Great Dogs: Hachiko

hachiko.jpgHachiko, an Akita, visited the Shibuya train station in Tokyo every day to meet his master, Professor Eisaburo Ueno. When Ueno died in 1925, Hachiko continued to visit the station, waiting for his master’s return (and to visit, no doubt, many of the friends he had made at Shibuya Station, including the station master, who set aside a special storeroom in which Hachiko would rest.)

To commemorate Hachiko’s loyalty a bronze statue was erected in front of the station in 1934. The statue was recycled during the war, but a recreation was put in place just a few short years after the war was over.

If you visit Tokyo today, you may be asked to meet someone at “Shibuya Hackikoguchi,” the Hachiko exit that leads to the comfortable courtyard. Hachiko presides over the chattering throngs, still immune to distraction, standing faithfully while the video billboards and garish lights splattered all over the tall buildings that have grown in a steel hedge around the crossroads at Shibuya Station.

A great write-up about Hachiko [Wikipedia]


3 Responses to “Great Dogs: Hachiko”

  1. 1 astroglide

    Reminds me of the Futurama episode with the dog that waits for Fry at the pizza parlor.

  2. 2 maki

    The Hachiko sculpture is such a popular meeting point that it gets very crowded, so often you need to specify in which direction from him you will be – e.g. “I’ll be at the tail end of Hachiko”.

  3. 3 The Dude

    My cat woud do that for me… maybe it is a japanese thing (I got her in Japan)

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