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ISHIDO KOREKAZU

ISHIDO HIDEO
ISHIDO YOSHITAKA

ISHIDO YOSHITAKA & MOTHER

FORGE

DROP HAMMER


URA GRINDING ABRASIVE WHEEL
QUENCH

OLD SCRAP BRIDGE IRON

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ISHIDO
FAMILY LINEAGE
In the following paragraphs I have
attempted to piece together an overview of the lineage of the Ishido
blacksmith name. I do not wish to disrespect or pry into the Ishido
family. My purpose is to establish some historical perspective and nothing
more. If any of the following is incorrect, I apologize and will attempt
to correct it to any degree possible. I understand that the Ishido name
has been used by a separate line of sword smiths until the present date. My
research deals only with the Ishido lineage that is directly connected
with the present Ishido Teruhide who make kanna and tool blades in the
Tokyo area.
The following names used are presented as the family name first and the
given name or professional name next.
The Ishido history is a bit
complex but I believe that in the Edo period leading up to the Meiji
restoration the blacksmiths using the professional name of Ishido were sword
makers. Beginning with the Meiji they turned to the production of
kanna blades and various edged tools. The head of the clan at that time of
the restoration was the sword blacksmith know as Ishido Unjusai Korekazu. Soon
two
other blacksmith family names will merge with the Ishido history, they are the
Kato and Seiichi famlies.
Ishido Unjusai Korekazu was indeed an
actual sword smith, and it is documented that he was the 7th generation to
make swords. It is now understood that
Ishido Unjusai
Korekazu was the father of a daughter but no son. Another sword smith
who's family name was Kato but used the professional name of Chounsai
Tsunatoshi (father of Chiyozuru Korehide) had a brother by the name of Kato
Toshinaga. Kato Toshinaga married the daughter of Ishido and and thereby
legally adopted
the Ishido family name and became known as Ishido Toshinaga, but used the
professional name of Ishido Korekazu. There is evidence that earlier in
the Edo period a marriage union between the Ishido & Kato clans took
place. Ishido Toshinaga was the first Ishido to make kanna blades as a
tradesman, up until that point only swords were made by the Ishido clan.
About this
same time, the 1850-60s, the head of the Kato clan, Kato Chounsai Tsunatoshi had two
sons, the younger son, who's name was Kato Hiroshi was later to use the
professional name of Chiyozuru Korehide. Chiyozuru created his own name
and dropped the Kato name and therefore became an independent blacksmith
on his own and set up his own shop at a early age.
At the time of Korekazu's death in 1891, his
son
the talented Hidekazu, rightfully took over
the family business. The Ishido name became prominent in the tool trades
and there is a good chance that Ishido Hidekazu and Chiyozuru worked
closely and helped to encourage each others knowledge and skills. It is known and recorded that Hidekazu had two sons who where both
blacksmiths and it was assumed that one of them would have taken up the
family trade and the continuation of the Ishido name at some point. As
fate would have, tragedy struck the family thrice. The first son was
lost unexpectedly, possibly in an accident, and the second son died
tragically soon after. During this late period in Hidekazu's life he also
lost his wife. With the burden of all these losses it is reported that alcoholism and depression
befell the master. Thankfully Hidekazu's cousin, Chiyozuru Korehide stepped into manage the Ishido business for the few years
that Hidekazu was suffering.
Upon Hidekazu's untimely
death in 1931, a leader to the Ishido hamono (blade) factory line was needed. There were two
apprentices at the foundry who were considered at this time. The facts are
very vague, and no details are available, but it appears that the older
apprentice, the heir apparent, met death by his own hand. The younger
apprentice decided to pass on the opportunity. There was one more option,
a student and skilled blacksmith by the name of Seiichi Kikuchi.
Born in 1900 at the
dawn of the 20th century, Seiichi Kikuchi had been working with the Ishido
hamono from the age of 14 years old, and now at the young age of 32 appeared
to have the vision, talent, and dedication needed to step in and handle
the work load. After Hidekazu died it
is known that Kikuchi-san assumed all of the work of running the factory and
filling orders and helped to pay the bills of the factory. It is believed
however, that as legal heirs to the Ishido hamono factory, its inventory, and all
of the Ishido documents and deeds, Chiyozuru Korehide and his wife Shizu
(maiden name Ishido Shizu) managed the company's office while Seiichi
Kikuchi ran the development and creative work in the factory. Kikuchi
immediately, as was his right as head of the Ishido factory, began using
the professional name of Ishido Teruhide. In 1951 he wisely formalized the
professional name of Ishido Teruhide by registering the name with the
Japan Trade Association. Ishido Teruhide was now a trademarked name and
Kikuchi maintained that professional title until his death in 1982.
Kikuchi's son Seiichi Hideo was born
in 1932. Although the family of Kikuchi Seiichi's were not blood relatives
or related by marriage to the Ishido clan, Hideo was a welcome addition to
the hamono factory in the Ebisu area of Tokyo. In grammar school, as Hideo
was later to say, "I enjoyed making models of airplanes". But
after graduating from grammar school he would be provided with a tutor (a
sign of good financial times) to continue his schooling while he began to
work at the factory. As the 1930s rolled along the production of kanna
blades declined, other changes happened too. In 1940 the factory started
to use more machinery, and when the war came, the Ishido hamono had up to
22 workers making swords under a contract with the army. In 1945 a fire
destroyed the factory and it was rebuilt. Hideo took part in this
rebuilding, and he understood the new machinery first hand.
Twenty five years after the
death of Hidekazu it was decided that a legal heir to the famous
Ishido name should be formalized. Chiyozuru Korehide, as head of the clan,
elected to enact a practice that was used in Japan in just such
situations. It was decided that Chiyozuru's wife would temporarily divorce
Chiyozuro, and in doing so was allowed to assume her maiden name and status as an Ishido. She was the
sister of Hidekazu and in 1956 she was the last remaining member of the Ishido
family. Now after leaving the Chiyozuru family (the process took a few
days) and becoming an Ishido again, she
could adopt Hideo as her son and therefore giving him all of the legal
rights to the Ishido name and fortune. An adoption ceremony was performed
on June 5th 1956, with 200 guests in attendance. There is a published photo of the
closest guests to the family and they include Chiyozuru sitting next to
Hideo sitting next to his adopted mother Shizu-san and at that end of the
row is Kikuchi's sister. On the other side of Chiyozuru to his left sits Seiichi
Kikuchi.
Directly behind this row are two daughters of Chiyozuru, their husbands,
and in the back row with his family is Chiyozuru Nobukuni. Immediately
after this adoption ceremony, the Chiyozurus' were married again in a
wedding ceremony.
Seiichi Kikuchi remained as
the master blacksmith of the Ishido hamono factory, making all of the
decisions regarding the designs and contracts. Teruhide Kikuchi-san may
have been the most creative of the Ishido blacksmiths of the 20th century.
A true man of vision, he was one of the first blacksmiths to incorporate
power driven drop hammers and sheers and modern steels. Needless to say he
was from the very beginning a humble and extremely devoted man in regards
to the Ishido hamono and the Ishido clan. He gave up his only son in name,
probably worked 365 days a year, forgave any claim to fame outside the
reference of the Ishido hamono, and I believed possessed an infinite
amount of integrity. Hideo's wife would later
describe that the last 20 years of Kikuchi-sans life, "he did not lift a
hammer very often but retained the rights to perform Yaki ire (tempering
and annealing) & Mei kiri (engraving or chiseling the makers name on
the blade) until just before his death in 1982".
Upon the death of
Kikuchi Seiichi, his son Ishido Hideo assumed the title of Ishido Teruhide. Hideo-san was trained in the traditional master/apprentice
manner from an early age and as a master blacksmith he became an
accessible inspiration to a whole generation of contemporary blacksmiths in
Japan. He helped to rebuild the war torn shop that Ishido hamono
maintained in Ebisu and which he would eventually moved to Oyama in
Tochigi prefecture. Hideo-san withstood the lean years and he participated in the soon to follow great
years of tool making of the 1950s and 60s. Along side the aging father Kikuchi, Hideo-san helped to nourish the emergence of the "boutique
blacksmith" era where reputations were rightly profiled and
recognized. In the late 1960s The Living National Treasure status was
promulgated and although tool makers were not officially included, craftspeople throughout Japan were given their due
respect. In the 1980s a new revitalization of the black smithy trade was
emerging. Ishido Teruhide won an award for a kanna blade in 1981, and in the bubble years of the 1980s customized blades with unique
decorative elements became popular, prices went up for top quality work.
Ishido Hideo, a man with enormous talent and knowledge was an example of
strength and stability to many emerging metal workers and tool smiths. Sadly, Hideo passed away late in
2006 after a long career of hard work and honest endeavor.
Ishido Yoshitaka Teruhide is now the bold captain of the family
business and is displaying his spirit as the leader of the Ishido clan.
May he have as much success and a long life as those before him.
Ishido
Chronology
Ishido Unjusai Korekazu
(b.?-d.1891)
Ishido Korekazu Toshinaga
(b.?-d.1891)
Ishido Hidekazu
(b.1874-1931)
Teruhide Seiichi Kikuchi (b.1900-1982)
Ishido Hideo
(b.1932-2006)
Ishido Yoshitaka
(b.1957
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