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260 items
Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 6 (ddr-one-7-10-6)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 6 (ddr-one-7-10-6)
Immigrating to the U.S. at age fifteen (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 11 (ddr-one-7-10-11)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 11 (ddr-one-7-10-11)
Hearing about the bombing of Pearl Harbor (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 13 (ddr-one-7-10-13)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 13 (ddr-one-7-10-13)
Receiving American citizenship (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 7 (ddr-one-7-10-7)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 7 (ddr-one-7-10-7)
Adjusting to life in the U.S. (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 5 (ddr-one-7-10-5)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 5 (ddr-one-7-10-5)
Foods eaten while growing up in Japan (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 3 (ddr-one-7-10-3)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 3 (ddr-one-7-10-3)
Father's immigration to the U.S. (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 8 (ddr-one-7-10-8)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 8 (ddr-one-7-10-8)
Getting married (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 4 (ddr-one-7-10-4)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 4 (ddr-one-7-10-4)
Attending elementary school (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 9 (ddr-one-7-10-9)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 9 (ddr-one-7-10-9)
Preparing for mass removal (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 17 (ddr-one-7-10-17)
vh Chiyo Endo Interview Segment 17 (ddr-one-7-10-17)
Living a long life (Japanese language)

This interview was conducted in Japanese. The transcript is a translation of the original interview.

CGA picnic group photograph (ddr-densho-379-448)
img CGA picnic group photograph (ddr-densho-379-448)
CGA members and their descendants are Japanese Americans who owned grocery stores in Washington, DC after relocating from various relocation centers.
Letter from Takuo Endo to Agnes Rockrise (ddr-densho-335-13)
doc Letter from Takuo Endo to Agnes Rockrise (ddr-densho-335-13)
Takuo Endo, a nephew of Thomas & Agnes Rockrise, writes to Agnes for the first time. He asks after his cousin, George, and invites the family to visit Japan the following year.
Letter from Takuo Endo to Agnes Rockrise (ddr-densho-335-14)
doc Letter from Takuo Endo to Agnes Rockrise (ddr-densho-335-14)
Takuo Endo writes to Agnes Rockrise of his memories of learning of George's birth and the Rockrise family photograph his grandmother kept. He then shares that he has a three year old daughter and that he currently works for the Tokyo Imperial University Hospital and teaches pediatrics.
Letter from Aiji Endo to Chimata Sumida (ddr-densho-379-15)
doc Letter from Aiji Endo to Chimata Sumida (ddr-densho-379-15)
First letter from Aiji Endo to his father-in-law, Chimata Sumida, that explains what is going on about evacuation plans. He states that the Parker Dam War Relocation project, in which he had signed up as a draftsman was cancelled by the Army. He had planned to have the family join him, so instead the current plan …
Sumida brothers and sisters and mother (ddr-densho-379-423)
img Sumida brothers and sisters and mother (ddr-densho-379-423)
Masako Sumida poses with her children in the home of Ken and Emmy Ito. left to right: Tets Sumida, Yohko Matsumoto, Grace Nagai, Masako Sumida, Alice Endo, Emmy Ito, Marshall Sumida

Narrator Kay Endo

Nisei male. Born September 26, 1933, in Milwaukie, Oregon. During World War II, removed to the Portland Assembly Center, Oregon, and the Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho. After leaving camp, returned to Oregon.
Office staff, Amache Consumer Enterprises (ddr-densho-163-17)
img Office staff, Amache Consumer Enterprises (ddr-densho-163-17)
Back (L to R): G. Akahoshi, B. Sato, R. Tanisaki, S. Hamatani, T. Shirokawa, E. Yoshimoto, N. Endo. Front (L to R): T. Miyano, T. Furuye, S. Nishihara, H. Hayashigawa, F. Yoshimura, T. Heya.
Topaz Times Vol. IV No. 39 (September 30, 1943) (ddr-densho-142-219)
doc Topaz Times Vol. IV No. 39 (September 30, 1943) (ddr-densho-142-219)
Selected article titles: "476 in Last Movement to Tule Lake" (p. 1), "Centers' Fire Losses Below Nat'l Average" (p. 1), "Board Activity Defined to Remove Misconceptions" (p. 2), "Mitsue Endo Now Center Resident" (p. 2).
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