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Frank Fukuda Photograph and Ephemera Collection, approximately 1906-1927

Overview of the Collection

Collector
Fukuda, Frank Tokichi, 1889-1941
Title
Frank Fukuda Photograph and Ephemera Collection
Dates
approximately 1906-1927 (inclusive)
Quantity
187 photographic prints and 2 items of ephemera
Collection Number
PH0128
Summary
Photographs documenting Fukuda's involvement with Japanese baseball teams in Seattle, ca. 1906 to 1927.
Repository
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu
Access Restrictions

Collection is open to the public.

Request at UW

Languages
English, Japanese
Sponsor
Funding for encoding this finding aid was partially provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
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Biographical Note

Frank Tokichi Fukuda was born in Shimonoseki, Japan, in 1889 and immigrated to Seattle at age 17 in 1906. He played on the Seattle Nippon baseball team before joining the Seattle Mikado baseball team in 1908. In 1912 he joined the Asahi Club, a young men's social club for prominent Japanese in Seattle, and helped form the Asahi Club baseball team. From 1912 until 1927 he was a player, manager and coach of several Seattle baseball teams mostly within the Asahi Club. During this time he worked in a local Japanese bank, Seattle Shokin Ginko, working his way up from cashier to manager and finally vice president. When the bank failed in 1927, he moved to Portland, Or., to become the principal of the Portland Japanese Language School, where he continued to coach and manage young Japanese teams. In 1931, Fukuda moved to Wapato, Wash., to become the principal of the Wapato Japanese Language School and continued coaching and managing teams. He briefly served as principal of the Japanese Language School in Fife, Wash., sometime in 1933, but in 1934 and 1935 he was teaching, coaching and organizing youth baseball leagues back in Wapato and continued to do so until he died in Wapato in 1941 after complications from bladder surgery.

He and his wife, Hatsue, had a daughter, Sachiko/Yukiko, and one son, Masuru/Suguru (the eldest, born ca.1922), whose Americanized name was Perry. Fukuda has been recognized as "the father of Japanese baseball in the Northwest," as well as being noted for his commitment to education and cultural exchange.

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Historical Background

Japanese baseball teams began organizing in Seattle in 1904, when the Nippon baseball team was formed by first-generation immigrants (Issei). The Mikado, another early Issei team, was formed in 1906. The first team composed of Nisei (second generation), the Cherry baseball team, was formed in 1910. In 1912, some players from the Mikado team, including Frank Fukuda, and some Cherry team players formed the Seattle Asahi Club's baseball team. By 1919, both the Asahi Club and the Mikado Club each sponsored three teams, and other Japanese teams in the area included Tacoma's Columbia Club.

Frank Fukuda was a prominent figure in the development of Japanese baseball in the Pacific Northwest, and the Asahi team was considered the strongest Japanese team in the region during Fukuda's time with them. Fukuda was credited with having shaped the team as a player and manager and as a coach of the Asahi junior teams, the Cubs and Midgets. While he was coaching in Portland and in Wapato, his teams consistently won league championships and the annual Fourth of July Japanese Baseball Tournaments (begun in 1933). Fukuda was often called upon for short-term coaching assistance to help area teams experiencing "slumps," and he even traveled to Japan on at least two occasions to coach teams there for short periods of time.

Fukuda was also one of the first managers to take his team to Japan to play college and university teams and promote cultural exchange. He wanted the young Nisei on his team to have a better understanding of their cultural heritage. Although the Waseda University team from Japan had come to the U.S. and visited Seattle as early as 1905, it wasn't until 1908, when an all-star team of professional players from the Pacific Coast League and the Major League arrived, that a U.S. team toured Japan. That same year, the University of Washington became the first American university team to tour Japan. (The UW team also visited in 1913, 1921, and 1926.) Other American university teams soon followed. However, Japanese teams in Seattle were the only club teams to sponsor consistent exchanges with teams from Japan before 1921. Seattle's Japanese club teams, including the Asahis, the Nippon and the Mikado, visited Japan six times from 1914 to 1920 and continued to do so until 1927. (The Asahi team visited in 1914, 1918 and 1921). Other club teams from the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii began visiting in 1921. Most of these teams were Japanese, including the Vancouver Asahi team, but the Suquamish Indian team toured Japan on one occasion. These university and club tours of Japan were highly publicized events that drew thousands of fans and figured prominently in the development of baseball there.

After 1927, coinciding with Fukuda's departure from Seattle and the development of new club tournaments in Japan that were the early stages of the formation of Japan's professional league, baseball in Japan began to shift to a higher level of play and exchanges with U.S. professional teams took the spotlight. Seattle sent no more teams to Japan after 1927. Fukuda's departure from Seattle also marked a new era in Japanese baseball there. The Asahi Club lost its dominance of the game, and the formation of the Japanese American Courier League in 1928 shifted attention to the Taiyo Club and the role of baseball as a social event for the Japanese community that aided in bridging the generation gap between the older generation of Issei and the Nisei youth. The Nisei were struggling with the pressures of trying to maintain traditional culture and values passed on by their Issei parents while identifying with their own culture as Japanese-American youth. The need to strengthen relations within their new Japanese-American community began to overshadow the interest in maintaining relations with the homeland.

These were also the emerging issues of the Yakima Valley Japanese Community where Fukuda eventually made his new home. Through his work with youth both as principal of the Japanese Language School and as a baseball coach and league organizer, Fukuda aided the community there in struggling with these issues up until his death in 1941, which shortly preceded the advent of WW II and the Japanese internment. None of the Japanese baseball teams were revived when the Japanese communities of the Pacific Northwest returned home after the war.

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Content Description

The collection consists of a scrapbook album (which has been disassembled due to very poor condition) and miscellaneous photographs (some of which probably fell out of the scrapbook). The photographs document Frank Fukuda's involvement with Japanese baseball teams in Seattle, Wash., from about 1906 to 1927, including the Mikado, Nippon, and Cherry teams. The images in the scrapbook album also depict Japanese University baseball teams both in Japan and as visitors in Seattle, as well as Fukuda's involvement in the 1922 National Boy's Tournament in Japan. There are also two photographs of women's baseball teams (probably in Seattle) whose identity and connection to Fukuda are not clear. The last part of the scrapbook album (folders 29-35) depict Japanese theater performances at Seattle's Nippon Kan Theater, where the Asahi baseball teams performed Shibai ("drama"- amateur performances of skits, folk songs and classical dance) to raise funds. Folders 40-45 document the University of Washington baseball team's tour of Japan in 1908. No apparent connection between Fukuda and the UW team or trip has been established.

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Use of the Collection

Alternative Forms Available

View selections from the collection in digital format.

Restrictions on Use

Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication. Contact Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries for details.

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Administrative Information

Acquisition Information

Donor: Gift of Mrs. Hatsue Fukuda via Dolores Gato, Japanese-American History Project, 1972.

Processing Note

Processed by: Nicolette Bromberg and Beth Dodrill with assistance from volunteers Ayako Harada and Minako Tada, who translated Japanese characters on photographs and related materials.

The original order of the scrapbook photographs has been retained.

Bibliography

"Asahis Were Good Then," Great Northern Daily News , Oct. 13, 1936.

"Memories of Nisei Sports Clubs," International Examiner , v. 3, no. 7 (July, 1976).

Nomura, Gail. "Beyond the Playing Field: The Significance of Pre-World War II Japanese American Baseball in the Yakima Valley," in Bearing Dreams, Shaping Visions: Asian Pacific American Perspectives , Revilla, Linda A., et. al., eds. (Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press,1981) .

Regaldo, Samuel O." 'Play Ball!': Baseball and Seattle's Japanese-American Courier League, 1928-1941," Pacific Northwest Quarterly , vol. 87, no. 1 (Winter, 1995/1996), pp. 29-36.

Shibazaki, Ryoichi. Seattle and the Japanese-United States Baseball Connection, 1905-1926, M.S. thesis, University of Washington, 1981.

Related Materials

A tape-recorded interview in Japanese with Mrs. Hatsue Fukuda (the wife of Frank Fukuda) is available in the Delores Goto Papers (manuscripts Accession no. 2647-1).

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Detailed Description of the Collection

 

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Subject Terms

  • Amateur theater--Washington (State)--Seattle
  • Baseball players--Japan--Photographs
  • Baseball players--Washington (State)--Seattle--Photographs
  • Baseball--Japan--History
  • Baseball--Washington (State)--Seattle
  • Japanese American baseball players--Oregon--Portland--Photographs
  • Japanese American baseball players--Washington (State)--Seattle--Photographs
  • Japanese American baseball players--Washington (State)--Wapato--Photographs
  • Japanese Americans--Travel--Japan
  • Japanese Americans--Washington (State)--Seattle--Photographs
  • Japanese drama--Washington (State)--Seattle
  • Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)
  • Youth league baseball--Washington (State)--History

Personal Names

  • Fukuda, Frank Tokichi, 1889-1941--Photographs
  • Fukuda, Hatsue--Photographs

Corporate Names

  • Asahi (Baseball team)--Photographs
  • Cherry (Baseball team)--Photographs
  • Mikado (Baseball team)--Photographs
  • Nippon (Baseball team)--Photographs
  • Nippon Kan Theater (Seattle, Wash.) (photographer)
  • University of Washington--Baseball
  • Waseda Daigaku--Baseball

Other Creators

  • Corporate Names

    • Aiko Studio (Seattle, Wash.) (photographer)
    • Toyo Studio (Seattle, Wash.) (photographer)
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