Eiko Yamaichi Interview Segment 3

Parents' family backgrounds (ddr-manz-1-175-1) - 00:08:02
Memories of growing up in Seattle, Washington (ddr-manz-1-175-2) - 00:07:46
Father's job at the Weyerhaeuser lumber company (ddr-manz-1-175-3) - 00:10:07
Father's move from Hawaii to the mainland (ddr-manz-1-175-4) - 00:05:31
Attending school (ddr-manz-1-175-5) - 00:02:59
Living conditions at the lumberyard (ddr-manz-1-175-6) - 00:12:47
Description of parents (ddr-manz-1-175-7) - 00:04:02
Hearing about the bombing of Pearl Harbor (ddr-manz-1-175-8) - 00:07:45
Returning to school after Pearl Harbor: "You could feel the tension" (ddr-manz-1-175-9) - 00:09:10
The journey by train to the Pinedale Assembly Center (ddr-manz-1-175-10) - 00:06:24
First impressions of the Pinedale Assembly Center (ddr-manz-1-175-11) - 00:13:05
Parents' adjustments to life in camp (ddr-manz-1-175-12) - 00:09:32
Arriving in Tule Lake (ddr-manz-1-175-13) - 00:12:13
Hearing about medical care in camp (ddr-manz-1-175-14) - 00:03:38
Attending school in camp (ddr-manz-1-175-15) - 00:09:10
Graduating high school and looking to the future (ddr-manz-1-175-16) - 00:06:14
Visiting aunt in one of the Arkansas concentration camps (ddr-manz-1-175-17) - 00:09:22
Description of a close relationship with aunt (ddr-manz-1-175-18) - 00:05:33
Remembering tensions and conflict over the so-called "loyalty questionnaire" (ddr-manz-1-175-19) - 00:09:39
Emotional effects of camp pilgrimages (ddr-manz-1-175-20) - 00:10:50
Transferring from Tule Lake to Jerome (ddr-manz-1-175-21) - 00:08:30
Daily life in Jerome: working as a dishwasher (ddr-manz-1-175-22) - 00:08:43
Hearing later about the effects of concentration camps on local communities (ddr-manz-1-175-23) - 00:06:23
Transferring camps again to Gila River (ddr-manz-1-175-24) - 00:08:26
Memories of Gila River (ddr-manz-1-175-25) - 00:09:25
Leaving camp and doing domestic work in California while attending college (ddr-manz-1-175-26) - 00:12:51
Working as a domestic after the war (ddr-manz-1-175-27) - 00:03:37
Getting married, getting involved in community activities (ddr-manz-1-175-28) - 00:12:07
Raising a family (ddr-manz-1-175-29) - 00:03:19
Family's postwar activities (ddr-manz-1-175-30) - 00:16:46
Reflections (ddr-manz-1-175-31) - 00:04:03
Free to use This object is offered under a Creative Commons license. You are free to use it for any non-commercial purpose as long as you properly cite it, and if you share what you have created.

Learn more...

Manzanar National Historic Site
Visit partner

ddr-manz-1-175-3 (Legacy UID: denshovh-yeiko-01-0003)

Father's job at the Weyerhaeuser lumber company

00:10:07 — Segment 3 of 31

Previous segment Next segment

July 15, 2015

Manzanar National Historic Site Collection

Manzanar National Historic Site Collection

Courtesy of the Manzanar National Historic Site Collection

Manzanar National Historic Site
Visit partner

ddr-manz-1-175

Eiko Yamaichi

Eiko Yamaichi Interview

04:17:59 — 31 segments

July 15, 2015

San Jose, California

Nisei female. Born in Seattle, Washington. Grew up in Snoqualmie, Washington, where father worked for the Weyerhaeuser company before the war. During World War II, removed to the Pinedale Assembly Center, California, and the Tule Lake concentration camp, California. Later transferred to the Jerome concentration camp, Arkansas, and the Gila River concentration camp, Arizona. After leaving camp, worked in domestic service in California.

Larisa Proulx, interviewer; Kristen Luetkemeier, interviewer; Kristen Luetkemeier, videographer

Manzanar National Historic Site Collection

Courtesy of the Manzanar National Historic Site Collection

API