
I’d like to set the scene as Maria in Sound of Music suggests “Let’s start at the very beginning” but maybe it’s better if I tell you first that this is Hachikō, the most famous dog in Japan, and that people come from all over Japan to visit his statue in central Tokyo. We tourists also come, led by guide books and the moving story of the faithful dog who waited at the train station for his owner to return from work, every day for nearly a decade.

Hachikō was a golden brown Akita born in November 1923 in Japan’s Akita prefecture: a year later, still a puppy, he was acquired by Hidesaburō Ueno, a professor who taught at Tokyo Imperial University and lived in the Shibuya neighbourhood of the city.
The pair formed a close bond and their life became one of routine. In the morning Professor Ueno would walk to the Shibuya Station, Hachikō trotting alongside, and take the train to work. After finishing the day’s classes, he would return by train arriving at the station at 3 p.m. on the dot: there Hachikō would be waiting for him.

This continued until May 1925 when the Professor died suddenly at work, having suffered a brain haemorrhage while teaching.
Hachikō, who had come to meet his master as usual on that day, was left waiting at the station. Day after day for nigh on ten years the dog returned to the spot where he had always waited for his owner, patient and loyal despite not being welcomed by the station employees.
The loyal dog, one of only 30 purebred Akitas on record at the time, never gave up hope and although reportedly given away after his master’s death, he regularly ran off to Shibuya Station at 3 p.m. hoping to meet the Professor. Days turned into weeks, then months, then years, and still Hachikō returned to the station each day to wait.
At first, the station workers were not all that friendly to Hachikō, but his fidelity won them over and they began to bring treats for him and sometimes sat beside him to keep him company. Soon, the lone dog and his story began to draw the attention of other commuters. His presence had a great impact on the local community of Shibuya and he became something of an icon.

It is thanks to one of Professor Ueno’s former students, Hirokichi Saito, who also happened to be an expert on the Akita breed, that we know much of this story, because when he got wind of the tale he took the train to Shibuya to see for himself. When he arrived and saw Hachikō there, as usual, he followed him from the station to the home of Ueno’s former gardener, Kuzaburo Kobayashi. There, Kobayashi filled him in on the story of Hachikō’s life.
The student wrote articles about the situation at the Shibuya station one of which was published in the national daily Asahi Shimbun in 1932. The tale spread throughout Japan bringing nationwide fame to Hachikō and people then began to arrive from all over Japan to visit the dog who had become something of a good-luck charm. Many travelled great distances just to sit with him.

For the next nine years and nine months, Hachikō came to the station every day at 3.00 pm on the dot. He was found dead in the street in March 1935, the cause of death (not discovered until 2011) later found to be a cancer. His death made national headlines and after cremation, his ashes were placed next to Professor Ueno’s grave in Aoyama Cemetery in Tokyo. His fur, however, was preserved, stuffed and mounted and is now housed in the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo.

The original bronze statue of Hachikō was raised from donations and erected in the exact spot where he had waited for his master for so many years but after World War ll erupted the statue was melted down for ammunitions. In 1948 however, the current statue was erected in Shibuya Station.

There is a similar statue, erected in 2004, in Odate, Hachikō’s original hometown, where it stands in front of the Akita Dog Museum.
On the 80th anniversary of Hachikō’s death, in 2015, the University of Tokyo unveiled yet another brass statue of the dog.
I feel for you, its an awful thing to do, isn’t it. I’ve done something similar (not in Japan) and felt such an idiot but didn’t know what to say to a crowd of people whose language I didn’t speak. I hope my mattuered “I’m sorry, sorry” and my grovelling, cringing, body language conveyed my apologies.
LikeLike
Apologies for not spell-checking before I hit Comment. It should be ‘muttered’ of course, not that over-voweled word I’ve put!
LikeLike
I visited Shibuya myself and saw the Hachiko statue. Knowing the story and having seen the film with Richard Gere, I ran up and took a quick selfie, when I spotted the statue exiting the station, then looked ahead of me, aghast, not realising there was a line of Japanese patiently waiting in a queue to take their own selfie with Hachiko. I was so embarrassed but just like the polite Japanese they did not bat an eyelid. I guess as a foreigner (with blond hair), I got a free pass at pushing in!
LikeLike
Oh, bless! That’s a lovely story 🙂 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, and Katie Askegaard (above) mentioned that there is a film on Netflix at the moment about Hachiko. I must try and watch it.
LikeLike
🤗💕
LikeLike
Echoes of Greyfriars Bobby, another famously loyal dog.
LikeLike
Yes, there are a lot of faithful hound stories around the world but this is the only one I know where the dog continued his vigil for ten years! Mind you, he might have just turned up for the 3.00 pm snacks!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I think we all do this. It’s just not possible to cover everything before you leave home and then sometimes something very special pops up or you meet a local who can show you something unusual and there it is – more Googling when you get home and a peek at Wikipedia!
The Wine Soc is seldom wrong so I think you were right to tell them about it. I’d neve heard of an Oregon wine before, interesting to know that the PN wasn’t good.
LikeLike
What a beautiful story 🙏🙏. You said that you read up more after you got home, this has happened to us a lot and I never know if it’s right way around? Sometimes I list things to see on holiday and read a little about them. Visit to see it, enjoy, get home, read more, and wish I’d done that before visiting 🤦♂️
By the way, just had an awful bottle of Oregon Pinot Noir from the Wine Society, flipping expensive so I’ve let them know.
LikeLike
Great post! There’s actually a movie on netflix at the moment based on Hachikō…definitely moving it up my watch list now!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow! I didn’t know that. I shall have to watch it now. Thanks for letting me know.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Your post here whisked me to Japan with such a beautiful story of devotion and love, Mari. The pictures were fantastic too and helped me gain a better perspective. Superb writing!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for commenting so positively. It is a moving story and although I am sure there are some embellishments over the years, the main story is very true. Wikicomms has a very moving picture of the people on the first anniversary paying their respects but I thought I’d put up enough images!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I remember seeing this statue and discovering its moving story when I was in Japan.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’d read about it in my guide book before I went to Japan so knew something of the story before I saw the statue, then I did a bit of research when I got back and found the backstory. I would have liked to have time to see the stuffed dog but alas, Tokyo has so many more attractions that I couldn’t fit that in as well.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you. Yes, have overcome most of them but I still can’t get WP to work properly and everytime I read a post, make a comment and move to another one I have to sign in again! This can happen 40 times a day, at least, and it is getting me down a bit, so I’m skipping some! To post this comment I have to click on the W underneath this, then wait for it to accept, sometimes it asks me to Log in again, then the comment comes up with a Post Comjment button attached. I(‘m losing the will to live!
LikeLike
I’m glad you seem to have overcome your difficulties with the new computer and WP. Thanks for the story and the pictures.
LikeLiked by 1 person