The Company
In its heyday, Hoshi Pharmaceuticals maintained a close association with the Japanese state. Its founder and longtime president, Hoshi Hajime (1873-1951) had close personal ties to leading statesmen such as Nitobe Inazō (1862-1933), Itō Hirobumi (1841-1990), and especially Gotō Shinpei (1857-1929). Hoshi Hajime himself was a politician; beginning in 1908, when he won his first seat as a representative in the National Diet from his native Fukushima Prefecture, Hoshi served as a parliamentarian six times while pursuing his career as a pharmaceutical mogul (his last term ended in 1947). Before entering the drug business, Hoshi had spent a decade in the United States studying and working among elites. He obtained an M.A. from the School of Political Science of Columbia University in 1901, directed the Japanese Exhibition at the 1904 St. Louis World Fair, and managed a bilingual newspaper that fostered U.S.-Japan relations titled, Japan and America. Hoshi's time in America piqued his interest in American franchising and retail methods and influenced his decision to enter the drug industry.
Today, Hoshi Pharmaceuticals is perhaps best known because of Hoshi Shin’ichi (1926-1997), one of the most popular writers of his postwar generation. He was Hajime's eldest son and a former company president before the Hoshi family sold off its stake in 1952.
Today, Hoshi Pharmaceuticals is perhaps best known because of Hoshi Shin’ichi (1926-1997), one of the most popular writers of his postwar generation. He was Hajime's eldest son and a former company president before the Hoshi family sold off its stake in 1952.