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William Elliot Griffis

William Elliot Griffis (September 17, 1843 – February 5, 1928) was an American orientalist, Congregational minister, lecturer, and prolific author.[1]

William Elliot Griffis
Born(1843-09-17)September 17, 1843
DiedFebruary 5, 1928(1928-02-05) (aged 84)
NationalityAmerican
Occupations
  • Educator
  • missionary
  • author

Early life

Griffis was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of a sea captain and later a coal trader. During the American Civil War, he served two months as a corporal in Company H of the 44th Pennsylvania Militia after Robert E. Lee invaded Pennsylvania in 1863.[2] After the war, he attended Rutgers University at New Brunswick, New Jersey, graduating in 1869.[1] At Rutgers, Griffis was an English and Latin language tutor for Tarō Kusakabe [ja], a young samurai from the province of Echizen (part of modern Fukui).

After a year of travel in Europe, he studied at the seminary of the Reformed Church in America in New Brunswick (known today as the New Brunswick Theological Seminary).[1]

William Griffis died on February 5, 1928, in Winter Park, Florida; after his death, his body was sent to Schenectady, New York, for burial. He is buried at Vale Cemetery along with his first wife, Katherine Lyra Stanton, his son John and his second wife, Sarah Francis King, after the death of Katherine in 1898 along with several other family members.

Modernizer in Japan

In September 1870 Griffis was invited to Japan by Matsudaira Shungaku, for the purpose of organizing schools along modern lines. In 1871, he was Superintendent of Education in the province of Echizen.[3] In recompense, he was provided with a salary of $2,400, a house in Fukui and a horse.

 
Griffis with a group of his students.

In 1872–74, Griffis taught chemistry[1] and physics at Kaisei Gakkō (the forerunner of Tokyo Imperial University).[3] He prepared the New Japan Series of Reading and Spelling Books, 5 vols. (1872).[1] He also published primers for Japanese students of the English language; and he and contributed to the Japanese press and to newspapers and magazines in the United States numerous papers of importance on Japanese affairs.

Griffis was joined by his sister, Margaret Clark Griffis, who became a teacher at the Tokyo Government Girls' School (later to become the Peeresses' School). By the time they left Japan in 1874, Griffis had befriended many of Japan's future leaders.

Griffis was a member of the Asiatic Society of Japan, the Asiatic Society of Korea, the Historical Society of the Imperial University of Tokyo, and the Meirokusha.[3]

Education and ministry

Returning to the United States, Griffis attended Union Theological Seminary; and after finishing his studies in 1877, he was called to the ministry in a series of churches—at the First Reformed Church, Schenectady, New York (1877–1886); at the Shawmut Congregational Church, Boston, Massachusetts (1886–1893); and at the First Congregational Church, Ithaca, New York (1893–1903). Concurrently, at Union College in 1884, he earned a higher degree, Doctor of Divinity (D.D.). Rutgers awarded him an honorary degree, Doctor of Humane Letters (L.H.D.) in 1899.[3]

Writing and lectures

In 1903 he resigned from the active ministry to devote himself exclusively to writing and lecturing. His books on Japan and Japanese culture were complemented with extensive college and university lecture circuit itineraries. In addition to his own books and articles during this period, he also joined Inazo Nitobe in crafting what became his most well-known book, Bushido: The Soul of Japan.

In 1907, the Japanese government conferred the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, which represents the fourth highest of eight classes associated with the award.[4]

The prolific writer was also a prolific traveller, making eleven trips to Europe—primarily to visit the Netherlands. In 1898, he was present at the enthronement of Queen Wilhelmina;[1] and he attended the Congress of Diplomatic History. He was among the group of Bostonians who wanted to commemorate the Pilgrims' roots in Holland; and the work was rewarded with the dedication of a memorial at Delfshaven and the placement of five other bronze historical tablets in 1909.[3] He was one of four Americans elected to the Netherlands Society of Letters in Leiden.[1]

In 1923 Griffis published "The Story of the Walloons: At Home in Lands of Exile and in America". In this work he reveals the long history and contributions of these Belgians. The last half of the book relates the story of New Belgium (Nova Belgica) in America, the first settlers of Manhattan being a group of Protestant Walloons who petitioned the Dutch West India Company to be sent to establish a colony in the New World. These Walloons were sent to Manhattan as well as to other smaller locations on the Delaware, Hudson and Connecticut Rivers. They sailed out of Leiden, Netherlands in 1624. Griffis draws parallels to the thoughts of government and freedom of the Walloons and the US Constitution of 1787, and how their ideas made a lasting contribution to this country, though at the time (1923) the Walloons were generally unknown and overshadowed by the Dutch and later, English. This remains true to a great degree even today.

In 1926, Griffis was invited to return to Japan; and on this trip, the Japanese government conferred a second decoration. He was presented with the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon, which represents the third highest of eight classes.[4] A private rail car was provided by the Japanese government, and he visited several cities in the course of this return trip.[3]

Griffis was a founding member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters (later to become the American Academy of Arts and Letters), the American Historical Association, and the U.S. Naval Institute. He died at his winter home in Florida in 1928.[3]

Family

One of Griffis' two sons, Stanton Griffis, would become U.S. Ambassador to Poland, Egypt, Spain and Argentina under President Truman. Stanton Griffis was ambassador to Argentina while Juan and Eva Peron were in power and wrote of his experiences in a book titled Lying In State. The other son, John, became a composer.

Honors

Time-line chronology

Griffis' life and publications are here organized chronologically.[4]

  • 1843 - Born September 17 in Philadelphia, the fourth child of seven and second son to John Limeburner Griffis and Anna Maria (Hess) Griffis.
  • 1850 - Observes the launching of the USS Susquehanna in Philadelphia. The Susquehanna, the largest steamship yet commissioned by the US Navy, was to be Commodore Matthew C. Perry's flagship on the 1853-1854 Naval Expedition to Japan.
  • 1860 - Sees the Shogun's Mission, the first Japanese Embassy to the US, when it visits Philadelphia.
  • 1863 - Serves in Pennsylvania's 44th Regiment in the Civil War.
  • 1866 - Enters Rutgers College.
  • 1869 - Graduates with AB (Bachelor of Arts degree) from Rutgers College. In the summer, tours Europe with his sister, Margaret Clark Griffis, and family friend, Edward Warren Clark.
  • 1870 - Sails for Japan to organize schools in Echizen.
  • 1871 - Named Superintendent of Education in Echizen.
  • 1872 - Awarded AM (Master of Arts degree) from Rutgers College. Publishes, in Yokohama, The New Japan Primer and The New Japan Pictorial Primer.
  • 1872-74 - Serves as Professor of Physics at the Imperial University, Tokyo. In 1872, Griffis's sister Margaret Clark Griffis joins him in Tokyo, and is appointed teacher, and then principal, of the first government school for girls (to become the Tokyo Female Normal School).
  • 1873 - Publishes The Tokio Guide and The Yokohama Guide (Yokohama).
  • 1874 - Griffis and Margaret Clark Griffis return to America.
  • 1876 - Publishes The Mikado's Empire.
  • 1877 - Graduates from Union Theological Seminary.
  • 1877-86 - Serves as Pastor of the First Reformed Church, Schenectady, NY
  • 1879 - Marries Katherine L. Stanton (1859–98)
  • 1880 - Publishes Japanese Fairy World: Thirty-five Stories from the Wonderlore of Japan
  • 1882 - Publishes Corea: the Hermit Nation
  • 1883 - Lillian Eyre Griffis (daughter) born in Schenectady
  • 1884 - Awarded DD (Doctorate of Divinity) from Union College
  • 1885 - Publishes Corea: Without and Within
  • 1886-93 - Serves as Pastor of the Shawmut Congregational Church in Boston, MA
  • 1887 - Stanton Griffis (first son) born in Boston. Publishes Matthew Calbraith Perry: A Typical American Naval Officer
  • 1889 - Publishes The Lily Among Thorns: A Study of the Biblical Drama Entitled "The Song of Songs"
  • 1890 - Publishes Honda the Samurai: A Story of Modern Japan[5]
  • 1891 - Publishes Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations, and an edition of The Arabian Nights
  • 1892 - Publishes Japan: In History, Folklore and Art
  • 1893 - John Elliot Griffis (second son) born in Boston
  • 1893-1903 - Serves as Pastor of the First Congregational Church, Ithaca, NY
  • 1894 - Publishes Brave Little Holland and What She Taught Us
  • 1895 - Publishes The Religions of Japan From the Dawn of History to the Era of Meiji: Shinto, Buddhism and Confucianism, and Townsend Harris, First American Envoy in Japan [an edition of Harris's journals]
  • 1897 - Publishes The Romance of Discovery: A Thousand Years of Exploration and the Unveiling of Continents
  • 1898 - Publishes Charles Carlton Coffin: War Correspondent, Traveller, Author and Statesman; The Romance of American Colonization; The Pilgrims in Their Three Homes. Katherine Stanton Griffis dies in Ithaca on December 9
  • 1899 - Publishes America in the East: A Glance at Our History, Prospects, Problems and Duties in the Pacific Ocean; The Romance of Conquest: The Story of American Expansion Through Arms and Diplomacy
  • 1899 - Awarded LHD by Rutgers College
  • 1900 - Marries Sarah Frances King (1868–1959). Publishes The American in Holland: Sentimental Rambles in the Eleven Provinces of the Netherlands; The Pathfinders of the Revolution: A Story of the Great March into the Wilderness and Lake George Region of New York in 1779; and Verbeck of Japan: A Citizen of No Country.
  • 1901 - Publishes In the Mikado's Service: A Story of Two Battle Summers in China.
  • 1902 - Publishes A Maker of the New Orient: Samuel Robbins Brown, Pioneer Educator in China, America, and Japan, the Story of his Life and Work, and Mighty England - Our Old Home.
  • 1903 - Resigns pastorate to write and lecture full-time. Publishes John Chambers: Servant of Christ and Master of Hearts, and his Ministry in Philadelphia; Sunny Memories of Three Pastorates; and Young People's History of Holland.
  • 1904 - Publishes Dux Christus: An Outline Study of Japan.
  • 1907 - Decorated with the Order of the Rising Sun, Fourth Class, by the Emperor of Japan. Publishes The Japanese Nation in Evolution: Steps in the Progress of a Great People, and Christ, the Creator of the New Japan.
  • 1908 - Publishes The Firefly's Lovers and Other Fairy Tales of Old Japan.
  • 1909 - Publishes The Story of New Netherland: The Dutch in America.
  • 1911 - Publishes China's Story in Myth, Legend, Art and Annals, and The Unmannerly Tiger and Other Korean Tales.
  • 1912 - Publishes A Modern Pioneer in Korea: The Life Story of Henry G Appenzeller; Might England: the Story of the English People; The Call of Jesus to Joy; Belgium, the Land of Art.
  • 1913 - Publishes Hepburn of Japan and His Wife and Helpmates: A Life Story of Toil for Christ. Margaret Clark Griffis dies in Ithaca, December 15.
  • 1914 - Publishes The House We Live In, Architect and Tenant: Talks About the Body and the Right Use of It.
  • 1915 - Publishes Millard Fillmore: Constructive Statesman, Defender of the Constitution, President of the US; The Mikado, Institution and Person: A Study of the Internal Political Forces of Japan; The Story of Belgium.
  • 1916 - Publishes Bonnie Scotland and What We Owe Her.
  • 1918 - Publishes Dutch Fairy Tales.
  • 1919 - Publishes Belgian Fairy Tales.
  • 1920 - Publishes Swiss Fairy Tales; Young People's History of the Pilgrims.
  • 1921 - Publishes Welsh Fairy Tales; The Dutch of the Netherlands in the Making of America.
  • 1922 - Publishes Korean Fairy Tales; Japanese Fairy Tales.
  • 1923 - Publishes The Story of the Walloons, at Home, in the Lands of Exile and in America.
  • 1924 - Publishes Proverbs of Japan: A Little Picture of the Japanese Philosophy of Life as Mirrored in Their Proverbs.
  • 1926 - Publishes The American Flag of Stripes and Stars: Mirror of the Nation's History, Symbol of Brotherhood and World Unity.
  • 1926-27 - With Frances King Griffis, journeys to Japan for the second time, stopping in Korea and Manchuria.
  • 1926 - Decorated with the Order of the Rising Sun, Third Class.
  • 1928 - Dies in Winter Park, Florida, February 5.[6]

Published works

  • 1876 -- The Mikado's Empire
  • 1880 -- Japanese Fairy World
  • 1881 -- Asiatic History; China, Korea, and Japan
  • 1882 -- Korea, the Hermit Nation
  • 1885 -- Korea, Without and Within
  • 1887 -- Matthew Calbraith Perry: A Typical American Naval Officer
  • 1889 -- The Lily among Thorns
  • 1890 -- Honda the Samurai: A Story of Modern Japan.
  • 1891 -- Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations
  • 1892 -- Japan in History, Folk-Lore, and Art
  • 1894 -- Brave Little Holland and What she Taught us
  • 1895 -- The Religions of Japan
  • 1895 -- Townsend Harris, First American Envoy in Japan
  • 1897 -- Romance of Discovery
  • 1898 -- Charles Carlton Coffin: War Correspondent, Traveller, Author and Statesman
  • 1898 -- Romance of American Colonization
  • 1898 -- The Pilgrims in their Three Homes
  • 1898 -- The Student's Motley
  • 1899 -- The Romance of Conquest
  • 1899 -- The American in Holland
  • 1899 -- America in the East
  • 1900 -- Verbeck of Japan
  • 1900 -- The Pathfinders of the Revolution
  • 1901 -- In the Mikado's Service
  • 1902 -- A Maker of the New Orient
  • 1903 -- Young People's History of Holland
  • 1903 -- John Chambers
  • 1903 -- Sunny Memories of Three Pastorates
  • 1904 -- Dux Christus: An Outline Study of Japan
  • 1907 -- Japanese Nation in Evolution: Steps in the Progress of a Great People
  • 1908 -- The Fire-fly's Lovers and Other Fairy Tales of Old Japan
  • 1909 -- The Story of New Netherland
  • 1910 -- China's Study in Myth, Legend, Art, and Annuals
  • 1911 -- The Unmannerly Tiger and Other Korean Tales
  • 1912 -- A Modern Pioneer in Korea: The Life Story Of Henry G. Appenzeller
  • 1913 -- Hepburn of Japan
  • 1914 -- The House We Live In Architect and Tenant
  • 1915 -- The Mikado Institution and Person
  • 1915 -- Millard Fillmore: Constructive Statesman, Defender of the Constitution
  • 1916 -- Bonnie Scotland and What We Owe Her
  • 1918 -- Dutch Fairy Tales for young folks
  • 1919 -- Belgian Fairy Tales
  • 1920 -- Young People's History of the Pilgrims
  • 1920 -- Swiss Fairy Tales
  • 1921 -- Welsh Fairy Tales
  • 1921 -- The Dutch of the Netherlands in the Making of America [reprinted by Kessinger Publishing, Whitefish, Montana, 2007. ISBN 978-0-548-61147-0 (paper)]
  • 1922 -- Korean Fairy Tales
  • 1922 -- Japanese Fairy Tales
  • 1923 -- The Story of the Walloons, at Home, in the Lands of Exile and in America [1]
  • 1924 -- Proverbs of Japan: A Little Picture of the Japanese Philosophy of Life as Mirrored in Their Proverbs
  • 1926 -- The American Flag of Stripes and Stars: Mirror of the Nation's History, Symbol of Brotherhood and World Unity

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Brown, John Howard. (1904). "Griffis, William Elliot," The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans. Boston: The Biographical Society.
  2. ^ "Rutgers in the Civil War," Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries Vol. 66 (2014), page 120 http://jrul.libraries.rutgers.edu/index.php/jrul/article/viewFile/1865/3298
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Dr. Griffis, Friend of Japan, Dies; Educator Who Helped Japanese Adapt Themselves to Western Civilization," The New York Times. February 6, 1928.
  4. ^ a b c d e Adam Mathew web. 2008-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Art Notes," The New York Times. December 24, 1890.
  6. ^ http://jrul.libraries.rutgers.edu/index.php/jrul/article/viewFile/1865/3298[bare URL PDF]

Further reading

  • Griffis, William Elliot. (1898). Charles Carlton Coffin: War Correspondent, Traveller, Author and Statesman. Boston: Estes and Lauriat. Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1915). Millard Fillmore: Constructive Statesman, Defender of the Constitution. Ithaca: Aldrus & Church. Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1908). The Fire-fly's Lovers and Other Fairy Tales of Old Japan. New York: Crowell & Company. [reprinted by University Press of the Pacific, 2003. ISBN 1-4102-0957-1], [reprinted by Kessinger Publishing, Whitefish, Montana, 2006. ISBN 1-4286-1402-8], [reprinted by Juniper Grove, 2007. ISBN 978-1-60355-053-6 (paper)] Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1895) Townsend Harris, First American Envoy in Japan. New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company. Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
    • __________. (1919). "Townsend Harris, Center of Japanese Drama; Adventures of First American Envoy to Mikado's Empire Furnish the Basis of a Play by a Native Writer, and Tokio Is Applauding the Stars and Stripes," The New York Times Magazine. December 28, 1919.
  • __________. (1913). Hepburn of Japan and His Wife and Helpmates: A Life Story of Toil for Christ. Philadelphia: Westminster Press. Publishing. Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1890). Honda the Samurai: A Story of Modern Japan. Chicago: Congregational Sunday School and Publishing Society.Digitized, full text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1907). Japanese Nation in Evolution: Steps in the Progress of a Great People. New York: T. Y. Crowell & Company.Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
    • "THE ARYAN STRAIN IN THE JAPANESE; Dr. Griffis Attributes Genius of the Islanders to White Ancestry -- Difficulties of the Thesis". The New York Times. June 27, 1908. Retrieved 2008-08-09. The New York Times. June 27, 1908.
    • "Book reviewThe Japanese Nation in Evolution. Steps in the Progress of a Great People. Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, Vol. 40, No. 4, 256. 1908.
  • __________. (1891). Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company.Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
    • "JOHNSTOWN'S SIR WILLIAM.; SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON AND THE SIX NATIONS. By William Elliot Griffis. (Makers of America Series.) New-York: Dodd, Mead & Co". The New York Times. November 15, 1891. Retrieved 2008-08-09. The New York Times. November 15, 1891.
  • __________. (1876). The Mikado's Empire. Philadelphia: Harper & Brothers. Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1915). The Mikado Institution and Person. Princeton: Princeton University Press. [reprinted by Adamant Media Corporation, New York, 2000. ISBN 978-1-4021-0824-2 (cloth) -- ISBN 978-1-4021-8652-3 (paper). Digitized, limited preview copy of this book
  • _________. (1887). Matthew Calbraith Perry: A Typical American Naval Officer. Boston: Cupples & Hurd. [reprinted by Reprint Services Corp., London, 1992. ISBN 978-0-7812-2960-9 (cloth)] [reprinted by Kessinger Books, Whitefish, Montana, 2007. ISBN 978-0-548-30525-6 (paper)] Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • __________. (1900). Verbeck of Japan: A Citizen of No Country; a Life Story of Foundation Work Inaugurated by Guido Fridolin Verbeck. Chicago, Fleming H. Revell Co. [reprinted by Oliphant, Anderson and Ferrier, London, 1901. Digitized, full-text copy of this book.
  • Rosenstone, R. (1988). Mirror in the Shrine: American encounters with Meiji Japan. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-57641-1.
  • Baarssen, G.H. Joost. (2014). America's True Mother Country? Images of the Dutch in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century. Münster, Berlin, Vienna, Zürich, London, LIT Verlag. ISBN 3-643-90492-4

External links

  • Works by William Elliot Griffis at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by William Elliot Griffis at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about William Elliot Griffis at Internet Archive
  • Works by William Elliot Griffis at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • William Elliot Griffis - Entry from the Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge
  • The William Elliot Griffis Collection - Collection of print, manuscript, photographic and ephemeral materials relating to early Japan-U.S. relations
  • Putting Rutgers’ Name in Print - Article on America's oldest student newspaper founded by W. E. Griffis at Rutgers University
  • Making of America - Collection of articles written by William Elliot Griffis located at Cornell University Library

william, elliot, griffis, september, 1843, february, 1928, american, orientalist, congregational, minister, lecturer, prolific, author, born, 1843, september, 1843philadelphia, pennsylvania, diedfebruary, 1928, 1928, aged, winter, park, florida, nationalityame. William Elliot Griffis September 17 1843 February 5 1928 was an American orientalist Congregational minister lecturer and prolific author 1 William Elliot GriffisBorn 1843 09 17 September 17 1843Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedFebruary 5 1928 1928 02 05 aged 84 Winter Park Florida U S NationalityAmericanOccupationsEducator missionary author Contents 1 Early life 2 Modernizer in Japan 3 Education and ministry 4 Writing and lectures 5 Family 5 1 Honors 6 Time line chronology 7 Published works 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditGriffis was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania the son of a sea captain and later a coal trader During the American Civil War he served two months as a corporal in Company H of the 44th Pennsylvania Militia after Robert E Lee invaded Pennsylvania in 1863 2 After the war he attended Rutgers University at New Brunswick New Jersey graduating in 1869 1 At Rutgers Griffis was an English and Latin language tutor for Tarō Kusakabe ja a young samurai from the province of Echizen part of modern Fukui After a year of travel in Europe he studied at the seminary of the Reformed Church in America in New Brunswick known today as the New Brunswick Theological Seminary 1 William Griffis died on February 5 1928 in Winter Park Florida after his death his body was sent to Schenectady New York for burial He is buried at Vale Cemetery along with his first wife Katherine Lyra Stanton his son John and his second wife Sarah Francis King after the death of Katherine in 1898 along with several other family members Modernizer in Japan EditIn September 1870 Griffis was invited to Japan by Matsudaira Shungaku for the purpose of organizing schools along modern lines In 1871 he was Superintendent of Education in the province of Echizen 3 In recompense he was provided with a salary of 2 400 a house in Fukui and a horse Griffis with a group of his students In 1872 74 Griffis taught chemistry 1 and physics at Kaisei Gakkō the forerunner of Tokyo Imperial University 3 He prepared the New Japan Series of Reading and Spelling Books 5 vols 1872 1 He also published primers for Japanese students of the English language and he and contributed to the Japanese press and to newspapers and magazines in the United States numerous papers of importance on Japanese affairs Griffis was joined by his sister Margaret Clark Griffis who became a teacher at the Tokyo Government Girls School later to become the Peeresses School By the time they left Japan in 1874 Griffis had befriended many of Japan s future leaders Griffis was a member of the Asiatic Society of Japan the Asiatic Society of Korea the Historical Society of the Imperial University of Tokyo and the Meirokusha 3 Education and ministry EditReturning to the United States Griffis attended Union Theological Seminary and after finishing his studies in 1877 he was called to the ministry in a series of churches at the First Reformed Church Schenectady New York 1877 1886 at the Shawmut Congregational Church Boston Massachusetts 1886 1893 and at the First Congregational Church Ithaca New York 1893 1903 Concurrently at Union College in 1884 he earned a higher degree Doctor of Divinity D D Rutgers awarded him an honorary degree Doctor of Humane Letters L H D in 1899 3 Writing and lectures EditIn 1903 he resigned from the active ministry to devote himself exclusively to writing and lecturing His books on Japan and Japanese culture were complemented with extensive college and university lecture circuit itineraries In addition to his own books and articles during this period he also joined Inazo Nitobe in crafting what became his most well known book Bushido The Soul of Japan In 1907 the Japanese government conferred the Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Rosette which represents the fourth highest of eight classes associated with the award 4 The prolific writer was also a prolific traveller making eleven trips to Europe primarily to visit the Netherlands In 1898 he was present at the enthronement of Queen Wilhelmina 1 and he attended the Congress of Diplomatic History He was among the group of Bostonians who wanted to commemorate the Pilgrims roots in Holland and the work was rewarded with the dedication of a memorial at Delfshaven and the placement of five other bronze historical tablets in 1909 3 He was one of four Americans elected to the Netherlands Society of Letters in Leiden 1 In 1923 Griffis published The Story of the Walloons At Home in Lands of Exile and in America In this work he reveals the long history and contributions of these Belgians The last half of the book relates the story of New Belgium Nova Belgica in America the first settlers of Manhattan being a group of Protestant Walloons who petitioned the Dutch West India Company to be sent to establish a colony in the New World These Walloons were sent to Manhattan as well as to other smaller locations on the Delaware Hudson and Connecticut Rivers They sailed out of Leiden Netherlands in 1624 Griffis draws parallels to the thoughts of government and freedom of the Walloons and the US Constitution of 1787 and how their ideas made a lasting contribution to this country though at the time 1923 the Walloons were generally unknown and overshadowed by the Dutch and later English This remains true to a great degree even today In 1926 Griffis was invited to return to Japan and on this trip the Japanese government conferred a second decoration He was presented with the Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon which represents the third highest of eight classes 4 A private rail car was provided by the Japanese government and he visited several cities in the course of this return trip 3 Griffis was a founding member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters later to become the American Academy of Arts and Letters the American Historical Association and the U S Naval Institute He died at his winter home in Florida in 1928 3 Family EditOne of Griffis two sons Stanton Griffis would become U S Ambassador to Poland Egypt Spain and Argentina under President Truman Stanton Griffis was ambassador to Argentina while Juan and Eva Peron were in power and wrote of his experiences in a book titled Lying In State The other son John became a composer Honors Edit Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon 1926 4 Order of the Rising Sun Gold Rays with Rosette 1907 4 Time line chronology EditGriffis life and publications are here organized chronologically 4 1843 Born September 17 in Philadelphia the fourth child of seven and second son to John Limeburner Griffis and Anna Maria Hess Griffis 1850 Observes the launching of the USS Susquehanna in Philadelphia The Susquehanna the largest steamship yet commissioned by the US Navy was to be Commodore Matthew C Perry s flagship on the 1853 1854 Naval Expedition to Japan 1860 Sees the Shogun s Mission the first Japanese Embassy to the US when it visits Philadelphia 1863 Serves in Pennsylvania s 44th Regiment in the Civil War 1866 Enters Rutgers College 1869 Graduates with AB Bachelor of Arts degree from Rutgers College In the summer tours Europe with his sister Margaret Clark Griffis and family friend Edward Warren Clark 1870 Sails for Japan to organize schools in Echizen 1871 Named Superintendent of Education in Echizen 1872 Awarded AM Master of Arts degree from Rutgers College Publishes in Yokohama The New Japan Primer and The New Japan Pictorial Primer 1872 74 Serves as Professor of Physics at the Imperial University Tokyo In 1872 Griffis s sister Margaret Clark Griffis joins him in Tokyo and is appointed teacher and then principal of the first government school for girls to become the Tokyo Female Normal School 1873 Publishes The Tokio Guide and The Yokohama Guide Yokohama 1874 Griffis and Margaret Clark Griffis return to America 1876 Publishes The Mikado s Empire 1877 Graduates from Union Theological Seminary 1877 86 Serves as Pastor of the First Reformed Church Schenectady NY 1879 Marries Katherine L Stanton 1859 98 1880 Publishes Japanese Fairy World Thirty five Stories from the Wonderlore of Japan 1882 Publishes Corea the Hermit Nation 1883 Lillian Eyre Griffis daughter born in Schenectady 1884 Awarded DD Doctorate of Divinity from Union College 1885 Publishes Corea Without and Within 1886 93 Serves as Pastor of the Shawmut Congregational Church in Boston MA 1887 Stanton Griffis first son born in Boston Publishes Matthew Calbraith Perry A Typical American Naval Officer 1889 Publishes The Lily Among Thorns A Study of the Biblical Drama Entitled The Song of Songs 1890 Publishes Honda the Samurai A Story of Modern Japan 5 1891 Publishes Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations and an edition of The Arabian Nights 1892 Publishes Japan In History Folklore and Art 1893 John Elliot Griffis second son born in Boston 1893 1903 Serves as Pastor of the First Congregational Church Ithaca NY 1894 Publishes Brave Little Holland and What She Taught Us 1895 Publishes The Religions of Japan From the Dawn of History to the Era of Meiji Shinto Buddhism and Confucianism and Townsend Harris First American Envoy in Japan an edition of Harris s journals 1897 Publishes The Romance of Discovery A Thousand Years of Exploration and the Unveiling of Continents 1898 Publishes Charles Carlton Coffin War Correspondent Traveller Author and Statesman The Romance of American Colonization The Pilgrims in Their Three Homes Katherine Stanton Griffis dies in Ithaca on December 9 1899 Publishes America in the East A Glance at Our History Prospects Problems and Duties in the Pacific Ocean The Romance of Conquest The Story of American Expansion Through Arms and Diplomacy 1899 Awarded LHD by Rutgers College 1900 Marries Sarah Frances King 1868 1959 Publishes The American in Holland Sentimental Rambles in the Eleven Provinces of the Netherlands The Pathfinders of the Revolution A Story of the Great March into the Wilderness and Lake George Region of New York in 1779 and Verbeck of Japan A Citizen of No Country 1901 Publishes In the Mikado s Service A Story of Two Battle Summers in China 1902 Publishes A Maker of the New Orient Samuel Robbins Brown Pioneer Educator in China America and Japan the Story of his Life and Work and Mighty England Our Old Home 1903 Resigns pastorate to write and lecture full time Publishes John Chambers Servant of Christ and Master of Hearts and his Ministry in Philadelphia Sunny Memories of Three Pastorates and Young People s History of Holland 1904 Publishes Dux Christus An Outline Study of Japan 1907 Decorated with the Order of the Rising Sun Fourth Class by the Emperor of Japan Publishes The Japanese Nation in Evolution Steps in the Progress of a Great People and Christ the Creator of the New Japan 1908 Publishes The Firefly s Lovers and Other Fairy Tales of Old Japan 1909 Publishes The Story of New Netherland The Dutch in America 1911 Publishes China s Story in Myth Legend Art and Annals and The Unmannerly Tiger and Other Korean Tales 1912 Publishes A Modern Pioneer in Korea The Life Story of Henry G Appenzeller Might England the Story of the English People The Call of Jesus to Joy Belgium the Land of Art 1913 Publishes Hepburn of Japan and His Wife and Helpmates A Life Story of Toil for Christ Margaret Clark Griffis dies in Ithaca December 15 1914 PublishesThe House We Live In Architect and Tenant Talks About the Body and the Right Use of It 1915 Publishes Millard Fillmore Constructive Statesman Defender of the Constitution President of the US The Mikado Institution and Person A Study of the Internal Political Forces of Japan The Story of Belgium 1916 Publishes Bonnie Scotland and What We Owe Her 1918 Publishes Dutch Fairy Tales 1919 Publishes Belgian Fairy Tales 1920 Publishes Swiss Fairy Tales Young People s History of the Pilgrims 1921 Publishes Welsh Fairy Tales The Dutch of the Netherlands in the Making of America 1922 Publishes Korean Fairy Tales Japanese Fairy Tales 1923 Publishes The Story of the Walloons at Home in the Lands of Exile and in America 1924 Publishes Proverbs of Japan A Little Picture of the Japanese Philosophy of Life as Mirrored in Their Proverbs 1926 Publishes The American Flag of Stripes and Stars Mirror of the Nation s History Symbol of Brotherhood and World Unity 1926 27 With Frances King Griffis journeys to Japan for the second time stopping in Korea and Manchuria 1926 Decorated with the Order of the Rising Sun Third Class 1928 Dies in Winter Park Florida February 5 6 Published works Edit1876 The Mikado s Empire 1880 Japanese Fairy World 1881 Asiatic History China Korea and Japan 1882 Korea the Hermit Nation 1885 Korea Without and Within 1887 Matthew Calbraith Perry A Typical American Naval Officer 1889 The Lily among Thorns 1890 Honda the Samurai A Story of Modern Japan 1891 Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations 1892 Japan in History Folk Lore and Art 1894 Brave Little Holland and What she Taught us 1895 The Religions of Japan 1895 Townsend Harris First American Envoy in Japan 1897 Romance of Discovery 1898 Charles Carlton Coffin War Correspondent Traveller Author and Statesman 1898 Romance of American Colonization 1898 The Pilgrims in their Three Homes 1898 The Student s Motley 1899 The Romance of Conquest 1899 The American in Holland 1899 America in the East 1900 Verbeck of Japan 1900 The Pathfinders of the Revolution 1901 In the Mikado s Service 1902 A Maker of the New Orient 1903 Young People s History of Holland 1903 John Chambers 1903 Sunny Memories of Three Pastorates 1904 Dux Christus An Outline Study of Japan 1907 Japanese Nation in Evolution Steps in the Progress of a Great People 1908 The Fire fly s Lovers and Other Fairy Tales of Old Japan 1909 The Story of New Netherland 1910 China s Study in Myth Legend Art and Annuals 1911 The Unmannerly Tiger and Other Korean Tales 1912 A Modern Pioneer in Korea The Life Story Of Henry G Appenzeller 1913 Hepburn of Japan 1914 The House We Live In Architect and Tenant 1915 The Mikado Institution and Person 1915 Millard Fillmore Constructive Statesman Defender of the Constitution 1916 Bonnie Scotland and What We Owe Her 1918 Dutch Fairy Tales for young folks 1919 Belgian Fairy Tales 1920 Young People s History of the Pilgrims 1920 Swiss Fairy Tales 1921 Welsh Fairy Tales 1921 The Dutch of the Netherlands in the Making of America reprinted by Kessinger Publishing Whitefish Montana 2007 ISBN 978 0 548 61147 0 paper 1922 Korean Fairy Tales 1922 Japanese Fairy Tales 1923 The Story of the Walloons at Home in the Lands of Exile and in America 1 1924 Proverbs of Japan A Little Picture of the Japanese Philosophy of Life as Mirrored in Their Proverbs 1926 The American Flag of Stripes and Stars Mirror of the Nation s History Symbol of Brotherhood and World UnitySee also EditMeiji Period Emperor MeijiReferences Edit a b c d e f g Brown John Howard 1904 Griffis William Elliot The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans Boston The Biographical Society Rutgers in the Civil War Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries Vol 66 2014 page 120 http jrul libraries rutgers edu index php jrul article viewFile 1865 3298 a b c d e f g Dr Griffis Friend of Japan Dies Educator Who Helped Japanese Adapt Themselves to Western Civilization The New York Times February 6 1928 a b c d e Adam Mathew web Archived 2008 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Art Notes The New York Times December 24 1890 http jrul libraries rutgers edu index php jrul article viewFile 1865 3298 bare URL PDF Further reading Edit Griffis William Elliot 1898 Charles Carlton Coffin War Correspondent Traveller Author and Statesman Boston Estes and Lauriat Digitized full text copy of this book 1915 Millard Fillmore Constructive Statesman Defender of the Constitution Ithaca Aldrus amp Church Digitized full text copy of this book 1908 The Fire fly s Lovers and Other Fairy Tales of Old Japan New York Crowell amp Company reprinted by University Press of the Pacific 2003 ISBN 1 4102 0957 1 reprinted by Kessinger Publishing Whitefish Montana 2006 ISBN 1 4286 1402 8 reprinted by Juniper Grove 2007 ISBN 978 1 60355 053 6 paper Digitized full text copy of this book 1895 Townsend Harris First American Envoy in Japan New York Houghton Mifflin and Company Digitized full text copy of this book 1919 Townsend Harris Center of Japanese Drama Adventures of First American Envoy to Mikado s Empire Furnish the Basis of a Play by a Native Writer and Tokio Is Applauding the Stars and Stripes The New York Times Magazine December 28 1919 1913 Hepburn of Japan and His Wife and Helpmates A Life Story of Toil for Christ Philadelphia Westminster Press Publishing Digitized full text copy of this book 1890 Honda the Samurai A Story of Modern Japan Chicago Congregational Sunday School and Publishing Society Digitized full text copy of this book 1907 Japanese Nation in Evolution Steps in the Progress of a Great People New York T Y Crowell amp Company Digitized full text copy of this book THE ARYAN STRAIN IN THE JAPANESE Dr Griffis Attributes Genius of the Islanders to White Ancestry Difficulties of the Thesis The New York Times June 27 1908 Retrieved 2008 08 09 The New York Times June 27 1908 Book reviewThe Japanese Nation in Evolution Steps in the Progress of a Great People Bulletin of the American Geographical Society Vol 40 No 4 256 1908 1891 Sir William Johnson and the Six Nations New York Dodd Mead and Company Digitized full text copy of this book JOHNSTOWN S SIR WILLIAM SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON AND THE SIX NATIONS By William Elliot Griffis Makers of America Series New York Dodd Mead amp Co The New York Times November 15 1891 Retrieved 2008 08 09 The New York Times November 15 1891 1876 The Mikado s Empire Philadelphia Harper amp Brothers Digitized full text copy of this book 1915 The Mikado Institution and Person Princeton Princeton University Press reprinted by Adamant Media Corporation New York 2000 ISBN 978 1 4021 0824 2 cloth ISBN 978 1 4021 8652 3 paper Digitized limited preview copy of this book 1887 Matthew Calbraith Perry A Typical American Naval Officer Boston Cupples amp Hurd reprinted by Reprint Services Corp London 1992 ISBN 978 0 7812 2960 9 cloth reprinted by Kessinger Books Whitefish Montana 2007 ISBN 978 0 548 30525 6 paper Digitized full text copy of this book 1900 Verbeck of Japan A Citizen of No Country a Life Story of Foundation Work Inaugurated by Guido Fridolin Verbeck Chicago Fleming H Revell Co reprinted by Oliphant Anderson and Ferrier London 1901 Digitized full text copy of this book Rosenstone R 1988 Mirror in the Shrine American encounters with Meiji Japan Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 57641 1 Baarssen G H Joost 2014 America s True Mother Country Images of the Dutch in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century Munster Berlin Vienna Zurich London LIT Verlag ISBN 3 643 90492 4External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about William Elliot Griffis Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Elliot Griffis Works by William Elliot Griffis at Project Gutenberg Works by William Elliot Griffis at Faded Page Canada Works by or about William Elliot Griffis at Internet Archive Works by William Elliot Griffis at LibriVox public domain audiobooks William Elliot Griffis Entry from the Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge The William Elliot Griffis Collection Collection of print manuscript photographic and ephemeral materials relating to early Japan U S relations Putting Rutgers Name in Print Article on America s oldest student newspaper founded by W E Griffis at Rutgers University Making of America Collection of articles written by William Elliot Griffis located at Cornell University Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Elliot Griffis amp oldid 1146419496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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