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Man identified after Royal BC Museum receives mysterious delivery of old photographs

The Royal BC Museum says it has identified the man highlighted as Scottish entrepreneur Thomas Blake Glover: (Royal BC Museum / Twitter) The Royal BC Museum says it has identified the man highlighted as Scottish entrepreneur Thomas Blake Glover: (Royal BC Museum / Twitter)
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Victoria -

The Royal BC Museum says one person has been identified after the museum received a box of old photographs simply labelled "Brentwood Bay" by an anonymous donor.

On July 23, the museum turned to the community to try to identify the people in the seven photos, noting that the "Brentwood Bay" label could mean anything from the location of where the photos were taken, where the donor was from or where the subjects were from.

On Friday, the museum said a prominent entrepreneur, Thomas Blake Glover, had been identified in one of the photos.

According to the museum, Glover was a Scottish merchant who moved to Nagaski, Japan in 1859. He moved to the city to manage the office branch of a British trading house, says the Royal BC Museum (RBCM).

During his time there, he worked with the founders of Japanese company Mitsubishi, including brothers Yataro Iwasaki and Yanosuke Iwasaki.

The museum says the other four men in the photo have not yet been identified, though they could be colleagues of the Iwasakis.

"We want to thank everyone for their patience. While we’ve suspected for some time that Thomas Blake Glover was one of the figures in the photographs, we needed to independently corroborate this idea to be certain," said the museum in a social media post Friday.

The museum believes that the photo was likely taken at Glover's home in Nagasaki, which has gone on to become a park and tourist attraction.

The RBCM adds that the lion statue shown in the left of the photograph, called a "komainu" in Japanese, may be a precursor design for the logo of Kirin Beer, which Glover "played a role in founding with the Iwasaki family."

"Thanks to additional community sleuthing, we now have strong leads to guide our next steps, which includes researching how these photos came to be on South Vancouver Island and, ultimately, at the museum."

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