The Reverend Jonathan Goble (1827–1897) was an American Free Baptist minister and missionary in Yokohama, Japan. He travelled with Matthew C. Perry to Japan in 1853. While there, he learned the Japanese language. He returned as the first Baptist missionary to Japan in 1860.[1] It is said that around 1869, he built the first rickshaw to transport his invalid wife Eliza Goble around the city.[2] However, there are numerous other theories about the origin of the rickshaw.
Name
editHis name is listed variously as Jonathan Scobie, E. Jonathan Scobie and Jonathan Goble.
In culture
editMusical Theater: Jonathan Goble appears as a character (played by the narrator) in act two of the musical Pacific Overtures who explains how he came to invent his rickshaw while a series of local residents working as runners pulling his rickshaw die of exhaustion, each instantly replaced by a new runner.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ World History and Cultures in Christian Perspective. Pensacola, FL, USA: Abeka. 2015. p. 290.
- ^ Parker, F. Calvin (1990). Jonathan Goble of Japan. New York: University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-7639-7.