23 items
23 items
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Joseph Grew (ddr-njpa-1-539)
Caption on reverse [translation]: "US Ambassador to Japan Grew. [Stamped] 1933."
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Portrait of Joseph Grew (ddr-njpa-1-550)
Caption on reverse: "Joseph C. Grew, Special Assistant to the U.S. Secretary of State, formerly U.S. Ambassador to Japan. 1942."
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Group of men and women posing in line (ddr-ajah-2-495)
Caption below photo: Aiso / Grew / Stuart
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Man speaking in front of camp building (ddr-ajah-2-498)
Caption below photo: Ambassador Grew Speaks
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View from audience of two men speaking (ddr-ajah-2-500)
Caption below photo: Col. Introduces the ambassador
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Joseph Grew and his wife returning to Japan (ddr-njpa-1-542)
Caption on reverse [translation]: "US Ambassador Grew Returns to Post. (Tokyo) October 11, 1939. US Ambassador to Japan Joseph Conrad Grew, who had returned to the US in connection to his mission of realigning relations between the US and Japan, and his wife entered Yokohama port at 5:30 p.m. on the 10th aboard the Tatsuta Maru …
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Newspaper clipping regarding Joseph Grew (ddr-njpa-1-473)
Caption on front [translation]: "Ambassador Grew Won't Come Back After Returning to the US? Personal Possessions Already Sent From Tokyo Last Fall. The President Believed to Be Already Looking for Successor. It has been reported that US ambassador to Japan Grew will return to the US for an important report to President Roosevelt at about the …
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Newspaper clipping regarding Joseph Grew (ddr-njpa-1-472)
Caption on front [translation]: "Ambassador Grew to Retire After 9 Years in Tokyo. Plans to Return to America in Early May. (Tokyo 21 Domei). According to today's Yomiuri Shimbun, US Ambassador to Japan Joseph Grew will likely return home on a leave of absence in early May. The same paper also stated that Ambassador Grew hopes …
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Joseph Grew visiting Heihachiro Togo (ddr-njpa-1-541)
Caption on reverse [translation]: US Ambassador Grew visits the ill Marshall Togo on May 28, 1934. (Admiral Hiroharu Kato is on the left)."
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Joseph Grew receiving the Holland Society's Gold Medal for Distinguised Achievement (ddr-njpa-1-538)
Caption on reverse: "Former U.S. Ambassador to Japan honored in New York. Joseph C. Grew (left), Special Assistant to the U.S. Secretary of State and former U.S. Ambassador to Japan, - receives the Holland Society's Gold Medal for Distinguished Achievement from Ottomar H. Van Norden, president of the Society, at ceremonies in New York City. The …
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"A Voice That Must Be Heard" (ddr-densho-156-178)
Extracts from statements regarding Americans of Japanese Ancestry by President Roosevelt, Henry L. Stimson, Joseph C. Grew, J. Edgar Hoover, Paul V. McNutt, and others.
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A Voice that Must be Heard (ddr-densho-171-195)
Extracts from statements, regarding Americans of Japanese Ancestry, by: President Roosevelt, Hon. Henry L. Stimson, Hon. Joseph C. Grew, J. Edgar Hoover, Paul V. McNutt, and others.
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Granada Pioneer Vol. II No. 8 (November 24, 1943) (ddr-densho-147-121)
Selected article titles: "New Civil Service Test to Assure Placement" (p. 1), "U.S. Ambassador Joseph Grew Pleads for Fair Treatment on Nisei" (p. 5), "Huge Crowd at Issei Program" (p. 5).
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Manzanar Free Press Vol. III No. 51 (June 26, 1943) (ddr-densho-125-143)
Selected article titles: "From Hilo to Gila and a Job in Elgin" (p. 1), "Priority Request Procedure Given" (p. 1), "Curfew Legality Upheld by Court" (p. 1), "Santa Fe Internee Camp Swept by Fire; All Escape Injury" (p. 1), "Joseph Grew States Common Japanese in Japan Hates War" (p. 1).
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Booklet: "A Voice That Must Be Heard" (ddr-densho-356-844)
Booklet titled: "A Voice That Must Be Heard" containing excerpts about Japanese Americans from statements by various government officials including: President Franklin Roosevelt, Henry L. Stimson, Joseph C. Grew, Elmer Davis, W.P. Scobey, Milton S. Eisenhower, Harold L. Ickes, J. Edgar Hoover, Paul V. McNutt, Delos C. Emmons, Kendell Fielder, and Chester C. Davis.
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Mitsuye May Yamada Interview (ddr-densho-1000-137)
Female, child of Issei parents. Born July 5, 1923, in Fukuoka, Japan while her mother and two older Nisei brothers visited relatives. Named Mitsuye Mei Yasutake at birth. From age 3, grew up in Seattle, WA. Father employed by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service as interpreter for twenty years, until separated from family on December …