Commodore Perry had returned to Japan on …
Years: 1854 - 1854
March
Commodore Perry had returned to Japan on February 1854 after only half a year rather than the full year promised, and with twice as many ships and sixteen hundred men.
Both actions are calculated to put even more pressure onto the Japanese.
After initial resistance, Perry is permitted to land at Kanagawa, near the site of present-day Yokohama on March 8, 1854, where, after negotiations lasting for around a month, the Convention of Kanagawa prepared by the delegates, embodying virtually all the demands in President Fillmore's letter, is signed on March 31, 1854.
Perry signs as American plenipotentiary, and Hayashi Akira, also known by his title of Daigaku-no-kami, signs for the Japanese side.
