- Source: Miyazaki House
- My Neighbor Totoro
- The House I Live In (film 1945)
- You Higuri
- Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (manga)
- Solanin (manga)
- Mizuho Fukushima
- Daftar perusahaan di Jepang
- Elle Fanning
- One-Punch Man
- Omoide no Marnie
- Miyazaki House
- Tsutomu Miyazaki
- Miyazaki (city)
- List of works by Hayao Miyazaki
- Hayao Miyazaki
- Kushima, Miyazaki
- Ebino, Miyazaki
- Hyūga, Miyazaki
- Tōten Miyazaki
- Masajiro Miyazaki
The Miyazaki House (formerly the Longford House) in Lillooet, British Columbia is an elegant house built by Caspar Phair in the 1880s. It was partially modelled after Mrs. Phair's previous home, Eyrecourt Castle, in County Galway, Ireland. The gardens originally reached down to Lillooet's Main Street. A.W.A. "Artie" Phair was next to live in the house, though he let the gardens deteriorate. In collaboration with the head of the local British Columbia Provincial Police, Phair brought Dr. Masajiro Miyazaki from the Bridge River relocation camp in Shalalth to Lillooet to replace the local coroner in 1945, and Miyazaki served in that capacity and, although only an osteopath by credentials, served in the capacity of doctor and dentist, and was living in Longford House in 1945. Dr. Miyazaki bought the house legally from Artie's son, Harold Phair, in 1947, when the ban on Japanese Canadians buying and owning property was lifted. The house was then used as Dr. Miyazaki's office until he donated it to the community of Lillooet in 1983.
The house is now called the Miyazaki House and is used for community events and local artwork display. It is also open as a Heritage House Tuesday to Saturday, 10–4, for free tours.
References
Historic Sites - District of Lillooet website
Miyazaki House in Lillooet, Michael Kluckner's Vanishing BC website
My Sixty Years in Canada, Masajiro Miyazaki, self-publ.
Miyazaki House page, Adventures in Gold Country website
External links
Official website
image of Miyazaki House, cayoosh.net website