Kominato, Aomori

Kominato (小湊町, Kominato-machi) was a town located in Higashitsugaru District in central Aomori Prefecture, Japan. It is now the central district of the town, Hiranai.

Kominato

小湊町
Former municipality
A map of Kominato as it was in 1926. The Ōshū Kaidō followed the thick yellow line from the center-right edge of the map, turned south through the center of the town, then west, leaving the map in the bottom-left edge of the map.
Kominato
Location in Japan
Coordinates: 40°55′33.4″N 140°57′21.1″E
CountryJapan
RegionTōhoku
PrefectureAomori Prefecture
DistrictHigashitsugaru
MergedMarch 31, 1955
(now part of Hiranai)
Population
 (1950)
  Total9,790
Time zoneUTC+9 (JST)

History

During Edo period when the area was controlled by the Tsugaru clan of Kuroishi Domain, what would become Kominato was the center of power for the eastern part of the Kuroishi Domain. Kominato was founded on April 1, 1889, as Nakahiranai Village. It was elevated to a town on October 1, 1928, and the town's name was officially changed to Kominato as part of the celebration of the enthronement of Emperor Hirohito.[1]

After the conclusion of the Pacific War, the point where the Morita River meets Mutsu Bay on the coast of Kominato was chosen by the Ministry of Transport as the site of a shipping port to Hakodate, Hokkaido to replace the port destroyed in Aomori City by air raids. Construction on a temporary port was completed on July 1, 1946, with services continuing until July 15, 1949. The services were cancelled because Japan National Railways assumed control of the port from the Ministry of Transport and then decided that the rebuilt port in Aomori would be more profitable than building a permanent port in Kominato. Despite losing the port's failure in turning Kominato into a transport hub, the town continued to make use the port in the scallop industry.[1]

On March 31, 1955, the town was merged with the neighboring Higashi-Hiranai and Nishi-Hiranai villages to make the currently extant town, Hiranai, with its government centered in Kominato.[2]

At the time of its merger, Kominato had a population of 9,790.

Neighboring municipalities

These were the neighboring municipalities of Kominato just before its incorporation into Hiranai.[3]

  • Aomori – this part of Aomori was the village, Azumadake until 1 January 1955.
  • Nonai – now part of Aomori
  • Nishi-Hiranai – now part of Hiranai
  • Higashi-Hiranai – now part of Hiranai

Economy

The town once had a busy port, connecting the Japanese islands Honshu and Hokkaido to the north by ferry; however, the ferry services were moved to Aomori by the beginning of the 20th century. They returned to Kominato after 90 percent of Aomori was destroyed by American B-29 bombers during World War II; however, the services moved once again when Aomori recovered from the air raids.[1] Otherwise, the town had a sizable paddy field system and was known for its scallops.

Transportation

Notable people from Kominato

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gollark: Seems pretty bad to me.
gollark: It doesn't have ADTs, so you can't have Rust's `Result` thing, and it doesn't have exceptions.
gollark: Also, Go has `nil`, which is a mistake.

References

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