James Gye

männlich 1840 -


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  • Name James Gye 
    Geboren 1840 
    Geschlecht männlich 
    Personen-Kennung I556  Otto-Genealogie
    Zuletzt bearbeitet am 9 Mrz 2012 

    Kinder 
     1. Alfred Ernst Gye,   geb. 1869, Japan Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort,   gest. Dez 1909, Rochford, Essex, England Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort  (Alter 40 Jahre)
    Familien-Kennung F238  Familienblatt  |  Familientafel

  • Notizen 




    • OURA ARTICLES
      Source: http://www.nfs.nias.ac.jp/page020.html#Med%20Hall





      GERMAN CONSULATE

      In the early days of the foreign settlement, Prussian merchants had to seek protection from
      one of the other foreign powers in Nagasaki, because Prussia (and later Germany) did not
      have a treaty with Japan. In 1865, Louis Kniffler, a local German merchant headquartered
      at No. 4 Dejima, became the first German Consul. For the next twenty-four years, the
      position of German Consul rotated among a number of German merchants in town, including
      Richard Lindau (1866-1868), G.A. Schottler (Acting Consul, 1869-June 1870), Max Militzer
      (June 1870-June 1873), George Westphal (Acting Consul, 1872-1873), Hermann Iwersen
      (1874 and 1877-January 1889) and E. Von Leesen (1875).

      In January 1889, F.G. Mullerbeeck became the first German foreign service officer
      appointed Consul at Nagasaki. He served in the position until 1906. Initially, the consulate
      was located at No. 4 Umegasaki, but on April 16, 1900 it was transferred to No.11 Oura.
      Juris G. Specks replaced Mullerbeeck as consul in 1907 and remained in office for two
      years. Specks was followed by A. Mudra (1909), K. Mechlenburg (July 1910-October 1911)
      and E. Orht (October 1911-April 1913). Specks came once more in April 1913 but remained
      only a year before the outbreak of World War I. At that time, the German consulate in
      Nagasaki was closed and it never again reopened. The building at No.11 Oura was
      purchased in 1929 by R.N. Walker & Co. and used by that company until its forced closure
      in 1941.


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      MUNICIPAL COUNCIL

      On April 21, 1861, a meeting of the Land Renters in Nagasaki was held. George Morrison,
      British Consul, was named chair. The meeting's main purpose was to select a Municipal
      Council to supervise the administrative affairs of the foreign settlement. Those residents
      with rents of $50-$100 got one vote, those with rents of $100-$150 got two votes, those
      with rents of $150-$200 got three votes, and those with rents above $200 got four votes.
      William Alt , John Major and Frankin Field were elected to seats on the Council. The
      Council submitted its first report three weeks later. In May 1862, the Council was said to
      be doing poorly because it had tried to do too much too soon. The Council languished for a
      time, before it was reestablished in 1872. In August of that year, an election of a new
      Municipal Council was held. D.D. Inglis (chair), Carl Rasch, H.A.Howe, Jr., Frederick Hellyer
      and Charles Hay were elected to seats on the Council and William Jalland was elected
      secretary. At that time, the Land Renters, headed by Glover & Ringer, wanted the new
      Municipal Council to take over some of the duties that had been held by the Consuls. The
      following month, the land renters of Dejima moved to withdraw from the Municipal Council
      because of the lack of representation, but the motion was denied. The meetings of the
      Municipal Council were usually held at No. 4 Oura, but in 1875 it was held at Oura No. 10. In
      May 1876, the Tentative Committee of the Municipal Council resigned - meaning in practical
      terms that there was no Council. There continued to be a debate as to the necessity of a
      Municipal Council, but it never again became an important administrative factor in the
      foreign settlement.


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      NAGASAKI CLUB

      As early as the summer of 1861, a social organization called the Nagasaki Club had been
      formed by members (primarily British) of the foreign settlement. By January 1862, rules for
      the Club had been settled and by the end of the year, a permanent building for the Club
      had been erected at No. 31 Oura. The original trustees were W.J. Alt and H.M. Wright. In
      May 1863, Edward Harrison replaced Alt as trustee of the Nagasaki Club. By July 1878,
      John Carrick Smith was the Club's trustee. Rumors circulated in the spring of 1881 that
      the club would soon close, and, indeed, the building and its bowling alleys were sold at
      auction in June.

      The Nagasaki Club reopened on November 1, 1881 in a new two-story building at No. 10
      Oura under the supervision of Charles Sutton. The biblical room was said to be the Club's
      main attraction. The Nagasaki Club was primarily a place for European and American
      residents of Nagasaki to meet and relax. Occasional dances were held at the Club,
      especially on holidays and the departures of important residents. In August 1921 a
      celebration was held marking the 40th anniversary of the Nagasaki Club at its No. 10 Oura
      site. Stewards and secretary-treasurers over the years included R.M.P. Austin, Robert
      Bowie, William Devine, Edward Duus, H.H. Hawkins, James Jones, Samuel Officer, W.H. Price,
      M. Smith, Frederick Stone and Arthur Tower. In 1933 the club moved to No. 4
      Minamiyamate, where it remained until its closure in 1941.


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      SACRED HEARTS GIRLS SCHOOL [SEISHIN JO GAKKO]

      Answering a plea from the French missionary Bernard Petitjean for a contingent of sisters
      to come work in Japan, five French women from the Soeurs de l'Enfant Jesus, under the
      leadership of Sister Mathilde, traveled from Malaysia, where they had been working, to
      Yokohama, arriving on June 28, 1872. The first group of French sisters to reach Nagasaki
      arrived on July 6, 1877. In 1880, they opened a school called Seishin Jo Gakko (Sacred
      Heart Girls School) at Minamiyamate. By 1886, the school had been transferred to No. 5
      Oura, where it remained until 1899. From 1900 to 1941, it was located at No. 16
      Minamiyamate. Seishin Jo Gakko merged with Josei Jo Gakko at Uenomachi in 1941.

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      ITALIAN CONSULATE

      Italian interests in Nagasaki were, surprisingly, never handled by an Italian, although there
      were a number of Italian residents in town over the years. The first time that the Italian

      flag flew over Nagasaki was in 1870 when William F. Gaymans, a Swiss under French
      protection, became Italian Consul. His offices were at No. 9 Oura along the Bund. Gaymans
      was followed by Julius Adrian, Prussian, who took over in 1872. The Italian flag flew over his
      residence at No. 4 Higashi Yamate. After this, other Western consuls in Nagasaki took
      charge of Italian affairs. In 1874 it was the Dutch Consul, from 1875 to 1892 and 1916 to
      1924 it was the Russian Consul, from 1893 to 1915 it was the German Consul, and from
      1925 to 1939 Italian interests were managed by the British Consul.


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      CHINA & JAPAN TRADING CO.

      On October 1, 1869, No. 4 Oura was transferred to an American firm operating out of New
      York called the China & Japan Trading Co. It advertized itself as shipchandlers, general
      shopkeepers, commission agents, and auctioneers, with offices at Nagasaki, Kobe, Osaka and
      Shanghai. Early merchants attached to the firm included the Americans John F. Twembly, I.
      M. Beauchamp and W. M. Robinet. Even though it was an American company, the two most
      important people associated with it were British: Edward Rogers and Frederick Stone. The
      company's Nagasaki headquarters remained at No. 4 Oura until at least September 1915,
      making it one of the most important and longest-operating American businesses in town.


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      MEDICAL HALL

      By 1867, James Gye was running a pharmacy called the Medical Hall at No. 12 Oura. Gye
      and family left town in mid-April 1870 after a March fire destroyed most of his goods. He
      was assisted financially by residents of the settlement. After Gye's departure, the Medical
      Hall was taken over by the British pharmacist A.C. Sin. Sin stayed only briefly in Nagasaki,
      however, before moving his business operations to Yokohama. On September 1, 1871, the
      American William Jalland, who until a month earlier had been running a competitive business
      called the Medicine Hall, bought the Medical Hall from Sin. Jalland operated the pharmacy
      for almost four years before selling it in April 1879 to William Hooper. At some point,
      Hooper moved his business, which he now called the Medical Hall and Aerated Water
      Manufactory, to the rear of Oura No. 11 facing Main Street. Hooper operated the
      pharmacy until his death in April 1895. The following month, William H. Evans took over the
      Medical Hall. Soon after, Evans moved the pharmacy to No. 42 Oura, where it remained
      until sold at auction in September 1904.