is a city located in Kanagawa
, Japan
.
It is
located at the mouth of Tokyo
Bay
in the Miura Peninsula
, and the city stretches across the peninsula to
Sagami
Bay
. Its neighbors are Yokohama, Miura,
Hayama
, and
Zushi
.
History
Heian period
In 1063, Muraoka Tamemichi established Kinugasa Castle in what is
now Yokosuka. He took the surname
Miura.
The castle fell during the Battle of Kinugasa in 1187. Miura Oosuke
Yoshiaki died at that time.
Kamakura period
Hōjō Tokiyori defeated the
Miura in 1247, but members of the Sawara family took the Miura
surname, allying themselves with the Hōjō.
In 1253,
Nichiren began teaching in the
region.
Sengoku period
The Miura perished at Arai Castle in a 1518 attack by
Hōjō Sōun.
Tokugawa Ieyasu took control over
the
Kantō region, including
Yokosuka, when
Toyotomi Hideyoshi
transferred him in 1590.
Edo period
The
adventurer William Adams
(inspiration for a character in the novel Shōgun), the first Briton to set
foot in Japan, arrived at Uraga
aboard the
Liefde in 1600. In 1612, he was granted the title
of
samurai and a fief in Hemi within the
boundaries of present-day Yokosuka, due to his services to the
Shogun. There he founded a family with Oyuki,
the daughter of Magome Kageyu, a noble samurai and official of
Edo Castle. William and Oyuki had a son called
Joseph, and a daughter, Susanna. A monument to William Adams
(called
Miura Anjin in Japanese) is still visible in
Yokosuka.
The
Tokugawa shogunate
established the post of Uraga
Bugyō in 1720.
To defend Edo Bay
, they
established an outpost at Ōtsu in 1842.
In 1853, United States naval officer
Matthew Perry arrived in Tokyo
Bay with his fleet of
Black Ships and
came ashore near present day Yokosuka, leading to the opening of
diplomatic and trade relations between Japan and the United
States.
The Yokosuka Iron
Foundry was established on
the site in the city in 1865, and the French engineer
Léonce Verny spent the next ten years
supervising the development of
shipbuilding facilities.
Yokosuka became the first modern
arsenal to
be created in Japan. The construction of the arsenal was the
central point of a global modern infrastructure, that was to prove
an important first step for the modernization of Japan's industry.
Modern buildings, the Hashirimizu
waterway,
foundries,
brick factories, and technical
schools to train Japanese technicians were established.

Construction of the Yokosuka arsenal
c.1870
Meiji period and later
The city itself was incorporated in 1907.
Yokosuka was to become one of the
main arsenals of the
Imperial Japanese Navy into the 20th
century, in which were built battleships such as
Yamashiro, and
aircraft carriers such as
Hiryū and
Shōkaku.
Major naval aircraft were also designed at the
Yokosuka Naval Air
Technical Arsenal.

Between 1938 and 1945 more than 260 caves in more than 20 separate
tunnel/cave networks were built throughout the base. There are 27
kilometers of known tunnels on the base. Many more tunnels are
scattered throughout Yokosuka and the surrounding areas. During the
war, these tunnels and caves provided areas in which work could be
done in secrecy, safe from air attacks. A 500 bed hospital, a large
electrical power generating facility, and a midget submarine
factory and warehouse were among the many facilities in caves
around the base. During the war, more than 800 personnel actually
lived in these caves. Each naval base department was ordered to dig
its own caves, which accounts for the lack of an overall
organization to the cave and tunnel system. In 1992, a complete
survey of all known caves was conducted, and all the caves except
for three still in use were sealed up for safety reasons. The cave
that is currently used as a command bunker by the US military was
used for several years after the war to grow mushrooms, which were
sold in the commissary for three yen per box.
The base has been used by the US Navy since 1945, and is the
largest naval facility in Japan.
The
battleship
Mikasa
, flagship of Admiral
Togo at the Battle of Tsushima
, built in Britain by Vickers, is preserved on dry land at
Yokosuka. It is a museum, complete with actors dressed like
members of the original crew, and can be visited for an entrance
fee of 500 yen.
Yokosuka today

U.S.
Navy sailors based at Yokosuka carry a traditional portable
shrine through the city during an annual parade.
As of 2007, the city has an estimated
population of 423,576 and a
density of 4,286.74 people per
km². It covers an area of 100.62 km².
It is the 11th most populous city
in Greater Tokyo
, 12th in the Kantō
region.
Yokosuka now is home to one of the biggest
military seaports shared by
the
United States Navy and the
Maritime Self-Defense
Force of Japan. The
US Navy nuclear
powered
USS George
Washington is currently in its home port at
Yokosuka Naval Base. On
October 28,
2005, the
US Navy announced that in 2008 the USS
Kitty Hawk will be replaced by the
USS George
Washington, a
nuclear
powered Nimitz class
carrier.
[35422] A US Navy spokesman said the decision
was a mutual agreement between the United States and Japan.
Hiroyuki Hosoda, a top spokesman for Japan's government, said, "We
believe that the change (of the carriers) will lead to maintaining
the solid presence of the U.S. Navy and contribute to keeping
Japan's security and international peace into the future." This
would be the first time a U.S. nuclear powered ship would be
permanently based in Japan.
[35423] In an attempt to explain the carrier's mission
to the Japanese public, the U.S. Navy has printed a
manga about life aboard USS George Washington, titled
"CVN-73". The JS
Hyūga, which
was commissioned Wednesday, March 18, 2009, will be stationed in
Yokosuka port.
The
Club Alliance enlisted club, which
lies just inside the main gate of Yokosuka Naval Base, opened in
1983. It replaced the old Club Alliance which was demolished to
make way for the Prince Hotel. The old Club Alliance is where
Ryudo Uzaki got his start playing
rock and roll.
The Honch, a mecca for shopping and
nightlife and located just outside the Yokosuka Naval Base's main
gates, is a popular attraction for tourists and sailors stationed
nearby, as well as local Japanese residents.
The former prime minister of Japan,
Junichiro Koizumi, was born in Yokosuka
and attended the
Yokosuka High
School.
Oppama
Many
Nissan and
Infiniti automobiles, such as the
Nissan Maxima and
Infiniti G20, were assembled in the 520,000
square metre Oppama plant (追浜工場) in
Yokosuka. The plant has been said to have played a significant role
in Nissan’s revival with its one car per minute output and quick
four day reconfiguration between assembly of various autos. The
plant is adjacent to Nissan's Research and Development Center, the
Oppama Proving Ground and the Oppama Wharf, from which Nissan ships
vehicles made at Oppama and Nissan’s other two Japanese vehicle
assembly plants to other regions of Japan and overseas to other
global markets.
Yokosuka in popular culture
Yokosuka is the birthplace of
Hideto
Matsumoto (1964-1998), who performed under the name "hide", the
lead guitarist of the rock band
X Japan.
Yokosuka is also the birthplace of Jpop singer
Rika Ishikawa, actors
Yosuke Kubozuka and
Yusuke Kamiji, and NFL Defensive Tackle
Marcus Thomas.
Yokosuka is also well-known as the setting of the
Sega video game
Shenmue, and the first major catastrophe in
Front Mission 3.
Education
Yokosuka's public elementary and junior high schools are operated
by the
Yokosuka Education
System, a department of the Yokosuka City Department of
Education
[35424]. Many of Yokosuka's public high schools,
including
Yokosuka High School,
are operated by the
Kanagawa Prefectural
Board of Education [35425].
The city
operates one municipal high school, Yokosuka Sogo
High School
.
Twin towns
Yokosuka has twin-town relationships with four other cities. They
are (in chronological order)
- Corpus Christi, Texas
, United States (since 1962)
- Brest
, Finistère
, France (since 1970)
- City of
Fremantle, Western
Australia
(since 1979)
- Medway, Kent
, United
Kingdom
(since 1998)
Yokosuka has a friendship-city relationship with one city:
See also
References
- 横須賀市行政サービス情報 - 「姉妹都市、友好都市」 (企画調整部 国際交流課) ("Yokosuka
Administrative Service Information– Sister Cities, Friendship
Cities") Yokosuka City official web site retrieved on January 11,
2009
External links