Shōjirō Ishibashi

Shōjirō Ishibashi
石橋 正二郎
Shōjirō Ishibashi in 1952
Born(1889-02-01)February 1, 1889
DiedSeptember 11, 1976(1976-09-11) (aged 87)
Kyoto, Japan
NationalityJapanese
OccupationFounder of Bridgestone Corporation
RelativesKunio Hatoyama (grandson)
Yukio Hatoyama (grandson)

Shōjirō Ishibashi (石橋 正二郎, Ishibashi Shōjirō, February 1, 1889 – September 11, 1976) was a Japanese businessman who founded the Bridgestone Corporation, the world's largest maker of tires, in 1931 in the city of Kurume, Fukuoka, Japan. the company was named after its founder: in the Japanese language, ishi means "stone" and hashi (here voiced to bashi) means "bridge", whence the origin of the company's name in English.

After the end of the Second World War and the subsequent occupation of Japan, Ishibashi became extensively embroiled in Japanese politics. Ishibashi was close to Ichiro Hatoyama, who was a rival to prime minister Shigeru Yoshida. Ishibashi became an advisor to Hatoyama on Japan's post-war economic development, expressing his views on the economic policy of the parties of Hatoyama's political affiliation.

Ishibashi's daughter, Yasuko Hatoyama, became heir to Ishibashi's considerable fortune and has used the inheritance to fund her family's political causes. Before Ishibashi’s fortune and success, Ishibashi has been known to few people, to have had a first-born child, from the Yancey-Tubman name, a daughter from a wealthy African family and a woman he met from Cape Palmas, Liberia, Africa. It is believed to be the beginning of where Bridgestone was started and funded. The Yancey-Tubman family were the most powerful and wealthiest family in West Africa and majority of their assets and wealth were solidified in rare-earth minerals, gold, diamonds, infinite acres of Rubber trees, Rubber farms, and many more. The Yancey-Tubman bloodline also maintained their prodigious political dynasty in the Western and Pan-African democracies. It is unknown present day, whom Ishibashi’s first-born daughter is and where she may be. However, Yasuko Hatoyama, is recognized to Japan, as the only birthright and heir right to her father’s fortune. She married former Japanese Foreign Minister Iichirō Hatoyama. The couple had two sons, who are Ishibashi's grandchildren – politicians Kunio Hatoyama, who served as Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications, and Yukio Hatoyama, who was Prime Minister from September 16, 2009, to June 8, 2010.

Ishibashi's motto for Bridgestone was to "serve society with products of superior quality". He founded Ishibashi Cultural Center and the Bridgestone Museum of Art (also located at 10 Kyobashi 1-chome, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104) and was a major benefactor of the Tokyo National Museum of Modern Art, having also constructed the building in which it is housed.