Uhata Hachimangu

宇迦八幡宮
In 1720, Mr. Senda Shoheiko, a man from the country of Omi, came to this land and asked Prince Yoshimune, the eighth shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate at the time, to cultivate this land, and spent three long years to build a village, and named it Senda Shinta, Minami-Katsushika District, Musashino Province. Later, the entire Kansei 9th year village became the domain of the Hitotsubashi family, so it was also called the Hitotsubashi territory 100,000 tsubo. This shrine was a small shrine at that time, but out of respect for the god Senda Sho Soldiers, he built a temple and called it Senda Shrine, and is revered as the god of the soil of the land. It is also called Kataguri Hachimangu because of the old legend that he happened to lament the lack of grain on the land and prayed to this shrine, and after receiving the announcement of the divine spirit, he cultivated katakuri instead of this to save the peasants from starvation.