If William Kinninmond Burton is remembered at all in Britain, it is as a childhood friend of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. But in Japan he is revered as the foreign engineer who saved the country from cholera in the 19th century and built the country's first skyscraper [align=right]. In Shimonoseki, in southwestern Japan, the sand filtering system Burton built more than 100 years ago produces water so pure that today it is bottled and sold with his picture on the label. Now Japanese admirers are planning to remind Britons of Burton's achievements by erecting a monument to him in his native Edinburgh to commemorate the 150th anniversary of his birth...The Japanese believe Burton's tireless efforts on behalf of their country contributed to his early death aged 43, in 1899, as he was preparing to return home with his Japanese wife and young daughter...Japanese engineers pay annual tribute to Burton at his grave in Tokyo. Next weekend, they will play bagpipes while an American great-great-grandson of Burton will play the shamisen, a traditional Japanese string instrument...more...