Oizumi Hikawa Shrine

大泉氷川神社
The date of our founding is uncertain, but it was solicited out of reverence for the Miyahikawa Shrine of Musashi Kuniichi, and during the Meiji Restoration, the villagers decided that this was the shrine of our village (Hashido Village), and it became a village shrine in the seventh year of Meiji (1874). The shrine deities are Susanoo, Omi Takami, and Inada Hime, and there are Atago Shrine (Shrine of the Shrine and Perfume Hammer and Fire Birth Spirit) in the Aiden, and Inari Shrine, Hakusan Shrine, Benten Shrine, and Mitake Shrine in the precincts. In the 13th year of Meiji (1880), the shrine was renovated, but due to the deterioration of the shrine, it was rebuilt in the 50th year of the Showa era, and it was rebuilt with a reinforced concrete structure and a copper plate roof. In the Edo period, Inari Shrine was enshrined as the guardian deity of the Iga Gumi who had possessions in Hashido Village, but after the Meiji Restoration, it was handed over to the villagers. It is said that it was originally located in Atagosha in the village. On the right side of the torii gate of Inari Shrine is the Mitarai Stone, which was dedicated by 188 members of the Iga Gumi in the second year of Kaei (1849). It is engraved in Chinese with the history of the Iga people, who were given land around Edo in accordance with the entry of Tokugawa Ieyasu in the eighteenth year of Tensho (1590). At the same time, the stone torii gate dedicated to it was damaged and preserved in the temple grounds. In addition, there are stone lanterns commemorating the merger of the city area in Showa 7 and a historical monument of the Zhuang clan. Our company is located on a hill overlooking the Shirako River to the south, and is surrounded by deep greenery throughout the four seasons.