Topics
Facilities
Format
Genre
Usage

Use <Ctrl> or (⌘) keys to select multiple terms

27 items
Sagamiya confectionery (ddr-densho-13-1)
img Sagamiya confectionery (ddr-densho-13-1)
The Sagamiya confectionery was located at 524 Main Street in the area previously known as Nihonmachi, now Seattle's International District. Sagamiya closed in the early 1970s. Left to right: Yoshi Mamiya, Shuzo Asaba, Nobujiro Shibata, Kinzo Asaba, and Rick Mamiya.
Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Interview (ddr-densho-1000-33)
vh Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Interview (ddr-densho-1000-33)
In this interview, three Nisei, Chris Kato, Yoshi Mamiya, and Tad Sato recall their memories of growing up in Seattle's Nihonmachi (Japantown) and their respective Japantown family businesses. This informal three-way conversation captures a bit of what Nihonmachi was like before the World War II incarceration forever changed the Japanese American business and social community. Unless …
Mamiya Collection (ddr-densho-13)
Collection Mamiya Collection (ddr-densho-13)
The Mamiya collection, c.1918-1960s, records the business and leisure activities of the Asaba and Shibata families of Seattle, Washington. Dance and graduation programs from the Minidoka concentration camp, Idaho, are also shown. Densho interviewed collection donor Yoshi Mamiya in 1998.
Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Segment 8 (ddr-densho-1000-33-8)
vh Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Segment 8 (ddr-densho-1000-33-8)
Memories of Japanese food treats: "kintoki," homemade "sembei" and "mochi"
Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Segment 17 (ddr-densho-1000-33-17)
vh Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Segment 17 (ddr-densho-1000-33-17)
Prewar and wartime relationship between Seattle's Japanese and Chinese communities
Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Segment 2 (ddr-densho-1000-33-2)
vh Chris Kato - Yoshi Mamiya - Tad Sato Segment 2 (ddr-densho-1000-33-2)
Description of size and approximate boundaries of Seattle's prewar Japantown
API