Linghakusan Shrine

嶺白山神社
The date of the founding of this Hakusan Shrine is unknown, but it is said to have been founded during the Kanbun year. Since ancient times, it has been enshrined as "Ontai Gongensha" and was renamed Hakusan Shrine in the Meiji period. The "Shin-hen Musashi Fudo Chronicle" also mentions the festival date September 4th, and it is thought that it has been revered as a local god for quite a long time. A few minutes' walk from Kugahara Station on the Tokyu Ikegami Line, which runs north-south in Ota Ward, Tokyo. It sits along Ring Road No. 8 through the shopping street. The shrine hall is made of wooden tiles from the Taisho period. It consists of a one-room× one-room main shrine (in the main hall) and a three-room × two worship halls. There is a 600-year-old tub tree in the precincts, which is designated as a preserved tree in Ota City. At various annual events, including festivals, the worship association and the clan youth association work hard to indoctrinate the clan and children. In recent years, we have also conducted official visits to the main shrine and worship at Mt. Hakusan, and the relationship with the main shrine has been further deepened.