68 items
68 items


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Family picnic (ddr-densho-113-50)
This photo was taken at West Seattle's Lincoln Park, formerly known as Fauntleroy Park. (L to R): Tetsumasa Uyeda, Ayako Uyeda, Fumiko Uyeda.

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Boy's Day Festival (ddr-densho-113-46)
Two Nisei children celebrate Boy's Day Festival in their home. (L to R): Yasuo Uyeda, Fumiko Uyeda Groves.

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Family picnic (ddr-densho-113-49)
This photo was taken at West Seattle's Lincoln Park, formerly known as Fauntleroy Park. (L to R): Fumiko Uyeda, Tetsumasa Uyeda.

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Business owner with family (ddr-densho-113-51)
This man, posing with his family in front of their car, owned the Home Brew Supply Store in Seattle. (L to R): Ayako Uyeda, Masato Uyeda, Fumiko Uyeda.

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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Interview (ddr-densho-1000-10)
Nisei female. Born September 9, 1933, in Seattle, Washington. Parents operated a store in the Sanitary Market (now known as the Pike Place Market). Father was very active in kenjinkai (prefectural organization) activities, both before and after World War II. Spent prewar childhood in and among Seattle's Japanese American community. Incarcerated at the Puyallup Assembly Center, …

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Funeral for a young boy (ddr-densho-113-35)
This funeral is for Tetsumasa Uyeda who contracted tuberculosis while living in Japan. His mother, Ayako, and sister, Fumiko, brought him back to Seattle, but he died a few months later.

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Funeral for a young boy (ddr-densho-113-32)
This funeral is for Tetsumasa Uyeda who caught tuberculosis while living in Japan. His mother, Ayako, and sister, Fumiko, brought him back to Seattle, but he died a few months later.

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Funeral for a young boy (ddr-densho-113-36)
This funeral is for Tetsumasa Uyeda who contracted tuberculosis while living in Japan. His mother, Ayako, and sister, Fumiko, brought him back to Seattle, but he died a few months later.

Collection
Uyeda Groves Collection (ddr-densho-113)
The Uyeda Groves collection, 1900s-1950s, features photographs of the Uyeda family, who resided in Hiroshima, Japan, Rock Springs, Wyoming and Seattle, Washington. The collection also includes photographs of Minidoka concentration camp and Seattle's postwar Issei community. The collection donor, Fumiko Uyeda Groves, was interviewed by Densho in 1998.

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Bon Odori (ddr-densho-38-19)
Front, left to right: Janet Okamoto, Ruby Suyama, Irene Yamauchi, Ben Yanagimoto, and unidentified. Back, left to right: Kiyo Harada, Mary Yoshijima, Fusaye Yokoyama, May Shimbo, Kanichi Iwami, Fumiko Uyeda Groves, Kiki Hagimori, and Sachi Iwami.


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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 12 (ddr-densho-1000-10-12)
Attending Bailey Gatzert Elementary School and the Japanese Language School

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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 33 (ddr-densho-1000-10-33)
The work of community groups after World War II

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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 39 (ddr-densho-1000-10-39)
Involvement helping visitors from Japan through the Nikkeijinkai



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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 19 (ddr-densho-1000-10-19)
First impressions of Minidoka concentration camp, rattlesnakes underfoot


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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 35 (ddr-densho-1000-10-35)
Schooling in postwar Seattle: a "cosmopolitan" school environment

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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 9 (ddr-densho-1000-10-9)
Description of siblings, a Kibei brother in Japan

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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 36 (ddr-densho-1000-10-36)
Nisei attitudes toward education following World War II


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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 7 (ddr-densho-1000-10-7)
Enterprising father, moving to the West Coast

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Fumiko Uyeda Groves Segment 20 (ddr-densho-1000-10-20)
Schooling in camp, keen competition among like peers