The US sent Adm. Matthew C. Perry to Japan in 1852 with a demand for a Japanese trade treaty. Upon arrival in Uraga Harbor near Tokyo he was denied entry to the main port by Tokugawa Shogunate authorities and was ordered to Nagasaki where he was told to limit trade to dealing with the Dutch.
Americans wanted to trade with Japan so they could get goods japan had, that they did not. They wanted help with their stranded soldiers, they wanted a place to fill up with coal and they wanted to trade.
The Japanese agreed with all terms except for trading. But later on, when Japan modernized during the Meiji Restoration Period they ended up trading.
Wish you luckk!-- claire, Canada ;)
Commodore Matthew C. Perry!!
all there tradees
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
we wered to china and they were used to us and Japan had strict tarrifs and didnt want to trade with us
Japan had little in the way of natural resources and felt it need to expand militarily, rather than by trade, to get them. America opposed Japan's expansion, particularly its aggression against China.
They invaded China.
America cut all trade to and from Japan.