Jokichi Takamine: Highly regarded scientist and founder of the Nippon Club

Jokichi Takamine was born in Takaoka, Toyama. He graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in 1879, and did postgraduate work at University of Glasgow and Anderson College in Scotland. He returned to Japan in 1883 and joined the chemistry division at the newly established Department of Agriculture and Commerce. In 1890, Takamine was invited to come to the U.S. to develop a practical application of Taka-diastase (a starch-digesting enzyme named after Takamine) for the distilling industry. Takamine established a research laboratory in Clifton, New Jersey, where in 1901 he isolated and purified the hormone adrenaline from animal glands, the first pure hormone to be isolated from natural sources. Takamine lived in the United States for the rest of his life, but maintained close ties with Japan, aiding in the country’s development of industrial dyes, nitrogen fixation, and the manufacture of Bakelite.

The beautiful rows of cherry trees along the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., were donated by the City of Tokyo in 1912. Takamine, American travel writer Eliza Sidmore, Tokyo Mayor Yukio Ozaki, and botanist David Fairchild played major roles in the donation. The National Cherry Blossom Festival is held annually to commemorate the donation in the United States.
In 1905, he established the Nippon Club, a social club for Japanese Americans and Japanese in New York.

Subject:
Takamine, Jokichi
Year:
1854-1922
Media Type:
Digital resources provided by:

Science History Institute, Williams Haynes Portrait Collection, Science History Institute. Philadelphia

Description written by:
Nippon Club