Personal collections are a critical component of Densho’s archives. These collections, donated by families and individuals, provide amazing insights into Japanese American history that might otherwise be forgotten, while allowing educators, researchers and the general public to see the past through the eyes of everyday families. Even though our staff has been working from home for the last several months, Densho’s collections team is still actively expanding our digital archives. Browse through these recent highlights, and then head over to the Densho Digital Repository for more — you may even find some familiar faces!
Kiyoko (Maeda) Yoshioka was a Kibei who lived on Terminal Island and in Los Angeles before being detained at Poston with her young family. The Yoshioka Family Collection contains family photos documenting her life from the 1900s to 1950s, like this portrait of Kiyoko (standing) and another woman.
Photograph of four cannery workers dressed for work. Second from the left is Kiyoko (Maeda) Yoshioka. Terminal Island, c. 1930-1940. Courtesy of the Yoshioka Family Collection.
A group photo at the Merced Assembly Center, July 1942. Courtesy of the Matsuoka Family Collection, which covers the multi-generational history of the Matsuoka family from the Issei immigration to Nisei post-war life.
A group photograph of children and caretakers at the nursery school in Topaz concentration camp, c. 1944. Shizuko Sumi, whose family history is showcased in the Sumi Family Collection, is in the third row, second from left.
Yuichi and Yuji Sumi at the “New World Gift Shop,” which they opened in New York City in 1945 after relocating to the East Coast after camp. Courtesy of the Sumi Family Collection.
Four men, identified as Matsu, Ky, Mike, and Geo., at Mount Rainier National Park in Washington c. 1933, from the Matsuo Sakagami Collection.
Young women, in traditional and Western dress, stand on a Japanese Chamber of Commerce parade float. July 27, 1940. Courtesy of the Bitow Family Collection.
Group photograph of Fuyo Kai, an organization to support Japanese American students, taken in front of the columns in Sylvan Grove on the University of Washington campus. Tamako Inouye Tokuda was president of Fuyo Kai as a senior in 1942. Her prewar life, along with that of her husband, George Tokuda, is the focus of the Tokuda Family Collection.
Yuri Tsukada sitting on the railing of a steel bridge during her honeymoon trip to New Hampshire in August 1945. The Yuriko Domoto Tsukada Collection contains family photos and personal correspondences from before, during and after WWII.
Even with such a wide range of collections and materials, we know we are only scratching the surface of the Japanese American experience. If you’re interested in contributing your family’s story to the Densho Digital Repository, please fill out this form to get in touch with our collections team. Know someone whose story should be captured in an oral history? Fill out the narrator nomination form here! Looking for more stories? Check out Campu, a new Densho podcast that goes beyond the standard “Incarceration 101” to explore more intimate, lesser-known corners of this history. And finally, if you’d like to learn more about the work Densho does, in the archives and beyond, we hope you’ll join us at the Densho Dinner @ Home on October 24th!