The site of the post town is located approximately two kilometers west of present-day
Shimada Station on the
JR East Tokaido Main Line. Initially, the river crossing was under the jurisdiction of the
daikan of Shimada-juku, but in 1696 the post was separated, and the river crossing came under the jurisdiction of a separate office. The procedure to cross the river was to have travelers purchase a crossing permit at the magistrate's office, and then be carried across the river either on the backs of porters or by
kago palanquin. The fee for crossing the river was determined daily by measuring the width and depth of the channel. The number of people making the crossing each day was estimated at 350 in the early Edo period, growing to more than 650 by the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate. A portion of the post town, including a number of late Edo-period buildings, has been preserved as a historic neighborhood. The magistrate's office has been relocated from its original site due to construction of the modern highway, but the structure itself is in good preservation. This building, along with the
banyado where people gathered to make the crossing, and the
fudaba, where the wooden river crossing tickets were sold and recovered, were designated a
National Historic Site in 1966. ==Gallery==