Thanks to Joe for sending this link, the diary of an American on his trip to Japan during the summer of 1923. The diary is fascinating standing alone, but even more interesting considering the entry for September 1, when the Great Kanto Earthquake struck Tokyo and killed approximately 136,000.

At Imperial Hotel Tokyo. Was talking in my room #310 on the third floor with Mr. Okamoto and Mr. Takaki of O.+Co. Lt. here at about 11:55 a.m. when we felt a terrible Earthquake. The whole building rocked and trembled, chairs and the beds slid about the room and we were all scared. As soon as the first quake passed we ran for the street. I stopped long enough to lock my door and my trunk. The halls were dark and all the guests were on their way to the street. Plaster was all over the floor in the halls and on the stairs but the building seemed little damaged.

The streets filled fast with frightened people and buildings were down all about us or badly cracked. We get into Mr. O’s car and started for Ueno Park where he lives. Fires and started in six or eight places where we passed and burned with terrible fury. Mr. Takaki left us near the office of O.+Co. Ltd. and just about that time a second quake but not as severe came. After arriving at Mr. O’s house the fires seemed to cover the whole city. The fires burned all day and all night. Refugees passed his house by the hundred thousand. Most women carrying babies the men and children carrying great loads of bedding or clothing or pushing a rikisha or some contrivance loaded with house-hold effects. Probably their entire belongings. They used part of Mr. O’s house as a hospital and treated a great many.

One man arrived who was caught on a bridge as which the fire was burning and before he could get across because of the crowds ahead fires burst out ahead of him and he lost his mother, his wife and four children – the youngest a little boy who died of suffocation on his daddy’s back.

Another woman and four small children arrived for treatment. She had left home with the young ones as her husband was at work at the time of the quake. She reached another bridge and tried for hours to get across but the passage was blocked by sick and the dying or dead and she finally resigned herself to die in the fast approaching flames. She huddled all the little ones around her telling them that they might better all go together. So this little group sat together awaiting the end when a man finally helped them and they got over the bridge and up to Ueno Park, where thousands and thousands were camped.

The earthquake prompted the reconstruction of Tokyo with its current networks of roads and trains, parks and schools across the city were designated as emergency gathering locations, and public buildings were constructed with stricter standards than private buildings to accommodate refugees, all of which you can see in Japan today.


COMMENTS / 7 COMMENTS

[...] Tokyo Earthquake Diary, 1923 (tags: earthquakes, history, japan) [...]

links for 2007-09-09 « Newsbong: Because News Matters, Kinda added these pithy words on Sep 09 07 at 8:23 am

I wonder how much the planning and infrastructure changes helped when Tokyo was firebombed by us (Americans) in the 1940s. Of course, they tragically continued to build everything out of wood and the conflagarations continued..

Rommel added these pithy words on 01 Sep 07 at 1:53 am

Frank Lloyd Wright designed the Imperial Hotel which opened in 1923. Because of the danger of earthquakes, he designed the building so that its various parts could move independently without collapsing. It was one of the few structures of its size that survived the quake pretty much intact.

Chief Wiggum added these pithy words on 01 Sep 07 at 3:00 am

There is one part of Tokyo that learned the lesson of the earth quake.Kanda,a sector known for the concentration of the rare second hand bookshops.Because many bookshops and the libraries had turned to ashes after the earthquakes,the shop owners asked city to finance to build second floor buildings that you can still see today.(They survuved the fire bombings too).

Frank Lloyd Wright’s student, Czech architect Antonin Raymond stayed and worked in Japan ever after Wright had left.Raymond designed many modernism buildings in Japan until 1937.After returned to the States he helped Gen,Curtis LeMay building model city resembling Tokyo downtown in the desert of New Mexico testing to cause firestorm by firebombing.It was the data that the American had obtained during the relief mission in the great earthquake and Raymond’s career in Tokyo made possible of the Tokyo Air Raid in March 10,1945 that scorched 1/3 of Tokyo and 80,000 citizens.
Raymond came back to Tokyo in 1948 and lived there until 1973.He died in 1974.

Aceface added these pithy words on 03 Sep 07 at 5:14 pm

Ooops.Raymond died in 1976.

Aceface added these pithy words on 03 Sep 07 at 5:16 pm

I was under the impression the losses from the tokyo firebombing were closer to 150,000

Brutus Cato added these pithy words on 06 Sep 07 at 9:37 pm

If you count the bombings on the11th then that could be so.

Aceface added these pithy words on 08 Sep 07 at 7:23 am
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Tokyo Earthquake Diary, 1923

Posted on 01 Sep 07 by Curzon. Subscribe to follow comments on this post. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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