Townsend Harris

E158258

Townsend Harris was a 19th-century American diplomat best known for opening Japan to formal relations and trade with the United States through the Harris Treaty of 1858.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Townsend Harris canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf American diplomat
human
merchant
politician
burialPlace Green-Wood Cemetery
countryOfCitizenship United States of America
dateOfBirth 1804-10-03
dateOfDeath 1878-02-25
diplomaticMission Japan
educatedAt self-educated
employer United States Department of State
endTime 1861
era 19th century
familyName Harris
founded City College of New York
givenName Townsend
hasHonor Townsend Harris High School
statue at City College of New York
influenced Meiji Restoration era foreign policy of Japan
Japan–United States relations
surface form: U.S.–Japan relations
knownFor establishing the first U.S. consulate in Japan
negotiating the Harris Treaty of 1858
opening Japan to formal relations with the United States
languageSpoken English
mannerOfDeath natural causes
memberOf New York City Department of Education
surface form: New York City Board of Education
nativeLanguage English
notableWork Harris Treaty of 1858
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the United States and Japan
occupation diplomat
merchant
politician
partOf United States foreign policy
surface form: United States diplomatic history

history of U.S.–Japan relations
placeOfBirth Hudson Falls, New York
Sandy Hill, New York
placeOfDeath New York City
positionHeld President of the New York City Board of Education
United States Consul General to Japan
first United States Consul General to Japan
religion Protestant Christianity
surface form: Protestantism
residence Edo
surface form: Edo, Japan

New York City
Shimoda, Japan
sexOrGender male
startTime 1856
workLocation Edo
surface form: Edo, Japan

Shimoda, Japan

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.