35th Annual Athletic Sports promotional postcard, Hokkaido Imperial University, Sapporo, c. 1915.



1910sAmusements & RecreationsHokkaidoSchools/UniversitiesSports & Athletics
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“XXXV Annual Athletic Sports” promotional postcard, Hokkaido Imperial University, Sapporo, c. 1915.

See also:
Undokai (Sports Day), c. 1930.
The 6th Far Eastern Championship Games advertising postcard, 1923.
Meiji Shrine Games, Tokyo, 1926.

Q: How did track and field sports got started in Japan?

A: There were two sources, I think. First, they were a part of athletic events held by residents of Japan’s foreign enclaves during the last years of the Shogunate and the early Meiji era (1868-1912), and spread from there. A second source was the athletic events held at the dormitory of the Japanese Naval Academy. The latter, too, had a foreign origin, of course — in this case the British officers who taught at the academy. I believe those were the two points of origin of track and field sports in Japan.

Q: How did these sports spread after that?

A: A major event was the athletic meet held at the Imperial University (now the University of Tokyo) in 1883. A government-hired foreign instructor, Frederick W. Strange of England, was concerned about the poor physical condition of the Japanese students, and introduced British sports like boat racing and cricket. The atmosphere created by these activities led to the holding of an athletic meet every year.

Q: What were some of the unique aspects of track and field events in those days?

A: One interesting aspect was that, although the track meets took the form of competitions, the contestants did not engage in any systematic, scheduled training regimen. As the time for a meet approached, students who normally trained at judo or baseball, for example, would start running to prepare for the races around three to four weeks beforehand. There was not yet a formal Japanese equivalent to the English “track and field,” so these events were referred to by a number of different terms. Given the fact that this was a type of sport practiced by university or high-school students on their own after class, and that compulsory education went no further than elementary school in those days, it would appear that track and field was meant for only a handful of elite youth.

Moreover, there was no sports science or theory to speak of at the time, so training and working out were generally done by ad-hoc methods.

Q: How did track and field develop in Japan after that?

A: Japan sent two track and field contestants to the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, which marked Japan’s Olympic debut—but they lost badly. At the time it was noted that records set 16 years earlier at the 1896 Olympics in Athens—the first of the modern Olympic Games—nearly equaled Japan’s best records in 1912. Those concerned with the development of sports in Japan reasoned that if the country was 16 years behind the rest of the world, the next 16 years would offer an opportunity to catch up. And indeed, the beginning of the Taisho era (1912-26) saw a surge in publication of how-to books about track and field sports.

[Sixteen years later,] at the Amsterdam Olympics in 1928, Japan’s aspirations in track and field were realized when Mikio Oda won the triple jump, becoming the country’s first gold medalist. Japanese athletes continued to win gold and other medals at the 1932 Los Angeles and 1936 Berlin games.

The Ups and Downs of Japanese Athletics History, interview with Professor Kei Ushimura of the International Research Center for Japanese Studies, National Institutes of the Humanities, No. 43, November 2019.

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