A sapling of Pembroke Dock’s famous Gingko tree, linked to the Japanese Imperial Navy, has been planted at the Heritage Centre to celebrate the town’s longstanding ties with Japan.

The little tree has a huge history: propagated from the famous Gingko tree which towers above the Royal Dockyard, it will now grow in the grounds of the town’s Heritage Centre, formerly the Dockyard Chapel.

In a ceremony on Thursday, April 17, Japanese diplomat Mr Masaki Ikegami, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Japan to the United Kingdom, planted the sapling before invited guests, heritage trustees and centre volunteers. He was joined for the visit by Captain Shuzo Homma, Naval Attache at the Japanese Embassy.

The original Gingko tree, in the garden of the nearby Master Shipwright’s House, was gifted to the town 148 years ago. It marked the launch in 1877 of one of the first modern warships for the Imperial Japanese Navy - which was modelled on the Royal Navy. The armoured corvette Hiei was built at a private shipyard at Jacob’s Pill, Pennar, and its launch was a major event in Pembroke Dock, attended by the then Japanese Ambassador to the UK.

In recent years, several offspring from the Ginkgo have been nurtured at the National Botanic Garden of Wales, Carmarthenshire, and some have since been returned to Japan, where they have been planted at naval bases and at the shrine to naval hero Admiral Heichahiro Togo who, as a young lieutenant, lodged in Pembroke Dock during the construction of the Hiei.

Heritage Trust Patron John Evans and Chairman Rik Saldanha welcomed the Japanese guests. Also present were Deputy Lieutenant of Dyfed Professor Patricia Mawuli Porter, Pembrokeshire County Council Chairman Cllr Steve Alderman, Pembroke Dock Mayor Cllr Maria Williams, Welsh Assembly Member Sam Kurtz, alongside Ayshea Cunniffe-Thomas from the National Botanic Garden of Wales and Simon Richards, who had both played key parts in the story of the new Ginkgo trees. Simon gave fascinating details about what is one of the oldest trees in the world, dating from the era of the dinosaurs.

Mr Masaki Ikegami and Captain Shuzo Homma from the Japanese Embassy pictured by the Ginkgo tree in the grounds of the Master Shipwright’s House with the owner, Mr Stewart Walton (left), and Rik Saldanha and John Evans of the Pembroke Dock Heritage Trust.
Mr Masaki Ikegami and Captain Shuzo Homma from the Japanese Embassy pictured by the Ginkgo tree in the grounds of the Master Shipwright’s House with the owner, Mr Stewart Walton (left), and Rik Saldanha and John Evans of the Pembroke Dock Heritage Trust. Photo: Martin Cavaney (Martin Cavaney Photography)

Mrs Margaret James, widow of the well-remembered maritime historian and author David James, was also welcomed, accompanied by her son Adrian. Mr James’ research and writings over many years encompassed both the naval links between Japan and Pembroke Dock and the commemoration of Japanese sailors, casualties in the Great War, who are buried in Pembrokeshire.

There was a special link to Japan through Mrs Yoriko Omae, originally from Hiroshima, who had helped David James with the commemoration of Japanese sailors at Angle and who recently retired as a staff member at the town library.

Following the planting ceremony, guests visited the garden of the Master Shipwright’s House, courtesy of owners Stewart and Angela Walton, to view the original Ginkgo tree.