Despite facing extreme race-based scrutiny and suspicion, Japanese Americans served in the U.S. military during WWII in disproportionate numbers—even as many of their families were stuck in government-run concentration camps. Most served in the segregated 442nd Regimental Combat Team and its predecessor, the 100th Infantry Battalion, but many others served as translators and interpreters in the Military Intelligence Service, and nearly 500 Nisei women served as nurses, Women’s Auxiliary Corps members, and MIS translators and teachers. This Veteran’s Day, we honor those who served by sharing some gems from collections recently added to the Densho archives.
Takashi Matsui was stationed in Japan with the U.S. military during the Allied occupation after the end of World War II. Here, a group of soldiers climb Mt. Hakodate, c. 1947. Courtesy of the Matsui Family Collection.
Doris (Okada) Abe kept a scrapbook of news articles and clippings on Japanese American soldiers during WWII. This clipping shows a photo and short profile of a Nisei couple, Army Sergeant Yosh “Nickie” Nakagawara and Women’s Auxiliary Corps Private Cherry Nakagawara—though the article’s unfortunate description of the “U.S. Jap and Wife” doesn’t exactly do the Nakagawara’s justice. Courtesy of the Masao and Doris Abe Collection, Densho.
Yuriko Domoto Tsukada saved many of the letters sent to her during WWII—including this annotated copy of Life Magazine, in which her friend Yoshito Shibata wrote notes about daily life in the U.S. Army. Here, Shibata comments on the food. Courtesy of the Yuriko Domoto Tsukada Collection, Densho.
Do you have objects from a veteran you’d like to add 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!