Sadatsuchi Uchida (内田 定槌, Uchida Sadatsuchi, born in February 12, 1865 in modern-day Kokura, Fukuoka Prefecture – June 2, 1942) was a Japanese diplomat. Assigned to postings in the United States and Brazil, Uchida was instrumental in facilitating improved Japanese trade relations and emigration to both countries. Uchida also served as the first consul in Korea.[1]
^"Diplomat's 1895 letter confesses to assassination of Korean queen | The Asahi Shimbun: Breaking News, Japan News and Analysis". The Asahi Shimbun. Retrieved 2021-11-21.
SadatsuchiUchida (内田 定槌, UchidaSadatsuchi, born in February 12, 1865 in modern-day Kokura, Fukuoka Prefecture – June 2, 1942) was a Japanese diplomat...
Ryōhei Uchida (1873–1937), a Japanese nationalist and political theorist Uchida Ryu Tanjojutsu, the martial arts school Uchida Ryogoro devised Sadatsuchi Uchida...
include: Diplomat's House (1910) designed for Japanese Ambassador SadatsuchiUchida by James McDonald Gardiner. Located adjacent to the Bluff 18 House...
1923: Admiral Mark Lambert Bristol Japan: April 1921-October 1923: SadatsuchiUchida "Constantinople occupied by British and Indian troops". British Pathé...
homeland. Years earlier, SadatsuchiUchida (Japan’s consul to the United States) toured the southern United States in 1902. Uchida reported back to Japan...
Houston Chamber of Commerce requested help from Japanese Consul General SadatsuchiUchida in improving Texas rice production techniques. At least thirty attempts...
Korean eyewitnesses, investigations conducted by Japanese emissaries UchidaSadatsuchi and Komura Jūtarō, and the verdicts of the trials of the assassins...
Theological Seminary. He was then encouraged by Japanese Consul General SadatsuchiUchida, the Houston Chamber of Commerce and the Southern Pacific Railroad...
historic building collection at Meiji-mura, and the former residence of SadatsuchiUchida, known as The Diplomat's House (1910), since 1995 a feature of the...
Downtown Houston, which employed many recently arrived Japanese Texans. SadatsuchiUchida visited Houston in 1902. There, city leaders of Houston told him that...
Agriculture Japan History of the Japanese in Houston Kichimatsu Kishi SadatsuchiUchida Connor, R. E. "How That Road Got Its Name." (Archive) Houston Post...