Kabayama Aisuke
Count Kabayama Aisuke was a Japanese businessman and privy counselor.
Early life
Kabayama was the son of Yosaburo Hashiguchi, a samurai of the Kagoshima clan. He was adopted by Sukenori Kabayama, a navy admiral. After learning at Dōjinsha and Kanda Kyoritsu Gakko, he travelled to the U.S. in 1880. After graduating from Amherst College in 1889, he went to Germany and enrolled at Bonn University. He returned to Japan in 1891.Career
Beginning in 1906, Kabayama successively served as executive director at Hakodate Funabari, Hokkaido Tanko Kisen, Nihon Tekkojo, and Chiyoda Kasai Hoken. He founded Kokusai Tsushinsha and became president in 1914. He inherited the title of hakushaku in 1922 and was selected as a member of the House of Peers in 1925. He served as an attendant in the suite of the commissioner plenipotentiary of the London Naval Conference in 1929. He served as privy councillor in 1946. He also served as the president of Nichi Bei Kyokai and president of the International House of Japan.In the 1930s, Kabayama was one of the first directors of the Society for the Promotion of International Culture, and an early leader of the America-Japan Society.