Sentaro, Japan's Sam Patch

Cook, Castaway, Christian

by F. Calvin Parker


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E-Book
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Softcover
$17.95
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Book Details

Language :
Publication Date : 2/1/2010

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 220
ISBN : 9781440198397
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 220
ISBN : 9781440198380

About the Book

Sentaro was one of seventeen Japanese mariners rescued from the storm-battered junk Eiriki-maru, taken to San Francisco, then consigned to the Perry expedition for repatriation. The U.S. government had noted the castaways’ potential usefulness as negotiating chips for persuading Japan to end its centuries-old isolation from the outside world. But when Commodore Perry transferred his flag to the Susquehanna for the dangerous foray into forbidden Japanese waters, Sam Patch, as Sentaro was now known, was the only one of the seventeen castaways still under U.S. naval jurisdiction. Indeed, he was the sole Japanese to accompany the expedition that concluded an historic treaty of friendship between the United States and Japan.

Japanese officials tried to persuade Sam to accept repatriation, but he chose to keep his job as a landsman in the U.S. Navy. The Mississippi brought Sam to New York, where he returned to civilian life under the patronage of Jonathan Goble, a shipmate discharged from the marines. A pious Baptist with a flawed character, Goble regarded Sam as a potential asset to his future missionary work in Japan. As Goble’s protégé, Sam gained a smattering of English education in the academy of what is now Colgate University but resisted efforts to convert him to the Christian faith. Three years passed before he submitted to an icy-creek baptism and emerged as the first known Japanese Baptist. In 1860, despite mistreatment at the hands of his patron, Sam accompanied Jonathan and Eliza Goble to Japan as helper and cook.

The Gobles, lacking adequate financial support from America, turned Sam over to Robbins and Elizabeth Brown, Dutch Reformed Church missionaries with the resources to support him. The Browns released Sam to their younger colleagues James and Margaret Ballagh, who became so dependent on their “faithful but inefficient servant” that they brought him along when Margaret, neurotic and pregnant, required medical treatment in America.8 Sam later worked as cook for E. Warren Clark, a science teacher employed by the Japanese government, and part-time driver for Nakamura Masanao, a renowned literary scholar. When Sam died of beriberi in 1874, Clark and Nakamura buried him in Nakamura’s family plot at Hondenji, a Buddhist temple in Tokyo.


About the Author

Franklin Calvin Parker was introduced to Japanese language and area studies in the World-War-II Army Specialized Training Program at Yale University. While a Baptist missionary to Japan from 1951 to 1989, he researched the life of Jonathan Goble, the first Baptist missionary to that country, and wrote his biography. This led to his interest in the Japanese castaway named Sentaro and nicknamed Sam Patch, whom Goble befriended while serving in the Perry Expedition that opened Japan to the West. As Goble’s protégé, Sentaro became the first known Japanese Baptist. His life proved to be so interesting that Parker wrote his biography also. Parker served as a professor in Seinan Gakuin University, editor of the Japan Christian Quarterly and president of the Fellowship of Christian Missionaries in Japan. He is the author of ten books and scores of articles in journals and reference works. Since their retirement in 1989, he and his wife Harriett have lived in Mars Hill, North Carolina.