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70219-0003 - Yodobashi Bridge

Osaka, 1905
Yodoyabashi Bridge

Artist Unknown
Publisher Ueda
Medium Postcard
Period Meiji
Location Osaka
Image No. 70219-0003
Purchase Digital File
Author

People and a streetcar cross Yodabashi Bridge in Osaka. At first sight an ordinary vintage postcard. But the barely visible building in the center back makes this card special.

The building on the left is the Osaka branch of the Bank of Japan, located on Nakanoshima island. It was designed by Tokyo University Professor Tatsuno Kingo, and completed in January 1903 (Meiji 36).

Across from the Bank of Japan some wooden structures can be seen. Eventually these would be torn down to make way for Osaka City Hall, which was built between 1918 (Taisho 7) and 1921 (Taisho 10).

What makes this postcard so interesting is the arch in the back. This is the Triumphal Arch in Commemoration of the Victory in the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905). The arch was constructed by the Osaka city government on November 30, 1905 (Meiji 38) on the south-east end of Oebashi Bridge on what is now Midosuji Avenue for a total cost of ¥5,000.

110707-0026 - Triumphal Arch in Commeration of the Victory in the Russo-Japanese War
Triumphal Arch (凱旋門, gaisenmon) on the south-east end of Osaka's Oebashi, 1905 (Meiji 38).

Intended as a temporary construction, it consisted of a framework of wood covered with plaster. Returning Japanese troops marched from Osaka Harbor and passed under it on their way to Osaka Station in Umeda, all the while being cheered by Osaka citizens.

On December 26, only one month after its construction, the Triumphal Arch was destroyed by fire. Neighboring roofs crowded with spectators, the Osaka Fire Department tried heroically to extinguish the fire. But although they put the fire out after one hour, they failed to save the structure.

The Osaka Gas Company which had installed 20 gas lamps on the sides of the arch, was held responsible. The company offered a donation of ¥4,000 for the construction of a new arch, which was completed in March, 1906. Around summer of that year the arch was pulled down.1

Nowadays very few people know that Osaka ever had a Triumphal Arch. People think of Paris or Rome for such things, Osaka is the very last place that comes to mind.

Map of Osaka, 1903
1903 (Meiji 36) Map of Osaka: 1. Dojima; 2. Dojimagawa River; 3. Tosabori River; 4. Oebashi Bridge; 5. Bank of Japan; 6. Yodoyabashi Bridge; 7. Nakanoshima; 8. Osaka Hotel; 9. Naniwabashi Bridge

see current map

Notes

1 Yomiuri Shimbun Shakaibu (1987). Scenes of Naniwa: Osaka Time Tunnel. Warajiya Publishing Co., Ltd, 101-104.

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Old Photos of Japan aims to be your personal museum for Japan's visual heritage and to bring the experiences of everyday life in old Japan to you.

To enhance our understanding of Japanese culture and society I track down, acquire, archive, and research images of everyday life, and give them context.

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Thank you,
Kjeld Duits

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Reference for Citations

Duits, Kjeld (). Osaka, 1905: Yodoyabashi Bridge, OLD PHOTOS of JAPAN. Retrieved on April 19, 2024 (GMT) from https://www.oldphotosjapan.com/photos/815/yodoyabashi-bridge

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