- Seito Saibara
nihongo|Seito Saibara|西原 清東|Saibara Seito|1861-1939 was a
Japan ese parliament member, politician, administrator, colonist, and farmer.Overview
Born in 1861 in Kochi Ken
Japan , Seito Saibara was the firstChristian member of theJapanese Diet (parliament) at a time when there was strong opposition to Christianity in Japan. Later Saibara would be asked to relinquish his seat in the parliament to become president ofDoshisha University inKyoto , Japan.Rice farming
In 1901 Saibara came to Hartford,
Connecticut to studytheology . He was then invited by the Japanese consul on behalf of the Houston Chamber of Commerce and theSouthern Pacific Railroad to teach rice production to local farmers inTexas . [ [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/SS/fsagp_print.html TSHA Online - Texas State Historical Association - Home ] at www.tsha.utexas.edu] In 1903 Saibara came to Texas where he began the first Japanese-Christian colony in Texas. His family (including his parents Hide and Masuya, and his son Kiyoaki) and 30 other colonists joined him in Webster, Texas [ [http://www.cityofwebster.com/index.asp?NID=2 City of Webster - Gateway to the future ] at www.cityofwebster.com] to begin rice farming on a 1,000 acre lease that Saibara later bought.The first crop, grown from seed imported as a gift from the
Emperor of Japan and harvested in 1904, was primarily distributed as seed inTexas andLouisiana . At that time, the average rice yield using seed fromHonduras or the Carolinas was 18-20 barrels an acre while the Japanese seeds yielded 34 barrels per acre. Seito and Kiyoaki Saibara, are credited with building the multimillion-dollar Texas rice industry with their improved rice strains and production techniques.outh America
Saibara left Texas with his wife and spent fifteen years in
South America , where he established colonies along theAmazon River , before returning to Japan. Ill health caused him to return to Texas in 1937. He died, still a Japanese citizen, in Webster on April 11, 1939, and was buried at the Fairview Cemetery. [http://hirasaki.home.att.net/Family_Stories/Fairview/Fairview.htm] The rice farm was carried out by Kiyoaki and his sons Robert, Warren, Harvey andEddie Saibara . Seito Saibara would later be declared one of the 100 Tallest Texans by the Houston Chronicle newspaper. [ [http://www.chron.com/content/chronicle/special/00/talltx/saibara01.html HoustonChronicle.com - 100 Tall Texans ] at www.chron.com]Notes
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