The origin of Mitsubishi goes back to 1870, when the
founder, Yataro Iwasaki, started a shipping firm with three aging steamships.
Yataro's brother, son and nephew expanded the business into various fields
during their respective terms as president and set the foundation of the
Mitsubishi companies. After WWII, the original Mitsubishi organization was
disbanded to become independent companies as they are today. Here is a summary
of the 140 years history shared by the Mitsubishi companies.The history of
"Mitsubishi" parallels the story of modern Japan. The founder, Yataro
Iwasaki was from the prefecture of Kochi on the island of Shikoku, which was
the home of the powerful Tosa clan. He worked for the clan and distinguished
himself in managing its Osaka trading operations. In 1870, he set up his own
shipping company, Tsukumo Shokai, with three steamships chartered from the
clan. This was the beginning of Mitsubishi.
The company grew rapidly while undergoing a number of
name changes including Mitsukawa Shokai, Mitsubishi Shokai, Mitsubishi Jokisen
Kaisha (Mitsubishi Steamship Company), Yubin Kisen Mitsubishi Kaisha
(Mitsubishi Mail Steamship Company).
Mitsubishi Mail Steamship Company inaugurated service to
China and became the first Japanese company to open an overseas route. But the
political winds shifted against Mitsubishi in the early 1880s, and the
government sponsored the establishment of a competitor. The ensuing competition
nearly bankrupted both companies.Yataro died of cancer in 1885 and his younger
brother Yanosuke succeeded him as president of Mitsubishi. The feud between
Mitsubishi and its competitor ended with a government-arbitrated merger the
same year, which created Nippon Yusen--today's NYK Line.
While competition was escalating on the sea, Mitsubishi
was diversifying ashore. The company purchased the Yoshioka copper mine in
Okayama and Takashima coal mine in Nagasaki. It leased and then purchased the
Nagasaki Shipbuilding Yard from the government in 1884 and later engineered
Japan's first domestically produced steel steamship there.
In 1885, Yanosuke Iwasaki succeeded his elder brother,
Yataro, as head of the Mitsubishi organization.
After the independence of NYK, Mitsubishi continued to
grow and diversify under the autocratic leadership of Yanosuke. He bought up
more mines to provide resources for Mitsubishi and Japan's growing industries.
He also incorporated the Mitsubishi organizations as a
modern corporation. Yanosuke set about rebuilding the organization around its
mining and shipbuilding businesses. He expanded the organization's positions in
banking, insurance and warehousing, and thus laid the foundation for future
growth and development.
In 1890, he purchased 80 acres of the land next to the
Imperial Palace now known as Marunouchi.
Yataro's son, Hisaya, assumed the presidency in 1893. The
University of Pennsylvania graduate restructured Mitsubishi to support
increasingly diverse business operations. He set up divisions for banking, real
estate, marketing, and administration, as well as for the original mining and
shipbuilding businesses.
Some of Hisaya's private investments are part of today's
Mitsubishi companies. He purchased the Kobe Paper Mill, which is today's
Mitsubishi Paper Mills, and he backed the founding of Kirin Brewery. His cousin
Toshiya founded Asahi Glass, Japan's first successful manufacturer of plate
glass.
Hisaya insisted on the observance of firm ethical
principles in business dealings. After the outbreak of WWI in 1914, he called
on all the Mitsubishi employees to redouble their commitment to integrity and
fairness.
Philanthropy was a lasting emphasis for Hisaya. He
donated to the city of Tokyo two expansive Japanese gardens - Rikugien and
Kiyosumi-Teien, and established Toyo Bunko, a library for housing oriental works.
Koyata Iwasaki, the son of Yanosuke, took over the
presidency from Hisaya in 1916 at the age of 38. Like Hisaya, he had studied
abroad and was a graduate of Cambridge University. He led the Mitsubishi
organization for nearly 30 years and played a pivotal role in shaping the
development of Japanese industry.
Under Koyata, Mitsubishi was modernized further as the
divisions were incorporated into semiautonomous companies. Koyata steered
Mitsubishi to leadership in such sectors as machinery, electrical equipment,
and chemicals. The companies that later became Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
developed automobiles, aircraft, tanks, and buses. And Mitsubishi Electric also
became a leader in electrical machinery and in home appliances.
The Iwasaki family relinquished some of its control over
Mitsubishi through a public offering of shares in the core holding company. By
the end of World War II, outside investors held nearly one-half of the equity.
Koyata encouraged his managers and employees to stand
above the xenophobia that swept Japan during the war years. "We count many
British and Americans among our business partners," he reminded Mitsubishi
executives shortly after the outbreak of hostilities. "They are our
friends who have undertaken projects together with us and who have shared
interests with us. Should peace come again, they should again become our
partners."
After the war, the allied occupation forces demanded that
Japan's big industrial groups disband. The last Mitsubishi president, Koyata
Iwasaki, resisted conforming to the demands but unfortunately passed away in
1945. Mitsubishi Headquarters disbanded on September 30, 1946, and many of the
Mitsubishi companies subsequently split into smaller enterprises.
The old Mitsubishi organization ended in 1946. The
Mitsubishi holding company was dissolved while the trading house fragmented
into hundreds of independent enterprises. Most of the Mitsubishi companies
abandoned the name and emblem under pressure from the occupation forces.
In 1952, the San Francisco Peace Treaty was concluded and
Japan regained a welcome place in the international community.
In 1954, more than 100 companies that had been part of
the trading house, Mitsubishi Corporation, merged to reestablish that company.
Similarly, the principal components of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries reunited in
1964. Mitsubishi companies that had abandoned that name after the war began
using it and the three-diamond mark again.
Japan was the scene of unprecedented economic growth in
the 1950's and 1960's, and the Mitsubishi companies were very much a part of that
growth in their established industries and in new ones.
To commemorate the centennial anniversary of the founding
of the first Mitsubishi company, the Mitsubishi companies established the
Mitsubishi Foundation in 1969. The companies are also active individually in
supporting worthy causes through their own charitable foundations and in other
ways.
Mitsubishi
pavilions have been highlights of expositions in Japan since the historic
EXPO'70 in Osaka in 1970. In every way, the companies take part actively in the
life of the community they serve..
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