Greater Tokyo

TOCHIGI

Furukawa Ashio History Museum

A moving page from the dawn of Japan’s modern development.

<strong>Overview of the Furukawa Ashio History Museum</strong>

Ashio Copper Mine is one of the most important copper-producing sites in Japanese history. Discovered during the Sengoku period (1550), it was later mined under the direct control of the Edo shogunate. It once served as an essential source of material for <strong data-start="503" data-end="519">Kan’ei Tsūhō</strong>, the currency of the time. As output later declined, the mine was taken over by the Furukawa family during the Meiji period. Due to advances in technology, new ore veins were found, and under the then national policy of enriching the country and strengthening the military, the mine prospered, making the Furukawa family magnates of the mining industry.

 

The Furukawa Ashio History Museum tells the stirring story of that industrial dawn. In addition to models of the Ashio Mining Office and stories of successive managers, it also exhibits the various tools used by miners in those days, recounting the history of the Ashio area.
Phone number
0288-25-5810
Contact
0288-25-5810
Business hours
Opening Period: Every year from April to November
Open Days: Weekends and national holidays
Hours: 10:00~16:00
Charges
Adults (high school students and older): 400 yen
Children (elementary & junior high school students): 300 yen
Free for visitors with a disability certificate