YOKOHAMA.
Yokohama is the principal Treaty port of Japan, and was opened to foreign trade in July, 1859. It is situated on the Bay of Yokohama, a small bay on the Western side of the Gulf of Yedo, in lat. 35 deg. 26 min. 11 sec. N., and long. 139 deg. 39 min. 20 sec., in the island of Hondo, and is distant about eighteen miles from the capital, with which it is connected by a line of railway. The settlement stands on what was originally a swamp, and the town having sprung up only since the site was select- ed for a treaty port instead of the little town of Kanagawa-possesses few attrac- tions for the visitor. The scenery around, however, is hilly and pleasing, and on a clear day the snow-crowned summit and graceful outlines of Fusiyama, a volcanic mountain 13,540 feet high-celebrated in Japanese literature and depicted on so many native works of art-is most distinctly visible though some seventy-five miles distant. Yokohama is compactly built of low houses with tiled roofs. The town is divided into two nearly equal parts, the western half being occupied by the foreign settlement. Beyond the plain on which the town is built rises a sort of semicircle of low hills called "The Bluff," which is thickly dotted with handsome foreign villas and dwelling-houses in various styles of architecture, all standing in pretty gardens. From these dwellings charming prospects are obtainable. Along the water-front of the foreign settlement runs a good road called the Bund, on which, facing the water, stand many of the principal houses and hotels and the United Club. The streets in the foreign settlement are fairly paved, kerbed, and drained. There are Anglican, French Catholic, Union Protestant, and native Mission Churches in the settlement. A fine Cricket and Recreation Ground exists in the Settlement, and there are some well laid out Public Gardens on the Bluff. A new Theatre, neatly built of brick, was opened on the Bluff in 1885. The chief public buildings in the native town are the Kencho, opposite the British Consulate, the Town Hall, which has a clock tower, and the Custom House, a fine building erected in 1885. The Railway Station is also a creditable structure, being a well designed and commodious terminus. There is a fairly good Race Course situated about two miles from the Settlement. Yokohama is well supplied with hotels, some of which afford good accommodation. There are three English daily papers published in the port, namely, the Japan Gazette, the Japan Herald, and the Japan Daily Mail; the latter has also a weekly
edition.
The native population of Yokohama was, according to a censu- taken in January, 1885, 80,603. The number of oreign residents in 1885 was 3,737, of whom 2,487 were Chinese, 587 British, 228 Americar, 160 German, 109 Frencu, 31 Swiss, 31 Dutch, 20 Portuguese, 4 Russian, an the remainder of various nationalities.
1
;
The imports into Yokohama consist chiefly of cotton and woollen goods. In 1885, according to the British Con-ul's report, the value of the different classes of imports was as follows:-Cotton manufactures, £1,026,519; woollen and mixed cotton and woollen inanufactures, £428,001; metals, £348,414; kerosine, £188,427 ; sugar, £661,756; miscellaneous foreign, £829,047; miscellaneous eastern, £282,311; total, £3,894,984, as against £3,982,246 in 1884. The total value of the exports was £4,178,282. Silk is the most valuable of the exports, being set down at £2,489,774. The value of the tea exported was £751,666. The total export of raw silk during the season from 1st July, 1885, to same da'e 1886, only half of which period is covered by the Consular returns, was 25,831 bales. The total export for the previous year was 25,403 bales. The export of tea during the season 1st May, 1885, to same date 1886, was 24,184,720 lbs., nearly all for America. The export during the previous season was 20,858,248 lbs.