The area around Misawa has been occupied since the
Japanese Paleolithic period, and was a major population center for the
Emishi people. Numerous
Jōmon period remains have been discovered within the borders of Misawa, including within the borders of Misawa Air Base. The area was nominally under control of the
Northern Fujiwara in the
Heian period, and became part of the holdings granted to the
Nanbu clan after the defeat of the North Fujiwara by
Minamoto no Yoritomo in the early
Kamakura period. The Nanbu established numerous horse ranches, accompanied by a series of numbered fortified settlements in the region. During the
Edo period, the area was part of
Morioka Domain and was later transferred to the holdings of the subsidiary
Shichinohe Domain during the mid-Edo period.. After the
Meiji Restoration, the area was settled by many dispossessed ex-
samurai from former
Aizu Domain. Per the post-
Meiji restoration establishment of the modern municipalities system on 1 April 1889, the village of Misawa was created within
Kamikita District through the merger of Misawa and Tengamori hamlets. The area was devastated by a
tsunami in March 1896. In 1931, in the first successful nonstop transpacific flight,
Clyde Pangborn and
Hugh Herndon, in the airplane
Miss Veedol, took off from Misawa's
Sabishiro Beach and landed in present-day
East Wenatchee, Washington in the United States. Coastal areas of Misawa were again devastated by a tsunami in March 1933. An
Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service base was established in 1941, and nearby Lake Ogawara was reportedly one of the lakes used by the
Imperial Japanese Navy to practice for the
attack on Pearl Harbor, due to its shallow depth. The base was heavily bombed by the
United States Navy in 1945, and subsequently occupied by the United States after the
surrender of Japan at the end of
World War II. On 11 February 1948, the town of Omisawa was founded through the merger of Misawa village with portions of
Rokunohe,
Shimoda and Uranodate villages.
Misawa Airport was opened on 11 January 1952, with
Japan Airlines providing scheduled services to
Haneda Airport in Tokyo and
Chitose Airport in
Hokkaidō. The town was renamed Misawa, and elevated to city status on 1 September 1958. Misawa Airport was closed on 31 March 1965. On 11 January 1966, a large fire destroyed most of the center of the city. On 19 August 1969, the 51st annual
Japanese High School Baseball Championship was held in Misawa. Misawa Airport reopened on 10 May 1975. In the year 2000, Misawa hosted the winter events for the 55th annual
National Sports Festival of Japan. ==Government==