Countess Hayashi Misao | |
---|---|
林 操 | |
Born | Gamo Misao 1858 |
Died | 1942 (aged 83–84) |
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation | noblewowan |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Parent |
|
Countess Hayashi Misao (林 操) (born Gamo Misao (蒲生 操); 1858 – 1942) was a Japanese noblewoman and wife of Hayashi Tadasu, the first Japanese ambassador in London.
Early life
Gamo Misao was born in Edo, Japan[1] as the fourth daughter of Gamo Shigetami and was later adopted by Yamanouchi Teiun.[2]
Diplomat's wife
In 1875 at the age of 17, she married diplomat Hayashi Tadasu (1850–1913).[3] They had a daughter and a son, Kiku and Masanosuke.[1][4] She was made a Baroness on 31 October 1895.
The couple moved to England in 1900 where her husband would serve as Japan's resident minister to Great Britain. From their home in Grosvenor Gardens in London, Baroness Hayashi hosted regular dinner and tea gatherings of the few other Japanese women living in the city, and enjoyed doing needlework.[5][6] They would later help raise their granddaughter, Fukuzawa Sono.
On 8 November 1900, Hayashi launched the Japanese battleship Mikasa at its completion, from Barrow-in-Furness.[7][8]
Baroness Hayashi fascinated the British press in her own right. Newspapers and magazines reported on her dress and her hospitality. "It is incongruous to think of this slim, erect, young-looking woman as a grandmother, but her grandchild lives at the legation in London with her," reported one magazine in 1901, adding that "Madame la Baronne dresses in very French style."[9] Her recommendation that women learn jujutsu was widely reported.[10] Her photograph was featured on a cigarette card during this time.[2] She was made a Viscountess on 27 February 1902. Her husband later became the Japan's first ambassador to the Court of St. James on 2 December 1905.
She helped organize a relief fund for the widows and orphans of Japanese soldiers and sailors who died in the Russo-Japanese War.[11] Baroness Hayashi and Tama Kurokawa wrote a joint letter of thanks to Anita Newcomb McGee for her efforts to organize American nurses to aid the Japanese Red Cross during that war.[12] She was made a Countess on 14 September 1907.
Later life
Hayashi Misao was widowed when Hayashi Tadasu died in 1913. She died in 1942, aged 84 years.[2]
References
- 1 2 Alexander Black, "Society in Japan" The Lady's Realm (January 1901): 299-308.
- 1 2 3 "Viscountess Misao Hayashi (née Gamo)", National Portrait Gallery.
- ↑ John William Leonard, William Frederick Mohr, Frank R. Holmes, Herman Warren Knox, Winfield Scott Downs, eds., Who's who in New York City and State, Issue 2 (L. R. Hamersly 1905): 1013.
- ↑ "The Japanese Minister to the Court of St. James" The Sphere (September 15, 1900): 331.
- ↑ "Viscount Hayashi at the Japanese Legation in London" Lady's Realm (March 1904): 655-661.
- ↑ Robert Machray, "London's Legations from the Far East" The Royal Magazine (1901): 144.
- ↑ "A Great Battleship" Sketch (November 14, 1900): 133.
- ↑ "Mikasa" Journal of the American Society of Naval Engineers (November 1900): 1114.
- ↑ Joanna E. Wood, "At the Court of St. James" Current Literature (August 1901): 229.
- ↑ "Up-to-date Japanese Countess" Saint Paul Globe (February 27, 1904): 7. via Newspapers.com
- ↑ "On Watch" The Syren & Shipping Illustrated (November 13, 1907): 151.
- ↑ "Nurses for Japan" The Trained Nurse and Hospital Review (January 1904): 40.
External links
- Three photographs of Misao Gamo, Countess Hayashi, from 1902, in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum.