Wada Ei

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Wada Ei (1857-1929) textile worker and memoirist during the Meiji Era in Japan, daughter of samurai Sinshu Matsushiro. She is known for writing a memoir called the "Tomioka Diary" (Tomioka Nikki) in which she chronicled her life among the female workers in the Tomioka silk mill.

She was among the daughters of Samurai who were recruited in 1873, the fifth year of the Meiji period (明治時代, Meiji-jidai), from across the nation for practical training over a period of two to three years in the silk production process. They would later become trainers in silk manufacture in their own prefectures.

Upon leaving Tomioka in 1874, the government awarded Wada and her colleagues medals and the special title "Women Spinners' Victory Battalion". She became a trainer at the Saijo Village Silk Reeling Factory (later Rokkosha mill) in Matsushiro, Nagano prefecture.

Wada married an army officer, who later died in 1913 from wounds he sustained in the Russo-Japanese war. She began composing the Tomioka Nikki while living at the Furukawa Mine company house at the Ashio Copper Mine, where her son was a manager. It was published after her death by him, leading some historians to doubt it's authenticity.