Life in Japan Under pressure from British minister Sir
Harry Parkes to fulfil its obligations to make the waters and harbors of Japan safe for shipping, the
Tokugawa shogunate hired the
Edinburgh-based firm of D. and T. Stevenson to chart coastal waters and to build lighthouses where appropriate. The project had already begun under French
foreign advisor Léonce Verny, but was not proceeding fast enough for the British. Brunton was sent from Edinburgh in August 1868 to head the project after being recommended to the Japanese government by the Stevensons, despite the fact that he had no experience in lighthouse building at all. He was accompanied by his wife, sister-in-law and two assistants. The party received word while docked at
Aden of the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate and its replacement by the
Meiji government, and decided to continue on to Japan, reasoning that the new government was still bound by the international commitments of its predecessor. Over the next seven and a half years he designed and supervised the building of 26 Japanese lighthouses in the
Western style, along with two
lightvessels. An obituary published in the journal of the Institution of Civil Engineers states "in ten years he had executed 50 lighthouses". There had been Japanese lighthouses before then, but they were short and squat buildings, such as the old Shirasu lighthouse now in the grounds of
Kokura Castle in
Kitakyushu. Brunton also established a system of
lighthouse keepers, modeled on the
Northern Lighthouse Board in Scotland. Aside from his work on lighthouses around Japan, Brunton also surveyed and drew the first detailed maps of
Yokohama, planned its sewage system, street paving and gas lights, established a telegraph system, and designed and built the settlement's first iron bridge. He also helped found Japan's first school of
civil engineering. In recognition of his efforts, he was received by
Emperor Meiji in an audience in 1871.
Return to Britain After disagreeing with Japanese officials he left Japan in March 1876, later receiving a prize for his paper "Japan Lights". On his return he first set up in
Glasgow for
Young's Paraffin Oil, before moving to south
London in 1881 making architectural plasterwork, where he remained until his death. He is buried in
West Norwood Cemetery, where his marble memorial there was restored by the Yokohama
Chamber of Commerce in 1991. ==List of Brunton's Japanese Lighthouses==