Sue, Fukuoka
The name itself carries a clue: Sue-machi takes its name from *sueki*, the grey, high-fired stoneware produced here during the Kofun period, when this stretch of Fukuoka's hinterland was already a place of serious craft. That lineage persisted into the Edo period, when the Fukuoka domain established a kiln here, and Sue-yaki continued as a local tradition. Walking through the town today, that history sits quietly beneath the surface — not on display, but present.
The Suemachi Rekishi Minzoku Shiryokan holds some of that record: old documents, a steam locomotive driving wheel, and examples of Sue-yaki arranged in a building that opened in the 1970s, when the town was still processing what the coal industry had left behind. Nearby, Shinbaru Park occupies the former site of a naval colliery, where a founding monument and the stone framing of an old pit entrance remain in place. The western edge of town still has a *botan-yama* — a colliery spoil heap — and the eastern edge rises into mountain terrain, cut by the steep pass of Shōke-goe toward Iizuka. The Suekawa river runs east to west through the middle, fed by the Sue Dam upstream.
What the town is now is largely residential — three stations on the JR Kashii Line, commuter distance from Fukuoka, new housing alongside older streets. The Azalea Hall and the Kuga Memorial Art Center suggest a municipality that has tried to keep cultural life local. The weight of the coal era and the quieter weight of ancient kilns give Sue an interior depth that its ordinary weekday face doesn't announce.