and Frederick Whymper, the expedition artist, coming spectacularly downriver on a raft. Whymper’s illustrations of expedition activities and landmarks are used lavishly in the book.
Ranald’s own original journal of the expedition, scratched out over his weeks in the field, is in the Provincial Archives of British Columbia. It supplements some of the official reporting done by Brown in his account.
The editor refers to MacDonald as “undoubtedly the most colorful and entertaining of the group … At forty, he was the oldest of the explorers, but his persistent high spirits made him, according to Brown, a popular member of the group”. One rainy night, Brown quotes MacDonald as saying, ” ‘ … the devil was whipping his wife’ and, if we may judge from his frequent allusions to that gentleman, he appears to be on terms of considerable intimacy …”
In addition to giving readers as account of life on the island as the expedition found it in 1864, this book gives us a rare glimpse of Ranald as seen by his contemporaries.
An Ocean Between Us: The Changing Relationship of Japan and the United States, Told in Four Stories from the Life of an American Town. By Evelyn Iritani. Wm. Morrow & Co.; 272 pgs., $23.00
Evelyn Iritani, daughter of a second-generation Japanese-American father and a born-and-reared-in-Japan mother, has covered Asian-related economic, political and cultural matters for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer since 1987. Her book reflects both her birth and her vocation; it is a first-hand look at the impact of the Japanese presence in Port Angeles, Washington, and reaction to it. Her “Four Stories” are about four situations involving Japan-U.S. relations, the first of them telling of the “drifters” enslaved by the Makah Indians (later) rescued through the efforts of the Hudson’s Bay Co. in 1834. She expands on the bewhiskered and fanciful fiction that Ranald MacDonald shared school-days with the trio by stating that he “befriended the Japanese sailors and traded English lessons for schooling in Japanese.” (In fact, of course, Ranald briefly attended John Ball’s school, held from November 1832~February 1833; the three Japanese youngsters were students of Cyrus Shepherd in the fall of 1834.) Another reference to Ranald says he departed via “rowboat” from the whaler in which he had sailed to Japan; Ranald described his craft as “custom-built” for the captain, with sails and a mast.
However, Iritani’s personal insights and interviews with contemporaries make her book well worth reading.
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October 18th, 1994
CENTENNIAL TRIBUTES FROM THE PACIFIC RIM
” … Through his great achievement Mr. MacDonald has been remembered by Japanese even today, one hundred years after his death, and is still remembered in the hearts of many Americans and Japanese as a token of the long-standing US-Japan relationship.”
~~ Takahiro Yokomishi, Governor of Hokkaido, Japan
” … On the commemoration of the centennial of the death of Ranald MacDonald, I would like to express my great respects to him, who ventured to land on the shore of Japan in 1848 at the risk of his life in order to open “the Gates of Brass” and loved dearly by the Japanese people.”
~~ Torao Tomita, Professor Emeritus, Rikkyo University; translator of Ranald MacDonald’s Original Narrative
“… I join Friends of MacDonald honoring Mr. MacDonald’s vast contributions to establishing an important friendship between the Japanese and English-speaking peoples. That early fascination with the Japanese culture played not only a critical historical role in the future relationships with businesses and governments but also (in) illuminating the beauty and customs of Japan.”
~~ Hon. Barbara Roberts, Governor of Oregon
” … Ranald MacDonald personified the American pioneering spirit. Seeking adventure and pursuing his vision of a prosperous trade relationship between the United States and Japan, MacDonald set out on his historic visit to our island neighbor … His vision has led to great benefit for our nation.”
~~ Hon. Mark O. Hatfield, U.S. Senator/Oregon
” … I strongly hope that this event will serve as a reminder of how strong the ties between the State of Washington and Japan are and how we all cherish the friendly relationship at the present time.”
~~ Masaki Saito, Consulate General of Japan
” … As Canadians we are happy to join in marking his career, which has drawn all three of our nations closer together.”
~~ Jean Murray Cole, Alfred O.C. Cole
” … The Society is pleased and honored to be associated with the Friends of MacDonald and its founders, mas Tomita and Bruce Berney …”
~~ Karen Broenneke, Executive Director Clatsop County historical Society
” … Keeping Ranald MacDonald’s inspirational words on international friendship in mind, and enabling Hyogo and Washington to take increasingly important roles as gateways between Hyogo and Washington, I would like to further deepen friendship …”
~~ Toshitami Kaihara, Governor of Hyogo Prefecture
[To FOM Chairman Mas Tomita] –
” … Thank you … for making the In Search of Ranald MacDonald trip and of the most interesting and vital trips that I’ve had the pleasure to put together. Your interest in and connection with the subject of MacDonald in all his many facets made for a truly magical trip. It is a gray morning in Portland today and it seems quite a stretch to think of all that eastern Washington sunshine. I enjoyed being a part of this centennial observance.” ~~Adair Law, OHS managing editor/assistant to the director
*
Centennial messages read during the ceremonies included other distinguished persons, including Toshitami Kaihara, Governor, Hyogo Prefectural Government, Kobe, Japan; Syunsuke Tsurumi, philosopher, author of Words Spread; Akira Yoshimura, author of Festival at Sea; Masaki Takahashi, FOM Japan; Masami Obama, FOM Nagasaki; Takeyasu Morokuma; Hyroko Sonoke, FOM Japan; and a resolution by the National Council of the Japanese American Citizens League relating to recognition of Ranald MacDonald as the first American to make significant contributions toward US-Japan Relations.
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October 18th, 1994
Nagasaki TV Video Popular
The KTN TV/Nagasaki documentary celebrating the life of Ranald MacDonald was “well received” when it was broadcast to Japanese listeners this spring, reports FOM Chairman Mas Tomita. The documentary, produced by the station, was filmed at Oregon, Washington, Hawaii and various Canadian sites as well as in Japan. FOM hosted the film crew at dinners in Portland and Astoria. M. Yamamoto, director of the film, discussed the project at South Nagasaki Rotary Club meeting.
[Mr. Yamamoto sends FOM members “best regards” and “thank you” for your help during the filming trip.]
*****
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October 1st, 1994
It was a great tour to Toroda!
by Mas Tomita, FOM Chairman
IN SEARCH OF RANALD MACDONALD: AUGUST 11-14, 1994~~~ Our exciting bus tour left the Oregon Historical Center at 8:30am on Thursday, Aug. 11. Once en route, our 22 tour participants introduced themselves and explained why they are intrigued by Ranald MacDonald. Tour Leader, Steve Kohl and OHS Director Chet Orloff provided historical background about Ranald’s life and Northwest geology as we passed many points of interest on the way to Spokane.
We were joined at a welcome dinner in Spokane by an enthusiastic group of seven members from Seattle led by Ken Nakano. Also joining us for dinner were Glen Mason, executive director of the Eastern Washington Historical Society, and his wife; Ed Tsutakawa of Mukogawa Institute, a U.S. branch of a Japanese Women’s college; and Dr. Watanabe and Denny Yasuhara of the Japanese American Citizens League. We enjoyed good food, good conversation and a video presentation.
Friday, we visited Mukogawa Institute to see its new Ranald MacDonald building, recently dedicated to his memory, and the nice display which Ed had set up in the lobby. We then visited Cheney Cowles Museum to see its MacDonald materials. These included Ranald’s copy of the original McLeod manuscript – based primarily on Ranald’s recollections – which was the basis for the 1923 publication of Ranald MacDonald, edited by W.S. Lewis, then director of the Eastern Washington Historical Society, and Naojiro Murakami. The MacDonald files are part of a collection of papers left by Lewis, who did much research on Eastern Washington history. We could have spent the day there but had to move on.
Four hours later, we arrived at Republic and were greeted by Dick Slagle, a long-time Friends of MacDonald member. We first visited the Stanton family farm and saw firsthand the old log cabin where, in 1894, Ranald died in the arms of his beloved niece, Jenny Lynch, saying “Sayonara, my dear, sayonara”. We got a special feeling as we touched the wall of the cabin and looked about us at peaceful fields and hills.
We left the farm for Ranald’s grave site where, in the late afternoon breeze, some 30 people stood waiting for the ceremony to begin. It was a beautiful and memorable ceremony. FOM Vice Chairman Bruce Berney, as master of ceremonies, stood by Ranald’s grave, which was flanked by U.S. and Japanese flags. A kilt-clad bagpiper from Canada opened the centennial observance with the spirited call of the pipes, reminding us of Ranald’s Scottish ancestry. A beautiful bouquet was placed at the grave site monument by Jean Murray Cole, also from Canada and the great-great-great-granddaughter of Archibald MacDonald, Ranald’s father. Rika Matsubara read a message from Consul-General Saito of Japan. Takeo Terahata read a message from Hyogo Gov. Kaihara. A JACL resolution honoring Ranald was read by Ken Nakano. FOM Chairman Mas Tomita made a speech recognizing Ranald’s inspiration beyond time and place.
Chet Orloff presented distinguished remarks. Local historians and families were introduced. The bagpipe’s solemn lament concluded the wonderful gathering of about 50.
A banquet at Republic followed the ceremony and provided a great opportunity to meet local friends and historians; we all enjoyed a cool evening, a considerable contrast to the hot daytime temperatures. We learned that Washington State Governor Mike Lowry had formally proclaimed August 12th as “Ranald MacDonald Day” and that Secretary of State Ralph Munro had paid a brief tribute to Ranald on the previous day when he visited the grave site.
On the third day of the tour we drove south and crossed Lake Roosevelt by a small ferry. Spectacular landscapes greeted us en route to Grand Coulee Dam, Dry Falls and Yakima. Dinner that evening at the Yakima Indian National Culture Center in Toppenish was accompanied by Indian storytelling and dancing.
The fourth and final day of the tour included another visit to the Toppenish Museum. Then we moved on to The Dalles Dam for lunch and a visit to Indian petroglyphs which had been removed from the canyon before it was flooded. Our final stop was at Fort Vancouver, where Ranald spent some of his boyhood. Throughout our bus ride, each of us in turn was able to comment and share interesting information. It was a great learning experience!
I think all of those who participated, in person or by message, for their contributions to the success of our tour. A big “thank you” to Adair Law for coordination and arrangements and to Barbara Peeples for her help with planning. It was a great trip in search of Ranald MacDonald. As he said at the last of his Narrative, more than 100 years ago, “Let us hope of a better day for Peace on earth! Good will to all men!”
Tour participants had a good time. Their comments bode well for future travels and tours:
” … I thought it was a good trip, both memorable and profitable. I hope the others felt the same way” – Dr. Steve Kohl, tour leader
” … All those present at the ceremony and dinner say that they had a wonderful time and look forward to a closer association between local residents and MacDonald’s far-flung friends. The MacDonald family members involved were delighted.” – Madilane Perry, Republic [ Madilane also reports that the Ferry County Historical Society will place a MacDonald exhibit in the local library.]
” … it was one of the most enriching experiences I’ve had.” — Katie Gordon
*****
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April 10th, 1994
The text of this article is reprinted from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography, (Volume XII) 1891-1900, thanks to the great kindness of its author, David H. Wallace, and of the publisher, University of Toronto Press, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
MACDONALD, RANALD, adventurer, teacher, explorer, businessman, and author; b. 3 Feb. 1824 in Fort George (Astoria, Oreg.), eldest son of Archibald McDonald*, an HBC fur trader, and Chinook Indian princess Raven (Sunday), daughter of Chief Comcomly; d. unmarried 24 Aug. 1894 in Toroda, Wash.
Ranald MacDonald’s mother died shortly after his birth, and he was raised by his stepmother, Jane Klyne. After spending his early years at several Hudson’s Bay Company posts in the Columbia district, he was sent in 1834 to the Red River Academy at Fort Garry (Winnipeg) [see David Thomas Jones*]. Four years later he went to St Thomas, Upper Canada, to train in banking at a bank managed by one of his father’s friends, Edward Ermatinger*. He soon tired of this work, however, and early in 1841 he left surreptitiously to go to sea. Determined to visit the closed country of Japan, he shipped from Lahaina (Hawaii) in 1848 on the whaler Plymouth and arranged to be dropped off, appearing to be a shipwrecked sailor, near the west coast of Ezo (Hokkaido).
Taken by the Japanese authorities to Nagasaki, he made the best of his comfortable confinement in a temple room by becoming the first teacher of English in Japan, and it is as a teacher that he is best remembered there. One of his students, Enosuke Moriyama, later became a noted interpreter to the missions of Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry in 1853–54 and of Lord Elgin [Bruce*] in 1858–59.
At the end of April 1849 MacDonald was released to the American sloop of war Preble, which was visiting Nagasaki to pick up American sailors who had deserted from the whaler Lagoda. He traveled widely in Asia, Australia, and Europe before returning, shortly after his father’s death in 1853, to his family, then living in St Andrews (Saint-André-Est), Lower Canada. He remained there for about five years, during which time he became a Freemason.
In 1858 Ranald and his half-brother Allan returned to the Pacific coast, to the new colony of British Columbia. They set up a packing business between Port Douglas (Douglas), at the head of Little Harrison Lake and the Fraser River gold-mines, and ran a ferry across the Fraser at Lillooet. Their younger brother Benjamin later joined them. In 1861–62 Ranald MacDonald and Johnston George Hillbride Barnston, whose families were connected through marriage, set up the Bentinck Arm and Fraser River Road Company to service the new mines in the Caribou district. The route for this road was a pack-trail, running from the site of present-day Bella Coola to the Fraser River near Fort Alexandria (Alexandria, B.C.). The enterprise was not completed, however, because of financial difficulties. In 1864 MacDonald and Barnston’s younger brother Alexander joined the Vancouver Island Exploring Expedition [see Robert Brown]. On this expedition, which crossed the largely unexplored interior of Vancouver Island four times, MacDonald participated in the discovery of vast stands of prime timber, the Sooke gold-fields, and a large coalfield on Browns River near Comox. The next year he led a government-sponsored expedition to explore for minerals in the Horsefly area of the Caribou.
MacDonald spent the following decade in the Caribou district, exploring, and at his ranch on Hat Creek. He was also an employee of Barnard’s Express and Stage Line [see Francis Jones Barnard*] and later of Bonaparte House, the hotel run by Charles Augustus Semlin* and Philip Parke at Cache Creek. In 1875 he assisted his cousin Christina MacDonald in her trading operation at Kamloops. He finally retired to a log cabin close to the home of Christina’s brother Donald near Fort Colvile (near Colville, Wash.), where his own father had developed a large farm for the HBC during the 1830s.
While in retirement, MacDonald tried to find a publisher for his account of his visit to Japan. The manuscript was edited by Malcolm McLeod, who in 1872 had published Archibald McDonald’s Peace River journal, and several drafts were submitted to Canadian, American, and British publishers. A proposal for publication in Montreal under the title “A Canadian in Japan” fell through in 1892 because of a lack of subscriptions, but a revised version which McLeod prepared the following year finally appeared in 1923.
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A portion of Ranald MacDonald’s original account of his visit to Japan is preserved in Malcolm McLeod’s papers at PABC, Add. mss 1249, along with one of the three manuscript copies of McLeod’s final 1893 edition, “Japan: story of adventure of Ranald MacDonald, first teacher of English in Japan, A.D. 1848–49.” The other surviving copy (the one McLeod returned to MacDonald) is held by the Eastern Wash. State Hist. Soc. (Spokane), which published it in 1923 as Ranald MacDonald: the narrative of his early life on the Columbia under the Hudson’s Bay Company’s regime; of his experiences in the Pacific whale fishery; and of his great adventure to Japan; with a sketch of his later life on the western frontier, 1824–1894, ed. W. S. Lewis and Naojiro Murakami. A Japanese translation of the Narrative prepared by Toruo Tomita, Makudonarudo “Nihon Kaisoki”, appeared in Tokyo in 1979.
MacDonald is also the author of Bentinck Arm and Fraser River Road Company, Limited, prospectus (Victoria, 1862), prepared in collaboration with his partner, Johnston George Hillbride Barnston.
Japan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs Repository (Tokyo), Zoku Tsushin Zenran Ruishu (coil. of docs. from the time of the Tokugawa government), “Beikoku Hyomin no Geisen Nagasaki-ko ni Torai Ikken” (record of the visit to Nagasaki of the Preble, 1849) and “Kits Kaigan Hyochaku no Beikokujin Nagasaki Goso a Ikken, 1848–1849” (record of Ranald MacDonald and the Lagoda seamen). PABC, Add. mss 794, esp. Vancouver Island Exploring Expedition journals of Robert Brown and of Ranald MacDonald. [Robert Brown], Vancouver Island; exploration, 1864 (Victoria, [1865]). “An interesting visitor,” Ottawa Daily Citizen, 1 Sept. 1888; repr. in Daily News–Advertiser (Vancouver), 15 Sept. 1888. Frederick Whymper, Travel and adventure in the territory of Alaska, formerly Russian America – now ceded to the United States – and in various other parts of the north Pacific (London, 1868).
British Colonist (Victoria), 1858–60, continued as Daily British Colonist, 1860–64, and Daily Colonist, September 1894. Cariboo Sentinel (Barkerville, B.C.), 12 June 1865. China Mail (Hong Kong), 1 May 1849. Morning Oregonian (Portland), 12 Feb. 1891. Spokesman–Review (Spokane), 31 Aug. 1894. DAB. J. E. Ferris, “Ranald MacDonald, the sailor boy who visited Japan,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly (Seattle, Wash.), 48 (1957): 13–16; “Ranald MacDonald’s monument, Toroda Creek, state of Washington,” BCHQ, 15 (1951): 223–27. Province (Vancouver), 18 Nov. 1963. Shunzo Sakamaki, “Japan and the United States, 1790–1853,” Asiatic Soc. of Japan, Trans., 2nd ser., 18 (1939): 44–49. Vancouver Daily Province, 20 May 1928.
© 2000 University of Toronto/Université Laval
NOTE: A second edition of Ranald’s Narrative was published in 1990 by the Oregon Historical Society Press with support from FOM and Epson Portland, Inc. It is available from the OHS Press, 1200 S.W. Park Ave., Portland, OR 97205, at $30 plus shipping. [U.S. funds only.]
*****
Chinook Tribe Seeks Information …
Edna Miller, secretary of the Chinook Indian Tribe, has asked that FOM share with the Tribe information about Ranald MacDonald, half-Scot, half-Indian, and grandson of legendary Chinook Chieftain Comcomly. FOM Chairman Bruce Berney has offered copies of our publications and suggested a newsletter exchange.
*****
Tour Highlights:
Dramatic Scenery, Historic Sites, Good Company, Great Fun …
The vastness of Eastern Washington is awe-inspiring. The air is pungent with the scent of pine and sage, the land rolls with breathtaking skies. Travelers will visit three unusual museums: the Native Cultures Collection at Cheney Cowles Museum, Spokane; the architecturally exciting Yakima Nation Indian museum; and the charming Colville Museum, the heart of an historic complex.
We’ll learn more about Indian culture with an Indian feast — and see pictographs and petroglyphs painted and carved thousands of years ago. We’ll see gigantic Grand Coulee Dam, a working gold mine, a winery …
We will visit, finally, the house in which Ranald MacDonald died and the lands he knew, pausing for a centennial tribute at his well-marked grave site near the Canadian border.
The tour is being organized in cooperation with the Oregon Historical Society , which will also invite its members to participate. TO ASSURE YOUR PLACE on the tour, complete and mail the special FOM advance reservation form in this newsletter.
*****
A Visit to Toroda
by Prof. Steve Kohl, Ph.D.
(FOM Vice Chair Steve Kohl, a member of the Department of Asian Languages and Literature at the University of Oregon, has long been interested in the Ranald MacDonald story. Steve will lead our Tour to Toroda. The following is his account of his visit there last summer …)
RANALD MacDONALD died at Toroda on the Canadian border of Washington. Eva Emory Dye romantically and erroneously describes him passing away at his home at Fort Colville near Kettle Falls. The actual circumstances of his death were more dramatically poignant than that. Away from home, visiting his niece, Jennie Lynch, he died in her arms saying, “Sayonara, my dear, sayonara.”
Last August we drove through the Okanogan country, passing through Kettle Falls, crossing the Columbia, camping at Curlew Lake, and going on to Toroda to visit the site of MacDonald’s grave on a bluff high above Kettle River. In many ways the area has greatly changed since MacDonald passed through here on his last journey, and in that process of change our sense of history has changed as some things are lost and other things gain heightened importance.
MacDonald spent his final years at Fort Colville where his father had been chief factor half a century earlier. MacDonald evidently cared a great deal about preserving that legacy in his father’s memory. He seems to have found contentment during those final years of his life. He is quoted as saying, “I yearn for nothing more than to live according to the whims of my nature. If I need meat for my dogs, in the foothills there is plenty of game. If it is flour that I lack, there is a store at the nearest settlement. My books furnish diversion, and in my solitude I am free to write and meditate.” Today, neither fort nor homestead remain; all were flooded by the backwaters of Grand Coulee Dam.
As we crossed the 75 miles or so from Kettle Falls to Toroda, i could not help but wonder if these mountains and meadows are any different from what they were when Mac made his last journey in August of 1894. He surely passed by Curlew Lake and perhaps camped there as we did, watching the sun set and twilight gather over the Okanogan.
When Lewis and Murakami were editing MacDonald’s Narrative in 1923, they described the site as a neglected Indian cemetery. Today it is a neatly fenced plot which includes also the graves of Jennie Lynch, Nellie Stanton and other family members. The mountains and rivers have not changed at all. On a clear August morning the hills are green and dotted with pines and the river flows through the valley below, a remarkably lovely location.
Changes, of course, have been many. MacDonald went to Japan hoping to open the doors of commerce with that country. Today, as we see the vast amount of commerce – the wheat, cattle, timber, potatoes, fish and fruit of the Columbia River basin that goes to Japan, and when we see the Toyotas, televisions and computers that comes from Japan — we can appreciate the extent to which MacDonald’s dream of commerce and friendship between our two countries has been accomplished. As we near the 100th anniversary of MacDonald’s death, it seems appropriate to honor this man of vision and humanity.
*****
What FOM’s Been Doing …
AT FORT VANCOUVER Boy Scouts from Hyogo Prefecture in Japan joined Washington State representatives to rededicate the Friendship Monument erected in 1988 to honor three Japanese sailors – “shipwrecked” sea-drifters rescued and brought to the Fort in 1833 on orders of Dr. McLaughlin. Chairman Mas Tomita represented FOM.
AT THE OREGON HISTORICAL SOCIETY FOM was represented at the August 6th opening of an OHS exhibit about the issei, Japanese pioneers who came to Oregon in the late 19th and early 10th centuries. A special FOM flyer was developed for the opening. FOM member George Azumano was among those instrumental in developing the popular exhibit, a joint effort of the japanese American National Museum, Oregon Japanese Americans and OHS.
IN PORTLAND FOM was host to a film crew from KTN-TV/Nagasaki, which created a special documentary about Ranald MacDonald as part of the stations 25th anniversary celebration. Portland-area Friends met for dinner with the film crew. FOM Vice Chairman Bruce Berney entertained the group in Astoria. The film-makers also traveled to Vancouver and Victoria, B.C.; Winnipeg; Toronto; Washington, D.C.; Republic and Spokane, Washington, and Lahaina and Honolulu, Hawaii. A copy of the Japanese-language production will be placed in FOM archives.
FOM/PORTLAND this month also greeted visitors from Japan led by FOM Vice Chair/Japan Masaki Takahashi. The group was making an early centennial pilgrimage to Toroda.
IN JAPAN – Masaki Takahashi, who spearheaded development of the Rishiri monument memorializing Ranald MacDonald, is the new Vice Chairman/Japan for FOM. He will serve as liaison between FOM/US and leaders of four Japanese chapters, who are Dr. Obama, Nagasaki; Mr. Nishiya, Rishiri; Mr. Aisaka, Kansai; and Mr. Kawasaki, Tokyo. The Japanese groups have published a number of MacDonald studies.
AT THE BANK – Chairman Mas Tomita reported on FOM’s fiscal year-end status during the November meeting, noting a 12% increase in current paid membership. income from memberships exceeded budget projects by $231; resale items were up $8, donations up $450, and luncheon receipts up $452, for a total increase in income of $1,181. Expenses overall decreased, down from a budgeted $1800 to $1265, primarily because of reduced printing expenses.
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March 28th, 1993
100 Years Ago: 1893 was Ranald’s year of trial …
Ranald MacDonald, then 69 years old, was living as Fort Colville, Washington. He and his Ontario editor, Malcolm McLeod, had fleshed-out the story of Ranald’s Japan adventure. During 1891 and 1892, in response to McLeod’s insistent demands for money to publish the book, Ranald pleaded for loans, attempted to mortgage his ranch, and sold subscriptions – desperate efforts to raise a few hundred dollars. he recorded his failures in a heartbreaking series of letters, now among the McLeod papers in the Provincial Archives at Victoria, B.C. ~~~
” … My cousin, who understands the circumstances, unfortunately has not the available cash …” ” … Money is very tight, more especially after the fire and rebuilding of Spokane …” ” … It is impossible to avoid a feeling of disappointment and mortification …”
McLeod, meanwhile, was apparently writing to Ranald about his own financial problems, and Ranald was quick to sympathize.
“Thanks to kind providence we have plenty to eat and the broad Columbia passes our door — no fear of thirst,” Ranald wrote in late 1893. He tells of banks closing, hard times and his own poor health. Yet he remains optimistic: he thinks he can sell 100-150 copies of the book, once it is published.
A month later, Ranald writes again, this time saying he is disheartened and disappointed to learn that, after a year, the Book is no closer to publication.
His natural optimism returned quickly; he approached a local newspaper about publishing his book. One professional newspaperwoman, excited about the book, offers encouragement but is unable to find a publisher; she did select several chapters to be printed in the Kettle Falls Pioneer beginning in November 1893. Within a year, the Pioneer had published Ranald’s obituary. His book was not to see its first publication for more than 30 years; its second, for almost 100.
*****
FOM paid membership grows …
Friends of MacDonald paid membership has climbed 150% during the past year, bringing income g=from membership to within $69 of the budget, according to Chairman Mas Tomita. Lyn Hadley, who has computerized and reorganized the mailing list for faster access, says that the current roster lists 233 names, including courtesy mailings to Honorary members. Account reports from the Clatsop County Historical Society, of which Friends of MacDonald is a committee, indicate that FOM has almost reached its $1800 budget goals for the 1992-93 budget year and has established a sound financial base of operations.
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1994 Turoda tour plans underway …
Plans are moving forward for FOM’s 1994 Centennial Tour to Turoda, Washington, and the grave of Ranald MacDonald, who died August 5, 1894. Current thinking favors a four-day bus tour in June or October. it would include Fort Vancouver, museums in Spokane and Colville, Washington, which house MacDonald memorabilia; the house in which MacDonald died, and the Indian cemetery where he lies buried. Some interest has been expressed in a longer tour, including visits to Forts Kamloops and Langley in British Columbia, Nisquilly in Washington and Astoria Plans are still open to member opinions and suggestions (see FOM address, pg 4) but should be completed this Spring.
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OPB considers feature film …
Oregon Public Broadcasting has tentative plans underway for a documentary film which will focus on the story of Ranald MacDonald. A draft script has been completed, according to a report to FOM members, and the station is now seeking necessary funding. Michael McLeod, who wrote the draft script, claims no relationship to Malcolm McLeod, Ranald’s friend and editor. Mike based the script on Herbert H. Gowen’s Five Foreigners in Japan and Ranald’s Narrative of His Life; FOM reprinted a chapter from the first book and assisted the Oregon historical Society in reprinting of the second. Any members interested in participating in the project are invited to call or write FOM Chairman Mas Tomita, 3950 NW Aloclek Pl., Hillsboro, OR 97214; 503.645.1118.
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A Return To Japan
FOM Chairman Bruce Berney and his son Mark traveled to Japan in late summer of 1992, following the path of Ranald MacDonald from Lahaina in the Hawaiian Islands to Rishiri and Nagasaki. It was Bruce’s first trip to Japan since he taught in Toyama 30 years ago and he visited friends of that era as well as Friends of MacDonald throughout Japan.
IT WAS A FANTASTIC homecoming. The generosity of friendly people who welcomed us in Tokyo, Toyama, Nagasaki, Sapporo and Rishiri Island surely sets a new standard for visits here from our Japanese Friends of MacDonald.
We left Seattle on August 15 and spent one night at Lahaina, Maui, Hawaiian Islands, to see the town from which Ranald MacDonald sailed for Japan. We were thrilled to see two houses which he would have known: the 1847 Masters’ Reading Room and the 1838 Baldwin Home. We stayed at the Pioneer Inn, built in 1901 and later expanded. It is the oldest and cheapest hotel in town, but if you like atmosphere, I recommend it. Although overrun with tourists, Lahaina is rich in history and should be considered as a destination for FOM members.
We were greeted in Tokyo by FOM/Japan Chairman Mikio Kawasaki [Oregon’s trade representative in Tokyo] and Dr. Masaki Takahashi of Sapporo, and Mrs. Ishihara led us to the gravestone of Moriyama Einosuke, MacDonald’s most famous pupil. On, then, to Toyama, where we spent three nights with the family of Dr. Atsuro Oshima, my Japanese brother, in whose home I lived 30 years ago. Mother Oshima is beautiful as ever. Sister Hiroko came from Nagoya to help, as her English is very good. Among Toyama highlights: a visit to the minister of education and new principal of Chubu Hugh School, to whom I told the MacDonald story; a jazz party, at which I met three of my former students; and a folk dance festival in the village of Yatsuo. It is my pleasure, but not my doing, that Oregon and Toyama are sister cities. next, FOM enthusiast Yuji Aisaka accompanied us to Osaka and Dr. Morokuma had planned a MacDonald seminar, well-attended. They also took us to the Nagasaki Prefectural Library for a press conference. The librarian, Mr. Ishiyama, showed me the valuable manuscript of the official report of MacDonald’s stay at Nagasaki and gave me a photocopy of it for our library.
Then: sightseeing, including a visit to Deshima, the partially restored site of the Dutch factory from which MacDonald was deported; Daihian, a house at the location of the hermitage where MacDonald was incarcerated, and a memorable lunch at the famous Fukiro restaurant near the shrine which serves the Daihian neighborhood. Yuji, who joined us for the tour, made sure we arrived at Nagasaki Airport in time for our flight to Sapporo.
We were welcomed to Sapporo by Dr. Takahashi, Dr. Zengoro Terashima of Hokkaido Women’s College, Takahashi Shiroshita of TV Hokkaido, and the bright lights of his camera crew. The following day, we met with the vice-governor of Hokkaido, the president and executive director of Sapporo International Communication Plaza Foundation, and a reporter for Hokkaido Shimbun Press, lunched with several other FOM enthusiasts, and visited the Historical Museum of Hokkaido, where Hideshi Seki showed us models of boats believed similar to those in which MacDonald traveled the Japanese coast.
Dr. Takahashi and Tak Shiroshita and his TV camera flew with us to Rishiri Island. Among those who greeted us at the airport: Hideo Iwashima, my guest last year and the first Rishiri Islander to visit MacDonald’s birthplace. (It was pointed out that my son mark is the second native Astorian to visit Rishiri – MacDonald being the first.)
Highlights of Rishiri: visits to the Rishiri and Rishiri-Fuji city halls, to two beaches on which MacDonald may have landed, to the ancient customs house up an ancient stone stairway MacDonald may have climbed, to historic shrines … There was a tour of Rishiri Museum, including an excellent Ranald MacDonald exhibit, and guided by curator Eiji Nishiya, and a tour around the island with Mr. Furukawa and our interpreter, Lisa. Our lodgings were in a tatami room of the beautiful new Rishiri hotel, especially memorable because of the formal banquet held there in my honor. The next night, Mr. Iwashima hosted a sukiyaki farewell party in his popular gift shop, the Marine House. Close friends later took us to the dock for our overnight ferry ride to a port near Sapporo. We rested the next morning at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Takahashi, who later put us on the flight to Tokyo. There, an FOM dinner climaxed our adventure and included presentation of a new middle school English text (Chuko Shuppan Press) which devotes five pages to “The First American Teacher”.
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Book Presented
A copy of The Attic Letters, Ume Tsuda’s correspondence with her American mother at the turn of the 20th century, has been presented to the Astoria Public library by FOM-Japan member Akiko Ueda, who is one of the editors. Tsuda (1864-1929) was one of the first five girls sent to study in America by Japan’s Meiji government in its effort to modernize the nation. The book is available on inter-library loan; call number is 952.03.
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Fall Luncheon Proves Success …
Chairman Mas Tomita and Vice Chairman Bruce Berney reported to an October 24 meeting of FOM members on their trips following MacDonald’s path. Mas recalled his brief but exciting trip to Toroda, where he accompanied a Hokkaido TV team on a visit to the grave of Ranald MacDonald. Details are told in the Fall 1992 Gates Ajar. Bruce, whose journey to Japan in late summer is recounted in this issue, told of visiting sites Ranald might have visited and also of his meetings with FOM and other friends.
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Author to lecture in Astoria April 17 …
Dr. James P. Ronda, author of Astoria and Empire, will speak at the Astoria public Library at 3 pm Saturday, April 17, discussing “Astoria and the Wilder West”. The event is sponsored by the Astor Library Friends Association. Following the lecture, there will be an informal no-host dinner with Dr. Ronda. For reservations, call Bruce Berney, Astoria, Oregon, Public Library, 503-325-7323. Dr. Ronda’s book is the first scholarly treatment of the 1811 Astor Expedition, which built the first American settlement on the Northwest coast, since Washington Irving’s Astoria appeared in 1834. Fort Astor, later Fort George, became the birthplace of Ranald MacDonald in 1824.
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Recommended Reading: FOM Chairman Mas Tomita recommends FOM member JoAnn Roe’s new book, The Columbia River: An Historical Travel Guide ($15.95 softcover) to “those interested in Indian heritage.” For those interested in the MacDonald family’s role in the Northwest, he suggests member Jean Murray Cole’s Exile in the Wilderness ($30; University of Washington Press).
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Suggestions from friends …
DAVID H. WALLACE of Coquitlam B.C., who has studied and written about Ranald MacDonald, writes FOM to report that he recently has prepared a typescript of the only known actual Ranald MacDonald manuscript of his Japan visit, now in the Provincial Archives in Victoria, B.C. it is the basis of McLeod’s text. [A copy of the original is in FOM Archives.]
“It shows MacDonald a little less flowery than McLeod would make him appear and also shows his interest as a British Imperialist … [This poor word is so maligned today – at one time it was quite respectable to be a British Imperialist, especially in Canada,” Wallace writes.] He also suggests that the “MacDonald country” map printed in last fall’s Gates Ajar be expanded to include the Canadian sites which figured importantly in Ranald’s life.
Author JEAN MURRAY COLE also asks, in connection with the1994 tour, if it could include Fort Langley, where Ranald spent the “most memorable years of his childhood with the family — 1828 to 1833 …” She mentions also the archeological work around Fort Colville – and is seconded in that interest by DON STERLING, retired editor, who suggests that the tour include information about Indian settlements of the area.
[Diverse member interests may lead to some “tour extensions” for those with more time to travel.]
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