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Yasui family papers

 Collection
Identifier: Coll 949

Scope and Contents

This collection documents the lives and activities of three generations of the Yasui family, particularly the first generation (the Issei) who immigrated from Japan to Oregon in the early 1900s, and the second generation, the Nisei. Most of the materials date from 1910-1995, and consist of correspondence, personal papers, extensive historical research, and photographs. Major topics represented in these materials include the experience of the Issei -- Masuo Yasui, Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui, and Renichi Fujimoto -- as immigrants to the United States; the family’s business and community activities in Hood River, Oregon, through 1942; family members’ experiences of forced removal and incarceration during World War II; the Nisei’s advocacy for redress after the war; and extensive research on family and Japanese American history.

Correspondence in the collection includes letters of the Issei generation, but predominantly consists of material to or from the Nisei -- siblings Kay, Ray (Tsuyoshi), Minoru, Michi, Roku, Shu, Homer, and Yuka -- from youth through late adulthood, depending on the individual. The correspondence contains many letters exchanged among the family members, including incarceration-era correspondence. It also includes occasional letters from family members in Japan, and business correspondence of the Yasui Bros. stores operated by Masuo Yasui and Renichi Fujimoto. Personal papers in the collection consist of diaries and notebooks; immigration and identification papers; documents relating to day-to-day life, finances, and family members’ education; materials related to the Yasui Bros. stores; poetry, essays, and articles by family members; and ephemera. Photographs include early images relating to the family’s life and business operations in Hood River, as well as later images of the Nisei in their adult lives, but primarily depict travel and events related to advocacy work by Homer Yasui and his wife, Miki (Yabe) Yasui, in the latter 20th century.

A substantial portion of this collection consists of extensive research materials compiled or written by Homer Yasui and other family members about topics including Yasui family history, other Japanese Americans in Oregon, government incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, and Japanese American history broadly. These materials include translations and annotations of family documents; correspondence and news clippings; biographical notes and recollections; census extracts and other data on Japanese Americans in Oregon; copies of incarceration-era government files on Masuo Yasui and other family members; and essays, articles, newsletters, editorials, and press releases. The collection also includes a significant quantity of material related to Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui’s advocacy and educational work, and their pilgrimages to incarceration camp sites.

Most materials in this collection are in English, but about one-fifth are in a pre-World War II Japanese script that is distinct from modern Japanese. Approximately 150 documents or excerpts have been translated into English and modern Japanese; the translations are included in the collection and viewable online in OHS Digital Collections.

Dates

  • 1873-2023
  • Majority of material found within 1910-1995

Creator

Language of materials

While most of this collection is in English, approximately 20 percent of the materials are written in a pre-World War II Japanese script that is distinct from modern Japanese. A few items were translated by family members before the collection was donated to the Oregon Historical Society Research Library; these translations were retained in the collection and are noted where available. During a grant-funded project in 2023-2024 (see sponsorship note), staff and translators selected approximately 150 additional documents or excerpts for translation into English and modern Japanese, based on their historical significance or representativeness of the content of the collection. These translations are included in the collection and viewable online in OHS Digital Collections. Translators also provided brief interpretations in English for untranslated materials.

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research, with the exception of one folder of materials that is restricted until 2047.

Conditions Governing Use

The Oregon Historical Society owns the materials in the Research Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all materials in its collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from copyright owners.

Historical note

In 1903, seventeen-year-old Masuo Yasui left Nanukaichi in the Okayama prefecture of Japan for the western United States, stopping in Portland before he joined family members in working on the Union Pacific Railroad, along with thousands of other laborers from Japan. Two years later, Masuo returned to Japantown in Portland, Oregon, intent on learning English while working various jobs. Masuo later convinced his brother Renichi Fujimoto to move with him to Hood River, Oregon, which had a growing population of Japanese immigrant laborers. In 1908, Masuo Yasui and Renichi Fujimoto opened the Yasui Bros. Co. store in Hood River, the first iteration of what would become four locations of their successful business over the next three and a half decades.

A few years later, Masuo Yasui married Shidzuyo Miyake, a college-educated teacher also from Nanukaichi, Okayama, who joined him in Oregon in late 1912. Over the next two decades, the couple had nine children: sons Kay, sometimes spelled Kei (born 1914), Tsuyoshi, later known as Ray or Chop (born 1915), and Minoru, often known as Min (born 1917); daughters Yuki (born 1918) and Michi (born 1920); sons Roku (born 1922), Shu (born 1923), and Homer (born 1924); and youngest daughter Yuka (born 1927). Yuki died of an illness at age 3, and eldest son Kay committed suicide at age 17. Renichi Fujimoto married Matsuyo Senno in 1904, but obligations to Renichi’s adoptive family in Japan, the Fujimotos, kept her from immigrating to the United States to join him until 1931. Renichi and Matsuyo had no children of their own, but were close with Masuo and Shidzuyo's children.

The Yasui Bros. Co. store played a central role as a social hub and meeting place for the Japanese American community in Hood River. Masuo became a vital contact for Japanese immigrants and their families. He frequently helped fellow Japanese Americans find employment and housing, and used his English fluency to assist with legal and government forms, such as citizenship documentation for children born in the United States, and to broker small land purchases. The Yasui Bros. store also sold life insurance and brokered steamship travel arrangements to and from Japan.

In addition to operating the store, the Yasuis took advantage of the agricultural potential in the Hood River Valley and surrounding areas, where they bought and leased land for their own farms and orchards in Dee, Mosier, and Willow Flat. Like many in the area, they produced apples and pears, but also strawberries and asparagus, which the Yasuis and other Japanese American farmers introduced to the region. Their farming operations spawned trucking and shipping businesses, and Masuo Yasui created a cooperative called the Mid-Columbia Vegetable Growers Association to help with packing and shipping of asparagus.

Masuo Yasui also served as a liaison between the Japanese American and white communities in Hood River, fielding inquiries from business owners in search of laborers and helping to settle disputes. Over time, Masuo grew into a leading representative of his community, founding the Japanese Savings Association of Hood River and constructing and operating a Japanese Community Hall, while also being a rare Japanese American member in mostly white organizations like the Rotary Club. He was the first Japanese American person elected to the powerful Apple Growers Association and received the most votes of any candidate in 1939. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, Masuo Yasui was recognized by the Portland Japanese Consulate for his services to his community, and received awards from the Japanese government and other agencies for fostering business relations between the United States and Japan.

However, as the Yasuis and other Japanese immigrants prospered, anti-Japanese sentiment was growing among white residents in Hood River. In 1923, Oregon passed a bill preventing Japanese and Chinese immigrants from owning land, and a local Anti-Asiatic Association formed soon after. Anti-Japanese sentiment came to a boiling point after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The FBI arrested Masuo Yasui, then 55, five days later with no official charges or evidence of treason. He would remain in government detention until after the end of the war, and was repeatedly transferred among various federal detention centers, including Fort Missoula, Montana; Fort Sill, Oklahoma; and Camp Livingston, Louisiana.

In February 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, authorizing exclusion of "any and all persons" from areas designated by the military, which would, within months, result in the government's forced removal and mass incarceration of more than 120,000 Japanese Americans on the West Coast. In March, after being refused for U.S. military enlistment, Minoru Yasui, who had become a lawyer and was living in Portland, Oregon, deliberately violated a curfew imposed on Japanese Americans in order to be arrested and establish the basis for a legal challenge to the curfew. He was convicted and spent nine months in solitary confinement; during this time, his case reached the U.S. Supreme Court, but the court upheld his conviction and ruled that the curfew was legal.

The Yasui family's situation would continue to worsen; in the spring of 1942, the Yasui Bros. Co. store was forcibly closed and the family’s other assets were frozen or confiscated. Not long afteward, Yasui family members were among the Japanese Americans sent by the U.S. government to incarceration camps, euphemistically called "war relocation centers," which were typically located in dry and desolate locations. While Masuo was held in Louisiana and Min was in solitary confinement in the Multnomah County Jail, Shidzuyo, Renichi, Matsuyo, Ray (also known as Chop or Tsuyoshi) and his wife, Mickie, as well as young Homer and Yuka, were sent first to the temporary Pinedale Assembly Center near Fresno, California, then to the Tule Lake incarceration camp. Min appealed unsuccessfully to the government for his father to join the rest of the family as Shidzuyo and other family members and friends wrote letters pleading for a rehearing, but all requests were denied. In June 1943, Masuo was transferred to the Santa Fe Detention Center in New Mexico, where his family could finally request to visit him. By this time, Minoru Yasui and Renichi and Matsuyo Fujimoto were being held at the Minidoka War Relocation Center in southern Idaho. Roku, Michi, and Shu Yasui, college students at the time, had avoided incarceration through geographical location or preemptive travel to Denver, Colorado.

Life in the camps was difficult for most of those incarcerated; families were largely separated, food was bad and extreme elements pierced the shoddily constructed barracks. The Yasuis wrote letters to each other through this period and visited Masuo as often as possible. Ray secured a work leave to do farm labor in Idaho, while Shidzuyo successfully petitioned for educational releases for her younger children; they joined Michi in Denver, where Minoru also came after his release in fall 1944. Despite an active letter-writing campaign with the support of senators and the Japanese American Citizens League, Masuo was detained until January 1946, five months after Japan surrendered and the war was declared to have ended. He joined the rest of the family in Denver upon his release.

As was the case for many other Japanese Americans, incarceration caused the Yasuis to lose their home, savings, businesses, and all but one of their farms, and they never regained what they once had. Hood River made national headlines toward the end of the war for its virulent racism and antagonism toward Japanese American residents to deter them from returning to the area, and the local post of the American Legion had waged a campaign against Masuo’s release. Masuo and Shidzuyo left Denver to return to Oregon but resettled in Portland instead; only Ray Yasui returned to Hood River, to restore the now disheveled orchard in Willow Flat. In 1952, at their first opportunity to do so under federal law, the Issei (first generation) of Yasuis became United States citizens. Five years later, in declining health, Masuo died by suicide at the age of 70; Shidzuyo passed away of natural causes three years after his death. The second generation of Yasuis, the Nisei, built successful careers as lawyers, doctors, teachers, and entrepreneurs. Minoru Yasui's experiences during World War II led him to a lifelong career as a civil rights activist, for which he was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015. His siblings were also active in civil rights causes and served as strong advocates for redress in the 1980s, and led organizations including the Japanese American Citizens League, the Nikkei Legacy Center, and the Min Yasui Legacy Project.

Sources: Lauren Kessler, Stubbon Twig: Three Generations in the Life of a Japanese American Family (Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 2005); Densho Encyclopedia, “Minoru Yasui,” 2020, https://encyclopedia.densho.org/Minoru%20Yasui

Biographical note

Homer Yasui, the eighth child of Masuo and Shidzuyo Yasui, was born in Hood River, Oregon, in 1924. He lived in Hood River with his family until 1942, when the Yasui family were among more than 120,000 Japanese Americans who were incarcerated by the U.S. government during World War II. Along with other family members and friends and neighbors from Hood River, Homer Yasui, then a teenager, was sent to the Pinedale Assembly Center and then the Tule Lake Relocation Center in California.

After advocacy by his mother, he was granted educational leave in the fall of 1942 to attend college in Denver, Colorado. He later attended medical school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1950, Homer Yasui married Miyuki Yabe (1926-2018), later known as Miki. He joined the Navy Medical Corps as a surgeon in 1954 and opened a long-running practice in the Portland, Oregon, area in 1958. The couple had three children: Barbara, Meredith (Meris) and John.

Homer Yasui joined the Portland chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) in 1969. He served as its president in 1973 and as co-president with his wife, Miki Yasui, from 1980-1981. Both served as JACL board members throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and Homer Yasui was elected governor for the Pacific Northwest District Council of the organization in 1982. He also served as co-chair of the Portland JACL Committee for Redress, along with local attorney Peggy Nagae.

In the late 1980s, as Homer Yasui was retiring from medicine, he became the Yasui family's unofficial historian. Over the next 30 years, he performed extensive research on his own family and other Oregon-based Japanese American families, gathered additional documents through his network and Freedom of Information Act requests, and wrote about their lives before and after their wartime incarceration by the U.S. government. He also wrote a series of informal biographies and family histories titled “Passing it On,” which he sent to family and friends. Homer Yasui died in 2023.

Extent

19.76 Cubic Feet (38 legal document cases; 2 flat boxes (14x18); 1 oversize flat box (19x25); 1 card file box (9x12x6); 1 small card file box (6x12x4); 1 oversize folder (24x36))

Abstract

This collection includes correspondence, personal papers, and photographs of three generations of the Yasui family. Major topics represented in the collection include the first (Issei) generation’s immigration to Oregon in the early 1900s; the family's business and community activities in Hood River, Oregon, through 1942; the forced removal and incarceration of Yasui family members during World War II; and advocacy for redress and on behalf of Japanese American history by members of the second (Nisei) generation. A substantial portion of the collection consists of extensive research materials and writings by Homer Yasui, a second-generation member of the family, about the Yasui family history and the larger context of Japanese Americans' experiences before, during, and after World War II. While most of the collection is in English, approximately one-fifth of the materials were written in a pre-World War II Japanese script that is distinct from modern Japanese. Selected documents and excerpts were translated into English and modern Japanese and are viewable online in OHS Digital Collections.

Arrangement

Collection is arranged in five series:

  • Series 1: Correspondence
    • Subseries 1.1: Issei correspondence
    • Subseries 1.2: Nisei and Sansei correspondence
    • Subseries 1.3: Homer and Miki Yasui correspondence
  • Series 2: Yasui family materials
    • Subseries 2.1: Issei diaries and notebooks
    • Subseries 2.2: Issei personal documents
    • Subseries 2.3: Yasui Brothers Co. business and community documents
    • Subseries 2.4: Nisei and Sansei documents
    • Subseries 2.5: Published materials
  • Series 3: Research files and historical writings
    • Subseries 3.1: Research, writings, and government files on Yasui Issei
    • Subseries 3.2: Research files and collected memories of Yasui Nisei
    • Subseries 3.3: Research, census data and writings on Japanese Americans in Hood River, Portland, and broader Oregon
    • Subseries 3.4: Research and writings on forced removal, incarceration camps, redress, and memory
  • Series 4: Homer and Miki Yasui community activism, advocacy work, and pilgrimages to incarceration camp sites
  • Series 5: Photographs
    • Subseries 5.1: Early Yasui family photographs
    • Subseries 5.2: Photographs of Japanese American people and places in Hood River and Portland, Oregon
    • Subseries 5.3: Later Yasui family photographs
    • Subseries 5.4: Homer and Miki Yasui photographs

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

Collection includes nine 3.5-inch floppy disks. Due to technical limitations, the contents of the disks were not reviewed during processing, and the disks are not available for access by researchers.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Homer Yasui, December 2022 (RL2022-155).

Existence and Location of Copies

Related Materials

Additional collections at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library relating to the Yasui family include: the Yasui Brothers business records, Mss 2949; Masuo Yasui letter to Sagoro Asai, Coll 956; the Bernard B. Kliks papers relating to Minoru Yasui and University of Oregon Law School reunions, Coll 920; oral history interviews with Randall B. Kester, SR1278 (1992) and SR 11093 (2005); and an interview with Homer Yasui and Jeff Uecker on Hotline/Golden Hours, SR 0946 (1992).

Related Materials

Collections relating to the Yasui family that are held at other libraries include: the R. Sims Collection on Minidoka and Japanese Americans, Mss 356, Boise State University Library Special Collections; interview with Japanese Americans in Utah, ACCN 1209, University of Utah Library Special Collections; Mike M. Masaoka papers, Mss 0656, University of Utah Library Special Collections; the Gordon K. Hirabayashi papers, Coll 3159, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections; and the Minoru Yasui papers, Archives and Special Collections, Auraria Library, Denver, Colorado.

More than 900 photographs of the Yasui family and Yasui Bros. store are available online in the Densho digital repository, https://ddr.densho.org/ddr-densho-259/

Separated Materials

Yasui family belongings received with this collection were separated to museum collections at the Oregon Historical Society. They are viewable online in the OHS museum portal, along with objects related to the Yasui family and the Yasui Brothers stores that the museum received in earlier accessions.

Processing Information

Many documents within this collection originate from or refer to U.S. government policies of forced removal and mass incarceration of more than 120,000 Japanese Americans living on the West Coast of the United States from 1942-1946. These materials contain euphemistic language that was originally employed by the U.S. government, media organizations, and other parties, including terms such as "evacuee," "evacuation," "assembly center," "relocation center," and "internment camp."

During processing of the collection, the processing archivist retained these terms in folder titles and labels when necessary for consistency or clarity. Examples include formal titles of reports or other documents, language transcribed directly from official records, and official names of places and facilities. However, when feasible, the processing archivist has instead used terminology that more accurately reflects government actions, policies, and facilities of that time. These terms are based on guidelines compiled by organizations including Densho, the National Park Service, and the Japanese American Museum of Oregon, and are used throughout this collection guide in biographical information, in series and folder titles, and in other descriptions of materials, as well as on physical folder labels.

Processing Information

Preliminary processing was performed by Relicura LLC under the auspices of a 2022-2023 grant-funded contract; housing, arrangement, and description were finalized by Dana Miller in 2024. Interpretation and translation of the collection were provided by language consultants Yoko Gulde, Naomi Diffely, and Mami Kikuchi during a second grant project in 2023-2024.

Creator

Title
Guide to the Yasui family papers
Status
In Progress
Author
Oregon Historical Society staff
Date
2024
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English.
Sponsor
This collection was processed and partially translated through grant-funded projects made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Library Services and Technology Act, administered by the State Library of Oregon.

Repository Details

Part of the Oregon Historical Society Research Library Repository

Contact:
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