Horace Wilson (February 10, 1843 – March 4, 1927) was an American expatriate educator in late 19th-century Empire of Japan. He is one of the persons credited with introducing the sport of baseball to Japan.

Biography

thumb|right|200px|Wilson's grave at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park

Wilson was born in Gorham, Maine, United States. He enrolled at Kents Hill School in the fall of 1858, and is believed to have graduated in the spring of 1862. A veteran of the U.S. Civil War, he fought for the 12th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment against the Confederates in Louisiana.

After the war, he was hired by the Japanese government as a foreign adviser to assist in the modernization of the Japanese education system after the Meiji Restoration. He served as a professor of English at Kaisei Gakko, the forerunner of Tokyo Imperial University.

In either 1872 or 1873, Wilson decided that his students needed more physical exercise, and introduced them to the sport of baseball. Several weeks or months later, enough interest had developed for the school to sponsor a seven-inning game between the Japanese students and foreign instructors.

See also

  • Japanese baseball

References

  • Baseball In Japan
  • The Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum (English)