Fair Japan: Difference between revisions

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| built          = 1905
| built          = 1905
| opened        = 1905
| opened        = 1905
| closed        = Unknown
| closed        = 1914
| designer      = [[Kushibiki Yumindo]]
| designer      = [[Kushibiki Yumindo]]
| sitearea      = 4-15 acres
| sitearea      = 4-15 acres
| replacedby    = [[Swimming Pool]]<br/>[[Bandstand (3)|Band Shell (1)]]
}}
}}


[[Fair Japan]], sometimes stylized as '''Old Japan''', was a '''Japanese Village''' exhibit space at Olentangy Park<ref name="candb">Hyatt, Shirley. 2009. ''Clintonville and Beechwold.'' Arcadia Publishing.</ref> where parkgoers could walk through a Japanese-style garden, including the Bonzai Bridge, dine at a restaurant in the form of a tea and chop suey house, buy crafts at a bazaar, and watch traditional performances. Designed by [[Kushibiki Yumindo]] [published as Yumeta Kushibiki or Umeta Kushibiki], the area was built by eight to fifteen "native contractors" in 1905 just north of the [[Figure Eight Toboggan]], replacing the [[Miniature Railway]].<ref name="geisha">"Geisha Girls are to be Attraction." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' January 2, 1905. Page 5.</ref><ref>"Olentangy Park Opens." ''Ohio State Lantern (Columbus, Ohio),'' April 29, 1914. Page 4. </ref>  
[[Fair Japan]], sometimes stylized as '''Old Japan''', was a '''Japanese Village''' exhibit space at Olentangy Park<ref name="candb">Hyatt, Shirley. 2009. ''Clintonville and Beechwold.'' Arcadia Publishing.</ref> where parkgoers could walk through a Japanese-style garden, including the "Bonzai Bridge," dine at a restaurant in the form of a tea and chop suey house, buy crafts at a bazaar, and watch traditional performances. Designed by [[Kushibiki Yumindo]] [published as Yumeta Kushibiki or Umeta Kushibiki], the area was built by eight to 15 "native contractors" in 1905 just north of the [[Figure Eight Toboggan]], replacing the [[Miniature Railway]].<ref name="geisha">"Geisha Girls are to be Attraction." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch.'' January 2, 1905. Page 5.</ref><ref>"Olentangy Park Opens." ''Ohio State Lantern (Columbus, Ohio).'' April 29, 1914. Page 4. </ref>  


Overall, forty Japanese men and women came to Columbus to reconstruct the exhibit.<ref name="historian">Barret, Richard E. 1984. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." ''Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1,'' April 1984. Page 8.</ref> The area the exhibit took up ranged between four and 15 acres.<ref>"The Amusement Resort of Ohio." ''The Marion Star (Marion, Ohio),'' June 29, 1905. Page 5. Accessed through Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-marion-star-the-amusement-resort-of/80089354/</ref> The "village" included a "toris," a square arch placed in front of Japanese temples; an arched wishing bridge called the "Bonsai Bridge"; shops with Japanese souvenirs; and topiaries of swans and flamingos.<ref name="historian" /> It also included a "typical Japanese home" with a family living in the structure; an open stage with continuous performances by Japanese actors, tumblers, and jugglers; a bazaar; and tea houses staffed by Japanese women in costumes, where parkgoers removed their shoes before entering<ref name="historian" /> and could drink tea from porcelain cups.<ref name="geisha" /> The staff, performers, etc., were probably a mix of races and ethnicities but dressed and performed in the representational ways of the time period.
Overall, 40 Japanese men and women came to Columbus to reconstruct the exhibit.<ref name="historian">Barret, Richard E. 1984. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." ''Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1,'' April 1984. Page 8.</ref> The area the exhibit took up ranged between four and 15 acres.<ref>"The Amusement Resort of Ohio." ''The Marion Star (Marion, Ohio).'' June 29, 1905. Page 5. Accessed through Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-marion-star-the-amusement-resort-of/80089354/</ref> The "village" included a "toris," a square arch placed in front of Japanese temples; an arched wishing bridge called the "Bonzai Bridge;" shops with Japanese souvenirs; and topiaries of swans and flamingos.<ref name="historian" /> It also included a "typical Japanese home" with a family living in the structure; an open stage with continuous performances by Japanese actors, tumblers, and jugglers; a bazaar; and tea houses staffed by Japanese women in costumes, where parkgoers removed their shoes before entering<ref name="historian" /> and could drink tea from porcelain cups.<ref name="geisha" /> The staff, performers, etc., were probably a mix of races and ethnicities but dressed and performed in the representational ways of the time period.


Joseph Dusenbury originally saw the exhibit at the St. Louis Exposition and imported it to the park.<ref name="candb" /><ref name="historian" /> Builder Kushibik had been in the U.S. for twenty years and built similar exhibits at Atlantic City, Buffalo, and St. Louis. The stage featured Legerdemain, tumbling, and other acrobatic features.<ref>"Olentangy Park Will Be Extended to Doddridge St." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,'' February 18, 1905. Page 7.</ref> The park charged a five-cent ($1.79 in 2024) admission fee in 1906<ref>"Olentangy Opening." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' May 13, 1906. Page 44.</ref> until June 17 of that year when it was free for the rest of the season.<ref>Ad. ''Columbus Evening Dispatch,.'' June 16, 1906. Page 4.</ref>  
Joseph Dusenbury originally saw the exhibit at the St. Louis Exposition and imported it to the park.<ref name="candb" /><ref name="historian" /> Builder Kushibik had been in the U.S. for 20 years and built similar exhibits at Atlantic City, Buffalo, and St. Louis. The stage featured Legerdemain, tumbling, and other acrobatic features.<ref>"Olentangy Park Will Be Extended to Doddridge St." ''Columbus Evening Dispatch.'' February 18, 1905. Page 7.</ref> The park charged a {{Tooltip |text = 5-cent|tooltip = $1.79 in 2025 dollars}} admission fee in 1906<ref>"Olentangy Opening." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' May 13, 1906. Page 44.</ref> until June 17 of that year when it was free for the rest of the season.<ref>Ad. ''Columbus Evening Dispatch.'' June 16, 1906. Page 4.</ref>  


General games, such as a Japanese rolling ball game, were also available.<ref>"Columbus Railway & Light Co." ''Street Railway Review.'' 1906. Vol. 26. Issue 2. Page 70. Accessed through Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Electric_Railway_Review/VlY_AQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=%22shooting+gallery%22+Olentangy&pg=PA70&printsec=frontcover</ref> While Creatore's Italian Band performed during the opening weeks of the 1905 season, vaudeville acts were performed in the Fair Japan exhibition area.<ref>''The Billboard,'' June 24, 1905. 17 (25): 8.</ref> The [[Igorrote Village]] actors stayed and performed in this area in 1907 and 1908. Two staff members, Shingo Immamura and Toku Magaya, were married at the village on July 4, 1909, by Rev. Isaac, pastor of the 10th Avenue Baptist Church.<ref>"Shingo Immamura and Toku Magaya" ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' June 27, 1909. Page 13.</ref><ref>"Columbus Notes." ''The Show World,'' July 10, 1909. Vol. 5. Page 7.</ref>
General games, such as a Japanese rolling ball game, were also available.<ref name="railwayreview">"Columbus Railway & Light Co." ''The Street Railway Review,'' February 15, 1906. Vol. 16. Issue 2. Page 70. Accessed through the Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/streetrailwayrev161amer/page/70/mode/2up</ref> While Creatore's Italian Band performed during the opening weeks of the 1905 season, vaudeville acts were performed in the Fair Japan exhibition area.<ref>''The Billboard.'' June 24, 1905. Vol. 17 Issue 25. Page 8.</ref> The [[Igorrote Village]] actors stayed and performed in this area in 1907 and 1908. Two staff members, Shingo Immamura and Toku Magaya, were married at the village on July 4, 1909, by Rev. Isaac, pastor of the 10th Avenue Baptist Church.<ref>"Shingo Immamura and Toku Magaya" ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' June 27, 1909. Page 13.</ref><ref>"Columbus Notes." ''The Show World,'' July 10, 1909. Vol. 5. Page 7.</ref>


The area was rebuilt in 1914 and put under the management of Kenoshita [or Kinoshita], a "modest and young" Tokyo native who worked several years in the mercantile business in Cleveland.<ref>"Olentangy Park Opens." ''Ohio State Lantern (Columbus, Ohio),'' April 29, 1914. Page 4.</ref><ref>"At Olentangy." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' May 10, 1914. Page 36.</ref>
The area was rebuilt in 1914 and put under the management of Kenoshita [or Kinoshita], a "modest and young" Tokyo native who worked several years in the mercantile business in Cleveland.<ref>"Olentangy Park Opens." ''Ohio State Lantern (Columbus, Ohio).'' April 29, 1914. Page 4.</ref><ref>"At Olentangy." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' May 10, 1914. Page 36.</ref> However, the attraction does not appear in photos after 1913, and the [[Swimming Pool]] was added in the space in 1917.<ref>"Pool for Olentangy." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' March 25, 1917. Page 48.</ref><ref>"A Golden Flora." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' July 1, 1917. Page 42.</ref><ref name="candb" />
 
Fair Japan was replaced by the [[Swimming Pool]] in 1917.<ref>"Pool for Olentangy." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' March 25, 1917. Page 48.</ref><ref>"A Golden Flora." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' July 1, 1917. Page 42.</ref><ref name="candb" />


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
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==Lawsuits==
==Lawsuits==
Binzo Suzuki and Sohechi Iida sued J. W. Dusenbury in 1905 for $1,102 ($39,260 in 2024) for Japanese goods and merchandise that furnished Fair Japan.<ref>"Sue Olentangy Park." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' September 10, 1905. Page 1.</ref>
Binzo Suzuki and Sohechi Iida sued J. W. Dusenbury in 1905 for {{Tooltip |text = $1,102|tooltip = $40,256 on 2025 dollars}} for Japanese goods and merchandise that furnished Fair Japan.<ref>"Sue Olentangy Park." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' September 10, 1905. Page 1.</ref>
 
Also, in 1905, Japanese watercolor artist F. J. Baske and 10 other Japanese workers at Olentangy Park sued Dusenbury for not paying them for their final month and a half of work. Dusenbury told them he'd pay after meeting with the Fair Japan architect, Kushibiki, but the workers did not believe Kushibiki would come to Columbus. This underpayment led to Baske selling his paintings so the group could stay in Columbus or travel to New York.<ref>"Famous Exhibit of Water Colors." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch.'' October 22, 1905. Page 12.</ref>


Also, in 1905, Japanese watercolor artist F. J. Baske and ten other Japanese workers at Olentangy Park sued Dusenbury for not paying them for their final month and a half of work. Dusenbury told them he'd pay after meeting with the Fair Japan architect, Kushibiki, but the workers did not believe Kushibiki would come to Columbus. This underpayment led to Baske selling his paintings so the group could stay in Columbus or travel to New York.<ref>"Famous Exhibit of Water Colors." ''The Columbus Sunday Dispatch,'' October 22, 1905. Page 12.</ref>
   
== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />
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[[Category:Music and Performance Attractions]]
[[Category:Music and Performance Attractions]]
[[Category:Added in 1905]]
[[Category:Added in 1905]]
[[Category:Closed in 1914]]


{{#seo:|description=Fair Japan, sometimes stylized as Old Japan, was a Japanese Village exhibit space at Olentangy Park where parkgoers could walk through a Japanese-style garden.}}
{{#seo:|description=Fair Japan, sometimes stylized as Old Japan, was a Japanese Village exhibit space at Olentangy Park where parkgoers could walk through a Japanese-style garden.}}
{{#seo:|keywords=Fair Japan, Old Japan, Japanese Village, Olentangy Park, Olentangy Amusement Park, Olentangy Park Columbus, Columbus amusement park, amusement park, Clintonville, defunct amusement park, exhibit, exhibition}}
{{#seo:|keywords=Fair Japan, Old Japan, Japanese Village, Olentangy Park, Olentangy Amusement Park, Olentangy Park Columbus, Columbus amusement park, amusement park, Clintonville, defunct amusement park, exhibit, exhibition}}

Latest revision as of 18:06, 18 June 2025

Fair Japan
Other Name(s) Japanese Village
Old Japan
Type Activity Space
Exhibition
Music and Performances
Park Section Northwest
Built 1905
Opened 1905
Closed 1914
Designer Kushibiki Yumindo
Site Area 4-15 acres
Replaced By Swimming Pool
Band Shell (1)

Fair Japan, sometimes stylized as Old Japan, was a Japanese Village exhibit space at Olentangy Park[1] where parkgoers could walk through a Japanese-style garden, including the "Bonzai Bridge," dine at a restaurant in the form of a tea and chop suey house, buy crafts at a bazaar, and watch traditional performances. Designed by Kushibiki Yumindo [published as Yumeta Kushibiki or Umeta Kushibiki], the area was built by eight to 15 "native contractors" in 1905 just north of the Figure Eight Toboggan, replacing the Miniature Railway.[2][3]

Overall, 40 Japanese men and women came to Columbus to reconstruct the exhibit.[4] The area the exhibit took up ranged between four and 15 acres.[5] The "village" included a "toris," a square arch placed in front of Japanese temples; an arched wishing bridge called the "Bonzai Bridge;" shops with Japanese souvenirs; and topiaries of swans and flamingos.[4] It also included a "typical Japanese home" with a family living in the structure; an open stage with continuous performances by Japanese actors, tumblers, and jugglers; a bazaar; and tea houses staffed by Japanese women in costumes, where parkgoers removed their shoes before entering[4] and could drink tea from porcelain cups.[2] The staff, performers, etc., were probably a mix of races and ethnicities but dressed and performed in the representational ways of the time period.

Joseph Dusenbury originally saw the exhibit at the St. Louis Exposition and imported it to the park.[1][4] Builder Kushibik had been in the U.S. for 20 years and built similar exhibits at Atlantic City, Buffalo, and St. Louis. The stage featured Legerdemain, tumbling, and other acrobatic features.[6] The park charged a 5-cent$1.79 in 2025 dollars admission fee in 1906[7] until June 17 of that year when it was free for the rest of the season.[8]

General games, such as a Japanese rolling ball game, were also available.[9] While Creatore's Italian Band performed during the opening weeks of the 1905 season, vaudeville acts were performed in the Fair Japan exhibition area.[10] The Igorrote Village actors stayed and performed in this area in 1907 and 1908. Two staff members, Shingo Immamura and Toku Magaya, were married at the village on July 4, 1909, by Rev. Isaac, pastor of the 10th Avenue Baptist Church.[11][12]

The area was rebuilt in 1914 and put under the management of Kenoshita [or Kinoshita], a "modest and young" Tokyo native who worked several years in the mercantile business in Cleveland.[13][14] However, the attraction does not appear in photos after 1913, and the Swimming Pool was added in the space in 1917.[15][16][1]

Lawsuits

Binzo Suzuki and Sohechi Iida sued J. W. Dusenbury in 1905 for $1,102$40,256 on 2025 dollars for Japanese goods and merchandise that furnished Fair Japan.[17]

Also, in 1905, Japanese watercolor artist F. J. Baske and 10 other Japanese workers at Olentangy Park sued Dusenbury for not paying them for their final month and a half of work. Dusenbury told them he'd pay after meeting with the Fair Japan architect, Kushibiki, but the workers did not believe Kushibiki would come to Columbus. This underpayment led to Baske selling his paintings so the group could stay in Columbus or travel to New York.[18]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Hyatt, Shirley. 2009. Clintonville and Beechwold. Arcadia Publishing.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Geisha Girls are to be Attraction." Columbus Evening Dispatch. January 2, 1905. Page 5.
  3. "Olentangy Park Opens." Ohio State Lantern (Columbus, Ohio). April 29, 1914. Page 4.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Barret, Richard E. 1984. "Olentangy Park: Four Decades of Fun." Columbus and Central Ohio Historian No. 1, April 1984. Page 8.
  5. "The Amusement Resort of Ohio." The Marion Star (Marion, Ohio). June 29, 1905. Page 5. Accessed through Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-marion-star-the-amusement-resort-of/80089354/
  6. "Olentangy Park Will Be Extended to Doddridge St." Columbus Evening Dispatch. February 18, 1905. Page 7.
  7. "Olentangy Opening." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. May 13, 1906. Page 44.
  8. Ad. Columbus Evening Dispatch. June 16, 1906. Page 4.
  9. "Columbus Railway & Light Co." The Street Railway Review, February 15, 1906. Vol. 16. Issue 2. Page 70. Accessed through the Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/streetrailwayrev161amer/page/70/mode/2up
  10. The Billboard. June 24, 1905. Vol. 17 Issue 25. Page 8.
  11. "Shingo Immamura and Toku Magaya" The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. June 27, 1909. Page 13.
  12. "Columbus Notes." The Show World, July 10, 1909. Vol. 5. Page 7.
  13. "Olentangy Park Opens." Ohio State Lantern (Columbus, Ohio). April 29, 1914. Page 4.
  14. "At Olentangy." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. May 10, 1914. Page 36.
  15. "Pool for Olentangy." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. March 25, 1917. Page 48.
  16. "A Golden Flora." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. July 1, 1917. Page 42.
  17. "Sue Olentangy Park." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. September 10, 1905. Page 1.
  18. "Famous Exhibit of Water Colors." The Columbus Sunday Dispatch. October 22, 1905. Page 12.