The area of present-day Fussa was part of ancient
Musashi Province. During the
Edo period, it was
tenryō territory controlled directly by the
Tokugawa shogunate and administered by various
hatamoto. The area was agricultural and noted for
silkworms and
sake production. After the
Meiji Restoration, the 26 hamlets in the area consolidated into the villages of Fussa, Kumagawa and Tama within the short-lived Shinagawa Prefecture, followed by
Kanagawa Prefecture. Parts of the area were involved in the
Chichibu Incident of 1884. The entire district was transferred to the control of Tokyo Metropolis on April 1, 1893, and the Ōme Railway joined Fussa to Tachikawa the following year. Fussa was elevated to town status in 1940, and an airfield for the
Imperial Japanese Army was built, and became the central aircraft testing facility for the Army in 1942. During
World War II, the area was only lightly bombed (once in 1945, with four casualties), and the military facilities were seized mostly intact by the
American military after the war. In the post-war era, Fussa expanded rapidly through the construction of
subsidized housing districts, and was elevated to city status on April 1, 1970. ==Government==