195 items
195 items
vh
Jane Kaihatsu Interview Segment 12 (ddr-chi-1-9-12)
Japanese American businesses in postwar Chicago
vh
Tonko Doi Interview Segment 14 (ddr-chi-1-19-14)
Remembering Japanese American social clubs in Chicago
vh
Keith One Interview Segment 6 (ddr-chi-1-10-6)
The declining Japanese American community in Chicago
vh
Grace Sugita Hawley Interview Segment 21 (ddr-densho-1000-246-21)
Living in the Japanese American community in Chicago
vh
Joe Takehara Interview Segment 18 (ddr-chi-1-15-18)
Meeting other Japanese American young people in Chicago
vh
Ellen Watanabe-Huxtable Interview Segment 7 (ddr-chi-1-14-7)
Memories of Japanese-American-owned businesses in Chicago
vh
Constance Yamashiro Interview Segment 9 (ddr-chi-1-18-9)
Description of Japanese American businesses in postwar Chicago
vh
Lisa Doi Interview Segment 19 (ddr-chi-1-20-19)
Thoughts on the Japanese American community in Chicago
vh
Ben Chikaraishi Interview Segment 13 (ddr-chi-1-11-13)
The importance of the Japanese American community in Chicago
vh
Jane Kaihatsu Interview Segment 15 (ddr-chi-1-9-15)
The evolution of the Japanese American community in Chicago
vh
Wesley K. Watanabe Interview Segment 8 (ddr-densho-1000-166-8)
Being the only Japanese American in school in West Chicago
doc
Clipping from Chicago American with review of The World of Suzie Wong (ddr-densho-367-293)
Article title: Suzie Thin - but fun
vh
Ben Chikaraishi Interview Segment 10 (ddr-chi-1-11-10)
Remembering Japanese American businesses in Chicago in the immediate postwar era
vh
Frank Miyamoto Interview III Segment 2 (ddr-densho-1000-52-2)
Being the only Japanese American in the Sociology department at the University of Chicago
Collection
Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) and Chicago Japanese American Historical Society (CJAHS) Oral History Project Collection (ddr-chi-1)
This collection consists of interviews conducted during the "Then They Came For Me: Incarceration of Japanese Americans During WWII and the Demise of Civil Liberties" exhibit sponsored by Alphawood Gallery in Chicago, Illinois, along with additional interviews conducted subsequent to the closing of the exhibit. All interviews are held in the collections of the archival collections …
doc
Citizen's Indefinite Leave Card (ddr-densho-308-2)
Mae Hara's Indefinite Leave Card allowed her to leave Minidoka concentration camp and move to Chicago, Illinois with her husband, Iwao. While in Chicago she worked with the American Friends Field Service as a Social Worker.
img
Takami Hibiya leaves for Seattle (ddr-densho-381-179)
Takami poses with a car, likely departing from Chicago, Illinois to Seattle, Washington for a position at the North American Post.
doc
J.A.C.L. 11th Biennial National Convention Program (ddr-densho-201-466)
Title on cover: "11th biennial national convention; Blueprint for Tomorrow; Japanese American Citizens League 20th anniversary; 1950 September 28 - October 2; Chicago."
doc
Letter from Y. [Yuka?] Yamasaki to Miss Okine, December 4, 1945 [in Japanese] (ddr-csujad-5-106)
Yuka Yamasaki writes from Chicago, Illinois, to her relative or friend, Tomeyo Okine in the Rohwer incarceration camp. She is a former incareree in the Rohwer camp and moves to Chicago. She describes the living conditions in Chicago, including the weather, her apartment, and job opportunities. She states that there are many Japanese people who move …