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Why is there a lot of shops with rice in wholesalers on the fish shore?

If you look at the name of the shop facing the barn back street in the Nihonbashi Fish Market Picture Drawing (late Edo period) of the Kaneko family storehouse designated by the ward (ancient document), you will be worried about the name "Yoneya". Why did the name of the store name have nothing to do with fish? You can also see the Nihonbashi Fish Market Figure around 1921.

There is a store name Yone, Yonekatsu, Yonesho, Yonekichi, Yonedome, United States tiger, United States plum, and United States plum, which can be inferred from "Yoneya".

The Magoemon Mori clan was aiming near O Funamachi (currently Nihonbashi Muromachi 1-chome) near the Nihonbashi River, but there were hemp wholesalers and ship-related equipment stores, so it could not be relocated there. The mason who lived in Honmachi moved to Minami-Odawara-cho (currently Tsukiji 6-chome), so I was unwilling to move to Hon-Odawaracho (currently Nihonbashi Muromachi 3-chome) and open a fish shop. Carrying luggage to Hon Odawara-cho was used in the Nishibori Torugawa, which entered Isecho from Edobashi. This river leads to Isecho shore (Shuga shore) or Hon Odawaracho via the U.S. and Kofune shores. Most of them were used for ships carrying rice to rice wholesalers. Until the Genroku era, U.S. wholesalers were very swaying, and the residents of Honodawara-cho were so bad that dogs and cats fought.

However, after that, the fish shore flourished greatly, and the rice wholesaler was enviable and inevitable.

Fish wholesaler "United States"

Fish wholesalers "United States" Why are there many shops with "rice" in wholesalers on the fish shore?

Newly entered fish wholesalers (United States)

The rice wholesaler in Isecho and the residents of Honodawara-cho, who had good swings, are said to be the worst of both. Since then, the economy of the fish market has improved, and the positions of both sides have reversed. U.S. wholesalers who envied the prosperity of the fish market will change their business.

According to "History of Nihonbashi Fish Market" (written by Nobuo Okamoto / written by Kenjo Kido), the rice wholesaler "Yoneya Tarobei" on the banks of the rice bank of Isecho in 1636 changed business and opened a fish shop in Hon Funamachi. Was. The headwater of the trade name "The United States", which is still seen in wholesalers, is found here.