After the Port of Yokohama was opened to foreign trade in 1859, many foreigners settled there. Wishing to minimize contact between these foreigners and Japanese citizens, the government of the time established a separate settlement, and foreigners were permitted to reside only within its walls. However, with the increasing number of foreigners in Yokohama, the settlement became very crowded, and the government eventually granted permission for Yokohama's foreign residents to live in the Yamate district. As a result, many European-style residences were built in this elevated region, which was known as Yamate Bluff.
Yamate-cho (the cho suffix meaning street) runs along the top of Yamate Bluff, and is important to the Johnson family since that is where Stuart Plaza (Uncle Stuart's business) was located. In addition, that is where Jane lived for her first year in Japan, in a duplex behind Stuart Plaza. Please come with us as Jane relives her first year out of college and the fulfillment of her life-long dream of living in Japan!
Yamate
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There is a set of 99 very steep steps to get you from Yokohama to Yamate Bluff; Jane climbed these steps many a time during her year in Yokohama.
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