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Jujiro Wada

Jujiro Wada (Japanese: 和田重次郎) (ca. 1872-5 March 1937) was a Japanese adventurer and entrepreneur who achieved fame for his exploits in turn-of-the-20th-century Alaska and Yukon Territory.

Jujiro Wada, circa 1908. A copy of this photo appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer on July 5, 1908. At the time, Wada was said to stand about 5'2" tall, and weigh about 140 pounds.

Early life edit

According to his own account, Wada was born on February 12, 1872,[1] in Ehime Prefecture, Japan, to wealthy parents. Wada said that he arrived in San Francisco in late 1891, and that his purpose of traveling to the United States was to attend Yale University.[2]

Researcher Yuji Tani provides an alternative story. According to Tani, Wada was born on January 6, 1875, in Komatsu, Ehime Prefecture. He was the second son of a former samurai fallen on hard times, and his father died when Jujiro was four. Subsequently, Jujiro and his mother went to live with his mother's relatives in what is today Matsuyama City. In 1886, when he was 13 or 14 years of age (by Japanese counting, which would mean 12 or 13 by American), Jujiro went to work at Toda-Seishi Company, which was a local paper factory. In 1890, he went to work for the Yamaya Transport Company in Mitsuhama. Meanwhile, he heard tales about the fabulous wealth of America.[3]

According to subsequent US immigration data, Wada took a steamship to San Francisco in March 1890.[4] However, according to his own account, he stowed away aboard a ship out of Kobe in 1891.[3]

Whaling edit

Wada was a cabin boy and cook aboard the Pacific Steam Whaling Company's bark Balaena from March 1892 until October 1894. During this time, the ship was hunting baleen whales in the North Pacific and Arctic Oceans.[5] Wada learned English during this voyage. His teacher was the ship's master, H. Havelock Norwood.[6][7]

Wada returned to Alaska in 1895, this time as a shore hunter at Utqiagvik.[3] Shore hunters hunted whales using land-based boats, and also hunted caribou with which to provision visiting whale ships. Wada worked for the Cape Smythe Whaling and Trading Company. The local manager was Charles Brower.[8] This is probably when and where Wada learned to handle sled dogs and speak Alaska native languages.

In 1896, Wada returned to Japan to see his mother. He was in Japan about three months.[3]

Following his trip to Japan, Wada returned to Alaska, where he went back to working as a shore whaler at Utqiagvik.[9] In September 1897, an early freeze trapped eight ships of the U.S. whaling fleet in the ice off Point Barrow. Naturalist Edward Avery "Ned" McIlhenny (of the Tabasco sauce family) and two assistants were then living at the Point Barrow refuge station, and during the next few months, the McIlhenny party and the Barrow shore whalers helped the crews of the stranded whale ships.[10]

Prospector and cook edit

Wada was in San Francisco during 1898-1899,[11] and in August 1914, a young girl from San Francisco calling herself Helen Wada Silveira wrote the postmaster in Fairbanks, claiming to be Wada's daughter. She wrote a message to the Fairbanks Times and when presented to him by an acquaintance, Wada replied back, calling her "Himeko."[12] Her sixteen children and their families live throughout Northern California today.

Wada was in Nome during 1901.[11][13] He apparently spent the winter of 1901-1902 in Seattle, because on May 26, 1902, he arrived in Skagway on a steamer out of Seattle.[14]

From Skagway, Wada caught a different ship to St. Michael, and then took a gasoline launch up the Koyukuk River. In August 1902, Wada took a job as a cook for E.T. Barnette, who had established a trading post on the banks of the Chena River that subsequently became the site of modern Fairbanks.[15][16]

Fairbanks edit

On December 28, 1902, Wada drove one of Barnette's dog teams into Dawson City to tell the Canadians about the recent gold strikes near Fairbanks.[17] Reporter Casey Moran of the Yukon Sun subsequently wrote a front-page story whose headline screamed "Rich Strike Made in the Tanana."[14] The story caused several hundred miners to leave Dawson City for Fairbanks, where most were disappointed to find that prices were high and the best sites were already staked. An angry mob approached Barnette's store, and threatened violence against both Barnette and Wada. Nonetheless, said Wada in September 1907:[18]

The story that I was about to be hanged for causing a thought-to-be-fake stampede was not correct. The fact is that the miners held a meeting to decide as to the price of flour then being offered by one of the trading companies. They thought the price exorbitant. It was rumored that the miners had a rope on my neck, and were about to hoist me. Now that is not true. The other part of the story, that I showed a copy of the [Seattle] Post-Intelligencer saying that several years before I had rescued a party of shipwrecked whalers in the Arctic in dead of winter is true. I did show that paper to let some of the boys know I had been up North, but it was not in a plea to save my neck.

More trials edit

 
Seal hunting in the Arctic

After this experience, Wada left Fairbanks for Nome, where, in July 1903, he was arrested on the charge of failing to report the sale of 40 mink pelts. He paid the fine, and left town.[19]

During the winter of 1904-1905, Wada was hunting seals along the Beaufort Sea.[20] He was accompanied by several Indians. In August 1906, he was back in Nome. He promptly lost the money he'd made selling pelts in a card game, and he was arrested yet again, this time because some of the money he'd lost belonged to his Indian companions. The two Indians testified against him, but an all-white jury acquitted him anyway.[21] Wada was arrested a third time, in Candle, on the same charges, and he spent the rest of the year in and out of court.[6]

Marathon runner edit

Needing money to pay his lawyers, Wada began running indoor marathon races. These were gambling events, in which prizes were measured in thousands of dollars. Wada ran well, too, winning a Nome marathon in March 1907.[22] Said the Dawson Daily News on May 6, 1908:

All the Japanese boys in town had wagered their last cent of money on their fellow countryman, and their confidence in their man was never lost. Wada was the surprise of the race. Many people believed that he would make a strong showing, but only a few had given the dark-skinned boy credit for the wonderful powers of endurance which he displayed ... During the entire race he was off the track but once -- and for only six minutes, the actual time consumed in changing his shoes. While on the run he ate a little raw egg and some tomato, drank a little mineral water, and that was all.

In August 1907, Wada took his money to Vancouver, British Columbia. The Vancouver Daily Province of August 7, 1907 reported that Wada was a fine storyteller, a favorite being the one about the time he trained two polar bear cubs to pull his sled.

After a month in Vancouver, Wada returned to Dawson City. He secured a dog team, and then drove to Rampart, Alaska, to do some prospecting.[23] He visited whalers wintering at Herschel Island on March 15, 1908.[24] He left the whalers on March 21, and returned to Dawson City via Rampart House, Yukon Territory. It was on this trip that Wada, running short of dog food, reportedly fed the animals his sealskin pants. "Fortunately," he said, "the spring days were so warm that I did not suffer so keenly as such a sacrifice would have entailed in winter."[23] Then, after filing some mining claims and buying a new worsted suit and brown derby, Wada caught a series of steamers to Nome.[25]

Wada left Nome on December 18, 1908, and arrived in Fairbanks on January 11, 1909. This meant his sustained rate by dog team was about 35 miles per day. The reason for this haste was an indoor marathon scheduled for January 15, 1909. Wada finished second.[26]

Wada signed up to run in Fairbanks' Independence Day Marathon, which was scheduled for July 1, 1909, but he fell ill and so didn't participate.[27][28] After recovering, Wada went south, to run in more long-distance races. On October 7, 1909, he ran a 20-mile race in Vancouver, British Columbia. He lost.[29] He was scheduled to run an officially sanctioned marathon in Seattle on October 17, but did not. The winner, Henri St. Yves, set a world record in that race (2 hours, 32 minutes, 9 and 1/5 seconds).[30]

Establishing the Iditarod Trail edit

 
Street scene in Seward, Alaska, between 1910 and 1914.

Wada left Seattle on November 24, 1909. The Seattle Times published later that day recorded his departure. Said the newspaper article:

Clad in a suit of blue serge with white starched collar, Jayerio [sic] Wada, a well known Japanese Alaskan musher, who left for Seward on the Yucatan, of the Alaska Steamship Company, this morning, resembled an agent for an Oriental firm rather than a veteran adventurer ... Wada, as he ran up the gang plank, was recognized by several Alaskans, who were on the pier to witness the sailing of the steamship, he turned and said: 'Good luck everybody. Follow me and you all will have money.'

After arriving in Seward, Wada and Alfred Lowell, Dick Butler, and Frank Cotter helped pioneer the Iditarod Trail.[31] After finishing this project, Wada returned to Seattle. From Seattle, he went to Louisiana, where he visited Edward McIlhenny, probably to raise money for further expeditions.[27] He returned to Alaska via Seattle in April 1911.[32]

In early 1912, Wada was in the Kuskokwim area, looking for traces of a Japanese man known locally as Allen, who had disappeared there. On March 11, 1912, Wada was in Iditarod.[33] In July 1912, he and his partner, John Baird, made a gold strike on the Tulasak River.[34] Wada took about $12,000 in gold with him when he went to Seattle to report the findings to his backers, who included McIlhenny and the Guggenheim brothers.[35]

Wada returned to Seward in November 1912. He brought with him two sled loads of mining equipment, another sled load of miscellaneous supplies, and four Japanese companions who would serve as assistant dog drivers.[36] The Japanese and their twenty dogs then drove to the Bear Creek strike. Wada remained at the Bear Creek site until February 1913.[37]

Late life edit

Wada went to Seattle for a short while, then he returned to Alaska in May 1913.[38] That same year, he was described in John Underwood's Alaska, an Empire in the Making, as one of Alaska's best long-distance dog sled drivers.[39]

In 1915, a man named Ernest Blue wrote in the Cordova Daily Times that Wada was a Japanese spy asserting that Blue had seen cash and a map of Alaska in Wada's possession.[3] This story reappeared in 1923 and during WWII.[40] During May 1915, Wada was in San Pedro, California, working at Van Camp's tuna packing plant, but left town swiftly after receiving a phone call. As with many stories about Wada, the published accounts are contradictory. In the Seattle Times on May 15, 1916, Wada insisted the phone call was a job offer in Alaska, and he traveled to New York. However, on page 217 of Tani, 1995, Wada wrote a letter to his friend Sunada, written on Van Camp Sea Food Company stationery. that reads, "Sorry to say but I am compelled to leave here ... otherwise they will kill me."[41]

During 1917-1918, Wada resumed prospecting in the Yukon, mostly along High Cache Creek. In 1919, he went to the Northwest Territories.

On September 6, 1920, he entered New York State via Niagara Falls. He listed his last residence as Herschel Island, Northwest Territories, and his employer as E.F. Lufkin. He listed his height as 5'2", his hair as black, and his complexion as dark.[42]

From 1920-1923, he was trapping foxes on the Upper Porcupine. He also searched for gold around Herschel Island and for oil around Fort Norman (modern Norman Wells).[43] His business partners during this time included the veteran trader Poole Field.[44][45][46][47]

Wada left Canada in April 1923.[48] On May 3, 1923, he arrived at Ketchikan aboard the SS Princess Mary. He listed himself as a citizen of Canada, but was not allowed entry into Alaska because he had no passport.[49]

His subsequent whereabouts are not currently documented, but in 1930, he was in Chicago, Illinois. In May 1934, he was in Seattle, having recently arrived from San Francisco. During January 1936, he was in Green River, Wyoming. During the winter of 1936-1937, he was in Redding, California.[50]

He died at the San Diego County hospital on March 5, 1937. The cause of death was listed as peritonitis caused by diverticulitis.[1]

Wada was buried at county expense, probably in the city-owned Mount Hope cemetery. But he was not forgotten, at least not in Alaska and the Yukon, and in 2007, a Yukon Quest sled dog race was dedicated to his memory.[51]

References edit

  1. ^ a b County of San Diego--Standard Certificate of Death #37-023109, filed March 11, 1937.
  2. ^ Cotter, Frank. "Ju Wada As I Knew Him," Japanese-American Courier, July 3, 1937, p 2.
  3. ^ a b c d e Miyahara, Fumiko. "The tale of the Yukon's dog-mushing Samurai," Yukon News, March 13, 1996, 14, summarizing the Japanese-language Orora ni kakeru samurai (Samurai Who Ran to the Northern Lights) by Yuji Tani. Japan: Yama to Keikoku, 1995; Ronald Inouye, "Jujiro Wada: musher, long distance runner, and Fairbanks co-founder?" Fairbanks News-Miner, September 13, 2009, http://newsminer.com/news/2009/sep/13/jujiro-wada-musher-long-distance-runner-and-fairba/[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ Ancestry.com. Border Crossings: From Canada to U.S., 1895-1956 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007. Arrival date September 6, 1920, age 46, born about 1874, in Iyo, Japan.
  5. ^ Dates of service are from John R. Bockstoce, Steam Whaling in the Western Arctic. New Bedford, Massachusetts: Old Dartmouth Historical Society, 1977, p. 114.
  6. ^ a b DeArmond, Robert N. "This is My Country," Alaska Magazine, March 1988, pp. 37-38.
  7. ^ A photo of Wada in Dawson City appears on a site dedicated to H. H. Norwood.[1]
  8. ^ Brower, Charles D. Fifty Years Below Zero: A Lifetime of Adventure in the Far North. Fairbanks: University of Alaska Press, 1994.
  9. ^ Dawson Daily News, October 18, 1909; Dawson Daily News, January 11, 1913; Seattle Times, May 9, 1916. Wada's accounts of his participation appear in Seattle Times, September 18, 1909, and Dawson Daily News, September 22, 1909.
  10. ^ Bockstoce, John. "The Arctic Whaling Disaster of 1897," Arctic Whaling, 1977, pp. 27-42.
  11. ^ a b Kagan, Norm. "Wada the Wanderer." Archived 2013-02-22 at archive.today
  12. ^ Dawson Daily News, September 5, 1914; Fairbanks Times, August 5, 1914.
  13. ^ Seattle Post-Intelligencer, July 21, 1912.
  14. ^ a b Yukon Sun, January 17, 1903.
  15. ^ Cole, Terrence. E.T. Barnette: The Strange Man Who Founded Fairbanks. Anchorage, Alaska: Northwest Publishing Co., 1981.
  16. ^ Hedrick, Basil & Savage, Susan. "Steamboats on the Chena: The Founding & Development of Fairbanks, Alaska." Epicenter Press, Inc., 1988.
  17. ^ A photo of Barnette's dog team appears on page 217 of E. Tappan Adney, The Klondike Stampede, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1994. The rig shows five dogs in a row, but a photo of the fan harness that Wada often used appears on pages 219-220.
  18. ^ Dawson Daily News, September 28, 1907.
  19. ^ Seattle Times, July 27, 1903.
  20. ^ Yukon Daily News, September 22, 1909.
  21. ^ Dawson Daily News, December 10, 1906.
  22. ^ Hunt, William R. North of 53 Degrees: The Wild Days of the Alaska-Yukon Mining Frontier. New York: Macmillan, 1974, 163.
  23. ^ a b Dawson Daily News, April 27, 1908.
  24. ^ Dawson Daily News, April 28, 1908.
  25. ^ Dawson Daily News, April 29, 1908; Seattle Post-Intelligencer, July 5, 1908.
  26. ^ Dawson Daily News, February 2, 1909; Seward Weekly Gateway, January 30, 1909; Yukon World, January 30, 1909.
  27. ^ a b Dawson Daily News, July 8, 1912[permanent dead link]
  28. ^ Seattle Times, August 19, 1909.
  29. ^ Seattle Times, October 8, 1909.
  30. ^ Seattle Times, October 18, 1909.
  31. ^ Seward Weekly Gateway, December 4, 1909; Seward Weekly Gateway, January 15, 1910; Seward Weekly Gateway, February 5, 1910; Frank Cotter, Japanese-American Courier, July 17, 1937.
  32. ^ Seattle Times, April 11, 1911; Seattle Times, July 12, 1912.
  33. ^ Fairbanks Daily Times, March 12, 1912.
  34. ^ Fairbanks Daily Times, June 15, 1912; Seattle Post-Intelligencer, July 21, 1912.
  35. ^ Seattle Times, October 30, 1912; Letter of Agreement between Jujiro Wada and E.A. McIlhenny dated September 14, 1912, in McIlhenny Company Archives; Mary J. Barry. Seward, Alaska: A History of the Gateway City, Part I: Prehistory to 1914. Anchorage, Alaska: Self-published, 1987.
  36. ^ Seattle Times, November 23, 1912; Dawson Daily News, January 11, 1913.
  37. ^ Fairbanks Daily Times, February 18, 1913.
  38. ^ Seattle Times, May 2, 1913.
  39. ^ Underwood, John Jasper. Alaska, an Empire in the Making. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co., 1913, pp. 320-321.[2]
  40. ^ "How the Japs Spied on Alaska 50 Years Ago," The American Weekly, date unknown but circa 1943.
  41. ^ Tani, Yuji. Samurai Who Ran to the Northern Lights. Japan: Yama to Keikoku, 1995.
  42. ^ Ancestry.com. Border Crossings: From Canada to U.S., 1895-1956 (database on-line). Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007.
  43. ^ Newport, Rhode Island, Mercury, December 17, 1921.
  44. ^ Daniel, Hawthorne. "The Canadian Oil Rush, Limited," World's Work, 43, December 1921; Winnipeg Evening Tribune, March 22, 1922.
  45. ^ Northwest Territories Archives 2011-05-11 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ Struzik, Ed. Ten Rivers: Adventure Stories from the Arctic. Winnipeg, Manitoba: CanWest Books, 2005, p. 23.
  47. ^ Film of Poole Field 2007-07-27 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ Dawson Daily News, May 17, 1923.
  49. ^ Ancestry.com. Alaska Alien Arrivals, 1906-1949 (database on-line). Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006. Original data: Alaska. Alphabetical Index of Alien Arrivals at Eagle, Hyder, Ketchikan, Nome, and Skagway, Alaska, June 1906-August 1946. Washington, D.C.: National Archives. Micropublication M2016. 1 roll.
  50. ^ Svinth, Joseph R. "Tall Tales and True Stories: Ju Wada, Sourdough," unpublished paper read for the Alaska Historical Society, September 2002.
  51. ^ "Yukon Quest - East Meets West at the Yukon Quest." January 25, 2007 September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • Jujiro Wada Memorial Association

jujiro, wada, japanese, 和田重次郎, 1872, march, 1937, japanese, adventurer, entrepreneur, achieved, fame, exploits, turn, 20th, century, alaska, yukon, territory, circa, 1908, copy, this, photo, appeared, seattle, post, intelligencer, july, 1908, time, wada, said,. Jujiro Wada Japanese 和田重次郎 ca 1872 5 March 1937 was a Japanese adventurer and entrepreneur who achieved fame for his exploits in turn of the 20th century Alaska and Yukon Territory Jujiro Wada circa 1908 A copy of this photo appeared in the Seattle Post Intelligencer on July 5 1908 At the time Wada was said to stand about 5 2 tall and weigh about 140 pounds Contents 1 Early life 2 Whaling 3 Prospector and cook 4 Fairbanks 5 More trials 6 Marathon runner 7 Establishing the Iditarod Trail 8 Late life 9 References 10 External linksEarly life editAccording to his own account Wada was born on February 12 1872 1 in Ehime Prefecture Japan to wealthy parents Wada said that he arrived in San Francisco in late 1891 and that his purpose of traveling to the United States was to attend Yale University 2 Researcher Yuji Tani provides an alternative story According to Tani Wada was born on January 6 1875 in Komatsu Ehime Prefecture He was the second son of a former samurai fallen on hard times and his father died when Jujiro was four Subsequently Jujiro and his mother went to live with his mother s relatives in what is today Matsuyama City In 1886 when he was 13 or 14 years of age by Japanese counting which would mean 12 or 13 by American Jujiro went to work at Toda Seishi Company which was a local paper factory In 1890 he went to work for the Yamaya Transport Company in Mitsuhama Meanwhile he heard tales about the fabulous wealth of America 3 According to subsequent US immigration data Wada took a steamship to San Francisco in March 1890 4 However according to his own account he stowed away aboard a ship out of Kobe in 1891 3 Whaling editWada was a cabin boy and cook aboard the Pacific Steam Whaling Company s bark Balaena from March 1892 until October 1894 During this time the ship was hunting baleen whales in the North Pacific and Arctic Oceans 5 Wada learned English during this voyage His teacher was the ship s master H Havelock Norwood 6 7 Wada returned to Alaska in 1895 this time as a shore hunter at Utqiagvik 3 Shore hunters hunted whales using land based boats and also hunted caribou with which to provision visiting whale ships Wada worked for the Cape Smythe Whaling and Trading Company The local manager was Charles Brower 8 This is probably when and where Wada learned to handle sled dogs and speak Alaska native languages In 1896 Wada returned to Japan to see his mother He was in Japan about three months 3 Following his trip to Japan Wada returned to Alaska where he went back to working as a shore whaler at Utqiagvik 9 In September 1897 an early freeze trapped eight ships of the U S whaling fleet in the ice off Point Barrow Naturalist Edward Avery Ned McIlhenny of the Tabasco sauce family and two assistants were then living at the Point Barrow refuge station and during the next few months the McIlhenny party and the Barrow shore whalers helped the crews of the stranded whale ships 10 Prospector and cook editWada was in San Francisco during 1898 1899 11 and in August 1914 a young girl from San Francisco calling herself Helen Wada Silveira wrote the postmaster in Fairbanks claiming to be Wada s daughter She wrote a message to the Fairbanks Times and when presented to him by an acquaintance Wada replied back calling her Himeko 12 Her sixteen children and their families live throughout Northern California today Wada was in Nome during 1901 11 13 He apparently spent the winter of 1901 1902 in Seattle because on May 26 1902 he arrived in Skagway on a steamer out of Seattle 14 From Skagway Wada caught a different ship to St Michael and then took a gasoline launch up the Koyukuk River In August 1902 Wada took a job as a cook for E T Barnette who had established a trading post on the banks of the Chena River that subsequently became the site of modern Fairbanks 15 16 Fairbanks editOn December 28 1902 Wada drove one of Barnette s dog teams into Dawson City to tell the Canadians about the recent gold strikes near Fairbanks 17 Reporter Casey Moran of the Yukon Sun subsequently wrote a front page story whose headline screamed Rich Strike Made in the Tanana 14 The story caused several hundred miners to leave Dawson City for Fairbanks where most were disappointed to find that prices were high and the best sites were already staked An angry mob approached Barnette s store and threatened violence against both Barnette and Wada Nonetheless said Wada in September 1907 18 The story that I was about to be hanged for causing a thought to be fake stampede was not correct The fact is that the miners held a meeting to decide as to the price of flour then being offered by one of the trading companies They thought the price exorbitant It was rumored that the miners had a rope on my neck and were about to hoist me Now that is not true The other part of the story that I showed a copy of the Seattle Post Intelligencer saying that several years before I had rescued a party of shipwrecked whalers in the Arctic in dead of winter is true I did show that paper to let some of the boys know I had been up North but it was not in a plea to save my neck More trials edit nbsp Seal hunting in the ArcticAfter this experience Wada left Fairbanks for Nome where in July 1903 he was arrested on the charge of failing to report the sale of 40 mink pelts He paid the fine and left town 19 During the winter of 1904 1905 Wada was hunting seals along the Beaufort Sea 20 He was accompanied by several Indians In August 1906 he was back in Nome He promptly lost the money he d made selling pelts in a card game and he was arrested yet again this time because some of the money he d lost belonged to his Indian companions The two Indians testified against him but an all white jury acquitted him anyway 21 Wada was arrested a third time in Candle on the same charges and he spent the rest of the year in and out of court 6 Marathon runner editNeeding money to pay his lawyers Wada began running indoor marathon races These were gambling events in which prizes were measured in thousands of dollars Wada ran well too winning a Nome marathon in March 1907 22 Said the Dawson Daily News on May 6 1908 All the Japanese boys in town had wagered their last cent of money on their fellow countryman and their confidence in their man was never lost Wada was the surprise of the race Many people believed that he would make a strong showing but only a few had given the dark skinned boy credit for the wonderful powers of endurance which he displayed During the entire race he was off the track but once and for only six minutes the actual time consumed in changing his shoes While on the run he ate a little raw egg and some tomato drank a little mineral water and that was all In August 1907 Wada took his money to Vancouver British Columbia The Vancouver Daily Province of August 7 1907 reported that Wada was a fine storyteller a favorite being the one about the time he trained two polar bear cubs to pull his sled After a month in Vancouver Wada returned to Dawson City He secured a dog team and then drove to Rampart Alaska to do some prospecting 23 He visited whalers wintering at Herschel Island on March 15 1908 24 He left the whalers on March 21 and returned to Dawson City via Rampart House Yukon Territory It was on this trip that Wada running short of dog food reportedly fed the animals his sealskin pants Fortunately he said the spring days were so warm that I did not suffer so keenly as such a sacrifice would have entailed in winter 23 Then after filing some mining claims and buying a new worsted suit and brown derby Wada caught a series of steamers to Nome 25 Wada left Nome on December 18 1908 and arrived in Fairbanks on January 11 1909 This meant his sustained rate by dog team was about 35 miles per day The reason for this haste was an indoor marathon scheduled for January 15 1909 Wada finished second 26 Wada signed up to run in Fairbanks Independence Day Marathon which was scheduled for July 1 1909 but he fell ill and so didn t participate 27 28 After recovering Wada went south to run in more long distance races On October 7 1909 he ran a 20 mile race in Vancouver British Columbia He lost 29 He was scheduled to run an officially sanctioned marathon in Seattle on October 17 but did not The winner Henri St Yves set a world record in that race 2 hours 32 minutes 9 and 1 5 seconds 30 Establishing the Iditarod Trail edit nbsp Street scene in Seward Alaska between 1910 and 1914 Wada left Seattle on November 24 1909 The Seattle Times published later that day recorded his departure Said the newspaper article Clad in a suit of blue serge with white starched collar Jayerio sic Wada a well known Japanese Alaskan musher who left for Seward on the Yucatan of the Alaska Steamship Company this morning resembled an agent for an Oriental firm rather than a veteran adventurer Wada as he ran up the gang plank was recognized by several Alaskans who were on the pier to witness the sailing of the steamship he turned and said Good luck everybody Follow me and you all will have money After arriving in Seward Wada and Alfred Lowell Dick Butler and Frank Cotter helped pioneer the Iditarod Trail 31 After finishing this project Wada returned to Seattle From Seattle he went to Louisiana where he visited Edward McIlhenny probably to raise money for further expeditions 27 He returned to Alaska via Seattle in April 1911 32 In early 1912 Wada was in the Kuskokwim area looking for traces of a Japanese man known locally as Allen who had disappeared there On March 11 1912 Wada was in Iditarod 33 In July 1912 he and his partner John Baird made a gold strike on the Tulasak River 34 Wada took about 12 000 in gold with him when he went to Seattle to report the findings to his backers who included McIlhenny and the Guggenheim brothers 35 Wada returned to Seward in November 1912 He brought with him two sled loads of mining equipment another sled load of miscellaneous supplies and four Japanese companions who would serve as assistant dog drivers 36 The Japanese and their twenty dogs then drove to the Bear Creek strike Wada remained at the Bear Creek site until February 1913 37 Late life editWada went to Seattle for a short while then he returned to Alaska in May 1913 38 That same year he was described in John Underwood s Alaska an Empire in the Making as one of Alaska s best long distance dog sled drivers 39 In 1915 a man named Ernest Blue wrote in the Cordova Daily Times that Wada was a Japanese spy asserting that Blue had seen cash and a map of Alaska in Wada s possession 3 This story reappeared in 1923 and during WWII 40 During May 1915 Wada was in San Pedro California working at Van Camp s tuna packing plant but left town swiftly after receiving a phone call As with many stories about Wada the published accounts are contradictory In the Seattle Times on May 15 1916 Wada insisted the phone call was a job offer in Alaska and he traveled to New York However on page 217 of Tani 1995 Wada wrote a letter to his friend Sunada written on Van Camp Sea Food Company stationery that reads Sorry to say but I am compelled to leave here otherwise they will kill me 41 During 1917 1918 Wada resumed prospecting in the Yukon mostly along High Cache Creek In 1919 he went to the Northwest Territories On September 6 1920 he entered New York State via Niagara Falls He listed his last residence as Herschel Island Northwest Territories and his employer as E F Lufkin He listed his height as 5 2 his hair as black and his complexion as dark 42 From 1920 1923 he was trapping foxes on the Upper Porcupine He also searched for gold around Herschel Island and for oil around Fort Norman modern Norman Wells 43 His business partners during this time included the veteran trader Poole Field 44 45 46 47 Wada left Canada in April 1923 48 On May 3 1923 he arrived at Ketchikan aboard the SS Princess Mary He listed himself as a citizen of Canada but was not allowed entry into Alaska because he had no passport 49 His subsequent whereabouts are not currently documented but in 1930 he was in Chicago Illinois In May 1934 he was in Seattle having recently arrived from San Francisco During January 1936 he was in Green River Wyoming During the winter of 1936 1937 he was in Redding California 50 He died at the San Diego County hospital on March 5 1937 The cause of death was listed as peritonitis caused by diverticulitis 1 Wada was buried at county expense probably in the city owned Mount Hope cemetery But he was not forgotten at least not in Alaska and the Yukon and in 2007 a Yukon Quest sled dog race was dedicated to his memory 51 References edit a b County of San Diego Standard Certificate of Death 37 023109 filed March 11 1937 Cotter Frank Ju Wada As I Knew Him Japanese American Courier July 3 1937 p 2 a b c d e Miyahara Fumiko The tale of the Yukon s dog mushing Samurai Yukon News March 13 1996 14 summarizing the Japanese language Orora ni kakeru samurai Samurai Who Ran to the Northern Lights by Yuji Tani Japan Yama to Keikoku 1995 Ronald Inouye Jujiro Wada musher long distance runner and Fairbanks co founder Fairbanks News Miner September 13 2009 http newsminer com news 2009 sep 13 jujiro wada musher long distance runner and fairba permanent dead link Ancestry com Border Crossings From Canada to U S 1895 1956 database on line Provo UT USA The Generations Network Inc 2007 Arrival date September 6 1920 age 46 born about 1874 in Iyo Japan Dates of service are from John R Bockstoce Steam Whaling in the Western Arctic New Bedford Massachusetts Old Dartmouth Historical Society 1977 p 114 a b DeArmond Robert N This is My Country Alaska Magazine March 1988 pp 37 38 A photo of Wada in Dawson City appears on a site dedicated to H H Norwood 1 Brower Charles D Fifty Years Below Zero A Lifetime of Adventure in the Far North Fairbanks University of Alaska Press 1994 Dawson Daily News October 18 1909 Dawson Daily News January 11 1913 Seattle Times May 9 1916 Wada s accounts of his participation appear in Seattle Times September 18 1909 and Dawson Daily News September 22 1909 Bockstoce John The Arctic Whaling Disaster of 1897 Arctic Whaling 1977 pp 27 42 a b Kagan Norm Wada the Wanderer Archived 2013 02 22 at archive today Dawson Daily News September 5 1914 Fairbanks Times August 5 1914 Seattle Post Intelligencer July 21 1912 a b Yukon Sun January 17 1903 Cole Terrence E T Barnette The Strange Man Who Founded Fairbanks Anchorage Alaska Northwest Publishing Co 1981 Hedrick Basil amp Savage Susan Steamboats on the Chena The Founding amp Development of Fairbanks Alaska Epicenter Press Inc 1988 A photo of Barnette s dog team appears on page 217 of E Tappan Adney The Klondike Stampede Vancouver University of British Columbia Press 1994 The rig shows five dogs in a row but a photo of the fan harness that Wada often used appears on pages 219 220 Dawson Daily News September 28 1907 Seattle Times July 27 1903 Yukon Daily News September 22 1909 Dawson Daily News December 10 1906 Hunt William R North of 53 Degrees The Wild Days of the Alaska Yukon Mining Frontier New York Macmillan 1974 163 a b Dawson Daily News April 27 1908 Dawson Daily News April 28 1908 Dawson Daily News April 29 1908 Seattle Post Intelligencer July 5 1908 Dawson Daily News February 2 1909 Seward Weekly Gateway January 30 1909 Yukon World January 30 1909 a b Dawson Daily News July 8 1912 permanent dead link Seattle Times August 19 1909 Seattle Times October 8 1909 Seattle Times October 18 1909 Seward Weekly Gateway December 4 1909 Seward Weekly Gateway January 15 1910 Seward Weekly Gateway February 5 1910 Frank Cotter Japanese American Courier July 17 1937 Seattle Times April 11 1911 Seattle Times July 12 1912 Fairbanks Daily Times March 12 1912 Fairbanks Daily Times June 15 1912 Seattle Post Intelligencer July 21 1912 Seattle Times October 30 1912 Letter of Agreement between Jujiro Wada and E A McIlhenny dated September 14 1912 in McIlhenny Company Archives Mary J Barry Seward Alaska A History of the Gateway City Part I Prehistory to 1914 Anchorage Alaska Self published 1987 Seattle Times November 23 1912 Dawson Daily News January 11 1913 Fairbanks Daily Times February 18 1913 Seattle Times May 2 1913 Underwood John Jasper Alaska an Empire in the Making New York Dodd Mead and Co 1913 pp 320 321 2 How the Japs Spied on Alaska 50 Years Ago The American Weekly date unknown but circa 1943 Tani Yuji Samurai Who Ran to the Northern Lights Japan Yama to Keikoku 1995 Ancestry com Border Crossings From Canada to U S 1895 1956 database on line Provo UT USA The Generations Network Inc 2007 Newport Rhode Island Mercury December 17 1921 Daniel Hawthorne The Canadian Oil Rush Limited World s Work 43 December 1921 Winnipeg Evening Tribune March 22 1922 Northwest Territories Archives Archived 2011 05 11 at the Wayback Machine Struzik Ed Ten Rivers Adventure Stories from the Arctic Winnipeg Manitoba CanWest Books 2005 p 23 Film of Poole Field Archived 2007 07 27 at the Wayback Machine Dawson Daily News May 17 1923 Ancestry com Alaska Alien Arrivals 1906 1949 database on line Provo UT USA The Generations Network Inc 2006 Original data Alaska Alphabetical Index of Alien Arrivals at Eagle Hyder Ketchikan Nome and Skagway Alaska June 1906 August 1946 Washington D C National Archives Micropublication M2016 1 roll Svinth Joseph R Tall Tales and True Stories Ju Wada Sourdough unpublished paper read for the Alaska Historical Society September 2002 Yukon Quest East Meets West at the Yukon Quest January 25 2007 Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editJujiro Wada Memorial Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jujiro Wada amp oldid 1195927205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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