
- Dan Harden Lecture
Dan Harden lecturing at the Honolulu workshop at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Dan Harden Opens the Body
Dan Harden demonstrating at the Honolulu workshop at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Dan Harden in Hawaii
Dan Harden workshop group at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Hiroshi Kato and his Ukelele
Hiroshi Kato getting ready to sing the "Dan Harden Song" at the Honolulu workshop at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Dan Harden and the Australians
The group from Down Under with Dan Harden. From Aikido Sydney: Steve Seymour, Bertrand Douillard and Michael Dryer.
- Chris Li and Dan Harden
Chris Li and Dan Harden, at the end of the Honolulu workshop at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Andy Breton and Bob Kinzie
Andy Breton and Bob Kinzie at the Honolulu workshop with Dan Harden at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Dan Harden and Glenn Collins
Dan Harden with Glenn Collins, who came to train from Maryland, at the Honolulu workshop at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Dan Harden in Honolulu
Honolulu workshop at the Aikido Sangenkai dojo.
- Kodo Horikawa
Koro Horikawa, Founder of Daito-ryu Aikijujutsu Kodokai.
- Takuma Hisa
Takuma Hisa, Founder of the Daito-ryu Aikijujutsu Takumakai. He was a student of both Morihei Ueshiba and Sokaku Takeda. Here he demonstrates "Aiki-Shibori". - Minoru Hirai
Minoru Hirai, Founder of Korindo Aikido. Hirai was instrumental in the Dai-Nippon Butokukai's selection of the name "Aikido". Each year he would give a demonstration at Meiji Jingu on Culture Day (November 3rd). - Minoru Mochizuki
Minoru Mochizuki, Founder of Yoseikan Aiki-Budo and the Yoseikan Dojo. The group photo is from a seminar at Neuchâtel Switzerland in 1951. - Morihei Ueshiba - Happo Bunshin
Morihei Ueshiba, Founder of Aikido. The portrait shows Morihei Ueshiba around 1930. Below that Morihei Ueshiba demonstrated Happo Bunshin at the Kobukan Dojo in Ushigome (Wakamatsu-vho) that opened in 1931. The technique he was showing was included in the Daito-ryu scrolls issued in that same year. - Sokaku Takeda's Emeiroku
Two pages from Sokaku Takeda's Emeiroku. The page on the right shows the awarding of Kyoju Dairi (Assistant Instructor) to Morihei Ueshiba in 1922. The page on the left is from 1931 and records that Sokaku Takeda taught Morihei Ueshiba the 84 Goshinyo-no-te techniques for 20 days at Ueshiba's home in Ushigome (now Wakamatsu-cho).