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Korekiyo Takahashi

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Korekiyo Takahashi Famous memorial

Original Name
Wakiji Kawamura
Birth
Minato-ku, Tokyo Metropolis, Japan
Death
26 Feb 1936 (aged 81)
Minato-ku, Tokyo Metropolis, Japan
Burial
Fuchu City, Fuchū-shi, Tokyo Metropolis, Japan Add to Map
Plot
8-1-2-16
Memorial ID
View Source
Politician. Served as the 20th Prime Minister of Japan, November 1921 to June 1922, as well as several terms as the Minister of Finance. He was an economically liberal finance minister who resisted military spending. For this he was assassinated in the attempted military coup of 1936. He had a multifacted career which included service as the president of the Tokyo Agricultural College, where he worked out his philosophy of "self-help" for farmers, which he later implemented as finance minister. Takahashi began a successful career in banking in 1893, after a quixotic try at operating a silver mine in Peru. By 1900 he was a vice-governor of the Bank of Japan. For contributing to Japan's war effort against Russia by raising great sums through selling war bonds abroad, he was made a member of the House of Peers in 1905, at the age of 52. The next year he became president of the Shokin Bank. In 1907 he received the first of several decorations from the Emperor. Takahashi was made a baron and later a viscount, and in 1911 he became governor of the Bank of Japan, where he lowered interest rates as an anti-depression measure. In 1913 Takahashi entered politics by becoming finance minister in Gonnohyoe (Gombei) Yamamoto's Cabinet and joining the Seiyukai. He succeeded to that party's presidency and also to the premiership in 1921 upon Kei Hara's assassination, concurrently maintaining the finance portfolio. But Takahashi's leadership was weak, and his Cabinet fell the following year, contributing to the political instability of the 1920s. He gave up his peerage, was elected to the House of Representatives, and fought for "constitutional government." In 1924 he accepted the post of agriculture minister in Takaakira Kato's coalition Cabinet. In 1927, as Premier Giichi Tanaka's finance minister, he managed the bank moratorium. Taking the finance portfolio for the fourth time in 1931, he succeeded to the premiership upon Tsuyoshi Inukai's assassination in 1932. After this, he became minister of finance two more times, in Makoto Saito's and Keisuke Okada's Cabinets, before being gunned down on Feb. 26, 1936, with many other government officials, by radical young officers who saw him as a representative of the interests of the "zaibatsu" (industrial combines), thwarting renovation at home and expansion abroad.
Politician. Served as the 20th Prime Minister of Japan, November 1921 to June 1922, as well as several terms as the Minister of Finance. He was an economically liberal finance minister who resisted military spending. For this he was assassinated in the attempted military coup of 1936. He had a multifacted career which included service as the president of the Tokyo Agricultural College, where he worked out his philosophy of "self-help" for farmers, which he later implemented as finance minister. Takahashi began a successful career in banking in 1893, after a quixotic try at operating a silver mine in Peru. By 1900 he was a vice-governor of the Bank of Japan. For contributing to Japan's war effort against Russia by raising great sums through selling war bonds abroad, he was made a member of the House of Peers in 1905, at the age of 52. The next year he became president of the Shokin Bank. In 1907 he received the first of several decorations from the Emperor. Takahashi was made a baron and later a viscount, and in 1911 he became governor of the Bank of Japan, where he lowered interest rates as an anti-depression measure. In 1913 Takahashi entered politics by becoming finance minister in Gonnohyoe (Gombei) Yamamoto's Cabinet and joining the Seiyukai. He succeeded to that party's presidency and also to the premiership in 1921 upon Kei Hara's assassination, concurrently maintaining the finance portfolio. But Takahashi's leadership was weak, and his Cabinet fell the following year, contributing to the political instability of the 1920s. He gave up his peerage, was elected to the House of Representatives, and fought for "constitutional government." In 1924 he accepted the post of agriculture minister in Takaakira Kato's coalition Cabinet. In 1927, as Premier Giichi Tanaka's finance minister, he managed the bank moratorium. Taking the finance portfolio for the fourth time in 1931, he succeeded to the premiership upon Tsuyoshi Inukai's assassination in 1932. After this, he became minister of finance two more times, in Makoto Saito's and Keisuke Okada's Cabinets, before being gunned down on Feb. 26, 1936, with many other government officials, by radical young officers who saw him as a representative of the interests of the "zaibatsu" (industrial combines), thwarting renovation at home and expansion abroad.

Bio by: Warrick L. Barrett



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Warrick L. Barrett
  • Added: Jan 28, 2002
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6136240/korekiyo-takahashi: accessed ), memorial page for Korekiyo Takahashi (24 Jul 1854–26 Feb 1936), Find a Grave Memorial ID 6136240, citing Tama Cemetery, Fuchu City, Fuchū-shi, Tokyo Metropolis, Japan; Maintained by Find a Grave.