Hatsushima has been inhabited since prehistoric times, and remains from the
Jōmon period have been found in the island's interior. It is mentioned in poetry by
Minamoto no Sanetomo during the
Kamakura period, and per records dated 1351, the island had 18 households. This grew to 41 households by 1830 during the
Edo period. In 1913, the future
Emperor of Japan Hirohito visited the island to pursue his hobby of
marine biology. The writer
Akiko Yosano spent several months on the island in 1923, later publishing a diary of her experiences and comments that the culture of the island retained many traditional aspects which had now vanished from the mainland. Tourist development of the island began in 1964 with efforts by the
Fuji Kyuko railway to develop hotels, campgrounds and leisure facilities. In the 1980s, during the
Japanese asset price bubble an investment group attempted to overcome the island's objections to selling their land by making them shareholders in a venture company which intended to turn most of the island into a self-contained resort; however, the venture went bankrupt in 1999. ==Attractions==