Tracey Mission
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The Tracey Mission was a Naval mission of the Royal Navy sent to Japan in 1867–1868. Taking place immediately prior to the Meiji Restoration of 1868, the mission had been requested by the Shogunate in order to help develop its Navy, and more specifically to organize and superintend the Naval school at Tsukiji, Tokyo.
The mission was led by Commander, later Admiral, Sir Richard Tracey, and composed of several officers and warrant officers. Commander Tracey, who earlier in his career had served as a junior officer on HMS Euryalus, was a veteran of active operations at both the Bombardment of Kagoshima in August 1863 and the attack on Shimonoseki in September 1864.{{cite book|last1=Satow|first1=Ernest|title=A Diplomat in Japan|date=1921|publisher=ICG Muse Inc.|location=Tokyo and New York|isbn=4-925080-28-8|page=228|edition=First ICG Muse edition, 2000}}
The Tracey mission was barely able to start work due to the start of the Boshin War and returned to England, due to the promise of all foreign powers to remain neutral in the conflict.
References
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- [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/japan/ijn-rise.htm The rise of the Imperial Japanese Navy]
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Category:Japan–United Kingdom relations
Category:19th-century history of the Royal Navy
Category:1867 in military history
Category:1868 in military history
Category:1867 in the United Kingdom
Category:1868 in the United Kingdom
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