Changes in Transportation by Ship on the Mogami River in the 1870s-1910s

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  • 1870年代から1910年代に至る最上川舟運の変化
  • 1870ネンダイ カラ 1910ネンダイ ニ イタル モガミガワ シュウウン

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Abstract

This study examines the changes in the transportation by ship on the Mogami River from the removal of feudal restrictions concerning navigation after 1872 to the completion of the railroad network in Yamagata Prefecture in the 1910s.<br> The Mogami River is the sixth largest river in Japan in terms off the navigable length of the main river, and the tenth largest in total barge loadage, according to survey data on 135 rivers in the Statis-tical Yearbook of the Department of Civil Engineering compiled by the Ministry of Home Affairs be-tween 1892 and 1899, on the eve of the formative period of railway network construction in Japan. The Mogami River was larger than the Shinano and the Tone Rivers in the index of barge loadage per population in the drainage area. This means that the lives of the people within the drainage area of the Mogami River depended to a greater degree on transport by ship than did those living near other rivers at that time.<br> On the Mogami River, approximately 400 ships with a length of 4 ken (7.2m) and over in the span from stem beam to stern beam were in operation between the Port of Sakata and inland river ports in the 1870s, and these ships were concentrated on the Sakata, Shimizu, Motoaikai, Yachi, Nagasaki, Aterazawa, and other banks in 1886. 0-ishida, which had many large barges of 100 koku (15t) and <br>over in 1880, held a monopoly position in transport by ship, as did Sakata in the feudal age, although this large fleet of vessels broke up rapidly during the 1880s. On the other hand, barges operating in the waterway of the Mogami River gradually decreased between 1876 and 1886, since the transport of rice oriented to Osaka ceased and the money payment system of land tax was introduced.<br> The documents in the Nishi-Murayama District Office (Gun-yakusho) archives show that transport by ship between Aterazawa, situated in the Murayama district, and Arato, situated in the Okitama dis-trict, fell into decay after circa 1890, and the transfer from transport by ship to transport by land was completed during the second half of the 1890s.<br> Takahashi Toraji Shop was an Isabaya shop in Aterazawa which sold mainly salted and dried fish during the last 20 years of the 19th century. Invoices for goods and other items from this shop reveal that the masters of barges moored at Aterazawa in most cases went up and down the river between Sakata and Aterazawa, that the cargo shipped from Sakata in other moored barges as well as Aterazawa was relayed to Yokoyama (by land), Yachi (by ship), and Nagasaki (by ship), and that it took five days at the shortest, eight days at the longest, and seven days with a half-day grace period on average to transport cargo between Sakata and Aterazawa. The amount of goods held in Takahashi Toraji Shop in 1902 was about half as much as that in <br>1898. The opening of transport by railroad after 1899 not only reduced the extent of the business area of this shop, but also brought about a change in the form of shipping on the Mogami River. The Oki-tama district was no longer in the business area of Takahashi Toraji Shop, and the masters of barges moored in locations other than Aterazawa generally went up and down between Sakata and Ate-razawa. On the other hand, in some cases direct transport by land and a combination land and ship trans-port between Sakata and Aterazawa came into existence.<br> The view presented first in 1930 by Dr. Masataro Nagai that transport by ship on the Mogami River hastened into decline after the peak in 1902 directly caused by the opening of a railroad to Shi-njyo in the Mogami district has been accepted as a popular opinion in studies of the problems of the competition between ships and railroads. However, this study demonstrates that the view of Dr. Nagai is unreasonable. In the first stage, transport by ship on the Mogami River between Sakata and the inland area declined yearly after the peak in 1899.

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