Yasui family papers, 1873-2023

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Yasui family
Title
Yasui family papers
Dates
1873-2023 (inclusive)
1910-1995 (bulk)
Quantity
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))
Collection Number
Coll 949
Summary
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 are being translated into English and modern Japanese and will be viewable online in OHS Digital Collections after August 2024.
Repository
Oregon Historical Society Research Library
1200 SW Park Avenue
Portland, OR
97205
Telephone: 503-306-5240
Fax: 503-219-2040
libreference@ohs.org
Access Restrictions

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

Languages
English, Japanese
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.

Other Descriptive InformationReturn to Top

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 will be included in the collection and viewable online in OHS Digital Collections after August 2024. Translators also provided brief interpretations in English for untranslated materials.

Historical NoteReturn to Top

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 NoteReturn to Top

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.

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

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 are being translated into English and modern Japanese; the translations will be included in the collection and viewable online in OHS Digital Collections after August 2024.

Use of the CollectionReturn to Top

Preferred Citation

Yasui family papers, Coll 949, Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Restrictions on 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.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

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

Acquisition Information

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

Preservation Note

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.

Processing Note

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 Note

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.

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.

Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top

Series 1:  Correspondence, circa 1903-2017Return to Top

5.4 cubic feet, (12 legal document cases)
The series is divided into three subseries: Subseries 1.1, Issei correspondence; Subseries 1.2, Nisei and Sansei correspondence; and Subseries 1.3, Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence.

Series 1 consists of original correspondence from three generations of Yasui family members, spanning more than a century. Also see Series 3, Research Files and Historical Writings, for copies of additional Issei and Nisei correspondence, selected translations and historical interpretations, and World War II-era government communication files.

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 1.1: Issei correspondence
Materials in Subseries 1.1 are from the first generation of Yasui family members who immigrated to the U.S. at the beginning of 20th century. Letters to and from Masuo Yasui, Renichi Fujimoto, and Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui are usually personal in nature and written between family members in pre-World War II Japanese, with a small amount of business- and community-related correspondence included. While most of this early correspondence predates World War II, some correspondence is from the period when Masuo Yasui and other family members were incarcerated by the U.S. government in separate locations.
circa 1903-1992
Box Folder
1 1
Letters from Masuo Yasui to his brothers Renichi Fujimoto and Taiitsuro Yasui (in Japanese)
circa 1903-1907
1 2
Letters from Masuo Yasui to his brothers Renichi Fujimoto and Taiitsuro Yasui (in Japanese)
1908
1 3
Telegram from Hood River, Oregon, to Shinataro Yasui in Okayama, Japan (in Japanese)
1915
1 4
Masuo Yasui correspondence from family in Japan, including father Shinataro Yasui and cousin Yasuo Yasui (in Japanese)
1917; 1928
1 5
Takashi Katayama letter to Masuo Yasui informing him of the death of his father, Shinataro Yasui, in Japan (in Japanese)
undated
1 6
Masuo Yasui correspondence, mainly with his children and friends (in English)
1927-1941
1 7
Masuo Yasui incoming letters and greetings from friends (in Japanese)
1919-1936; undated
1 8
Letters from Reverend Isaac Inouye to Masuo Yasui (in Japanese)
1938-1941; undated
1 9
Letter from Senichi Tomohiro to Masuo Yasui regarding Alien Land Law (English translation of 1917 Japanese original; source letter not present)
1992
1 10
Letters from Reverend K. Kanazawa of Portland Japanese Methodist Episcopal Church to Masuo Yasui (in Japanese)
1915; undated
1 11
Masuo Yasui correspondence with Iola Kimura (in English)
1931-1935
1 12
Masuo Yasui correspondence with and about K. Furukawa (English; some in Japanese)
1915; 1936-1937
1 13
Iuemon Yasui letter to Masuo Yasui (in Japanese); with context note from Homer Yasui (in English)
undated
1 14
Masuo Yasui correspondence while incarcerated, including family letters regarding visits (in English)
1942-1944
1 15
Masuo Yasui postcards to Mr. and Mrs. Sagoro Asai (in Japanese)
1946
1 16
Masuo Yasui post-World War II correspondence (copies of English originals)
1946-1953
1 17
Masuo Yasui letters to George I. Takagi (copies of Japanese originals)
1944-1954
1 18
Letters from Ichiro Miyake to Etsuji Miyake (Shidzuyo Yasui's father and brother, in Japanese)
1910
1 19
Ichiro Miyake letters to Masuo and Taiitsuro Yasui (in Japanese)
1910
1 20
Postcards to and from Ichiro Miyake during his visit to Oregon (in Japanese)
1912
1 21
Shidzuyo Yasui correspondence (Japanese and English)
1916; 1939-1944
1 22
Renichi Fujimoto letters to Shidzuyo Yasui during his Japan trip (in Japanese)
1930-1931
1 23
Incoming letters from friends to Shidzuyo Yasui (in Japanese)
circa 1931-1936
1 24
Taiitsuro Yasui letter to Shidzuyo Yasui (in Japanese)
circa 1930
1 25
Gunzo Katayama letter to Taiitsuro Yasui, writing from Los Angeles, California, to Divide, Montana (in Japanese, includes 1991 English translation)
1908 July 2; 1991
1 26
Letter from Yoshie (wife of Taiitsuro Yasui?) to Renichi Fujimoto on letterhead of Yasui-Orimono Sho (Taiitsuro Yasui's business in Japan) regarding Michi Yasui visit (in Japanese)
1940 October 21
1 27
Letter to Renichi Fujimoto from friend in Japan (in Japanese)
1910
1 28
Renichi Fujimoto incoming letters from friends (in Japanese)
1930-1931
1 29
Renichi Fujimoto correspondence, primarily with his nephews and nieces (in English)
1924-1965
1 30
Renichi Fujimoto letter to Masuo Yasui from Japan (in Japanese)
1930
1 31
Renichi Fujimoto letters to Shidzuyo and Masuo Yasui from Japan (mostly in Japanese, 1 item in English)
1930-1931
1 32
Partial letter from Renichi Fujimoto to nephew Tsuyoshi (Ray) Yasui (copy of part of Japanese original)
1944 November 5
1 33
Matsuyo (Seno) Fujimoto draft letter to friend in Japan (in Japanese)
after 1931
2 1-4
Yasui Bros. business correspondence (English; some in Japanese)
1910-1942
2 5
Yasui Bros. business correspondence regarding assistance to Hood River Japanese American community, mainly re-entry, immigration, residency, and U.S. Selective Service forms (English and Japanese)
1926-1941
2 6
Business correspondence - Japanese Savings Association member newsletter or report from Masuo Yasui as general manager (in Japanese)
1921
Subseries 1.2: Nisei and Sansei correspondence
Subseries 1.2 is primarily in English and focuses on the second and third generations of the Yasui family. The subseries is anchored by Homer Yasui's numerous letters to family members from the 1980s to 2010s, reflecting on their history and how best to share it, as well as his research and advocacy work. Also featured are many letters from Shu Yasui (sometimes also known as Robert) and his wife, Phyllis, with Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui in the 1980s and 1990s; Minoru (Min) Yasui's letters from his college days and during his incarceration. The subseries also includes minor representation by Ray Yasui (also known as Tsuyoshi, Chop, or Ches) and his wife, Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui, as well as a few letters by Kay, Michi, Roku, and Yuka Yasui, primarily from 1930s through the 1950s.
1921-2017
Box Folder
2 7
Kay Yasui correspondence (English; some in Japanese)
1927-1930
2 8
Condolences to Masuo and Shidzuyo Yasui after Kay's death, funeral note (English; some Japanese)
1931 February-March
2 9
Ray Yasui personal correspondence (in English)
1929-1936
2 10
Ray Yasui letters to family from college (in Japanese)
circa 1933-1934
2 11
Postcard from Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui to Renichi Fujimoto and Matsuyo (Seno) Fujimoto
1950
2 12
Ray Yasui and Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui correspondence, especially regarding Roku Yasui end of life (in English)
1965-1968
2 13
Ray Yasui and Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui correspondence, especially regarding Roku Yasui end of life and estate (in English)
1969 January-April
2 14
Ray Yasui and Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui correspondence, especially regarding Roku Yasui end of life and estate (in English)
1969 May-December
2 15
Ray Yasui and Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui correspondence (in English)
1974-1989
2 16
Ray Yasui correspondence as trustee of Roku Yasui's estate (in English)
1970; 1988
3 1
Minoru (Min) Yasui postcards home during trip to Yellowstone National Park (in English)
1929
3 2
Min Yasui correspondence with his parents, Masuo and Shidzuyo Yasui, during high school and college; high school report card (in English)
1931-1933
3 3
Min Yasui correspondence with his parents while attending University of Oregon (in English)
1934
3 4
Min Yasui correspondence with his parents while attending University of Oregon (in English)
1935-1937
3 5
Min Yasui correspondence with his father, Masuo Yasui (in English)
1936
3 6
Min Yasui correspondence with his father, Masuo Yasui (in English)
1939-1940
3 7
Min Yasui correspondence, primarily with his father, Masuo Yasui (in English)
1938-1939
3 8
Min Yasui Pearl Harbor telegram from Masuo Yasui urging immediate enlistment in U.S. Army (in English)
1941 December 7
3 9
Min Yasui correspondence with family during incarceration, from Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura's papers (in English; includes 2014 inventory of Min's papers Yuka sent to Homer Yasui)
1942-1943
3 10
Min Yasui correspondence with family, primarily Yuka Yasui, during incarceration, from Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura's papers (in English)
1942-1943
3 11
Min Yasui postcard to Renichi and Matsuyo (Seno) Fujimoto on his way to Denver, Colorado (in English)
1943 November 4
3 12
Min Yasui letters to family; includes some information about parents' estate (in English)
1958-1959
3 13
Min Yasui letters to family (in English)
1960-1969
3 14
Min Yasui letters to Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui, with trip itinerary (in English)
1979
3 15
Min Yasui correspondence with Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui, includes trip itineraries and redress advocacy work (in English)
1981-1986
4 1
Michi Yasui correspondence with her parents while attending University of Oregon (in English)
1938-1941
4 2
Michi Yasui correspondence with Doris Hanson and others in planning their trip to Japan (in English)
1940
4 3
Michi Yasui correspondence regarding trip to Japan (in Japanese)
1940
4 4
Michi Yasui personal correspondence (English with some Japanese)
1921-1941
4 5
Michi (Yasui) Ando letters to Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui
1987-1999
4 6
Roku Yasui personal correspondence (in English)
1934-1941
4 7
Roku Yasui letters from Bill Bond, a fellow Hood River Boy Scout who moved to California (in English)
1935
4 8
Roku Yasui letters from his father, Masuo Yasui, while incarcerated and letter from Senator Wayne Morse (in English, includes copies)
1942-1945
4 9
Letter to Lise Yasui from Stuart Crossman in remembrance of Roku Yasui, inspired by Lise's film "A Family Gathering" (in English)
1990
4 10
Homer Yasui correspondence with family, especially Rachel Yasui, regarding Roku Yasui's death (in English)
1968-1969; 1990
4 11
Shu Yasui personal correspondence (in English)
1930-1936
4 12
Shu Yasui family correspondence during World War II (in English; some copies)
1942-1944
4 13
Shu Yasui letters to family (in English)
1982-1983
4 14
Shu and Phyllis Yasui correspondence with Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in English)
1984-1987
4 15
Shu Yasui letters to Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in English)
1986
4 16
Shu Yasui correspondence with Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui and other family; featured topics are Lise Yasui's film "A Family Gathering," and Shu's research and advocacy (in English)
1988
4 17
Shu Yasui correspondence, primarily to Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in English)
1989-1991
4 18
Shu Yasui letters to family; featured topic is Lise Yasui's film "A Family Gathering" (in English)
1992
4 19
Shu Yasui letters to Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui, and to Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (in English)
1993
4 20
Shu Yasui correspondence, primarily with family (in English)
1994
5 1
Shu Yasui letters to Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui, and to Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (in English)
1995
5 2
Shu Yasui letters to Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in English)
1996
5 3
Shu Yasui letters to Miki (Yabe) and Homer Yasui (in English)
1997
5 4-7
Shu Yasui letters to family (in English)
1998 January-1999 December
6 1
Shu Yasui correspondence with family (in English)
2000-2006
6 2
Yuka Yasui incoming letters from family (primarily in English, some copies)
1938-1955
6 3
Homer Yasui early correspondence; includes handmade card he made for his father (in English)
circa 1930s
6 4
Homer Yasui letters to his father, Masuo Yasui, during incarceration (in English)
1942-1945
6 5
Homer Yasui correspondence with Robert Takaki and family, who knew Masuo Yasui (in English)
1980
6 6
Homer Yasui correspondence with Julia Noe of EX-P.O.W. regarding redress (in English)
1988
6 7
Homer Yasui correspondence with Oregonian Editor R. N. Terrall regarding redress argument (in English)
1988-1989
6 8
Homer Yasui family correspondence regarding donation of family documents, artifacts, and legacy; includes his Yasui Family Bulletin #1 and Uchimon progress reports, with some responses (in English)
1989-1990
6 9
Homer Yasui Family Bulletin #1 and Uchimon progress reports, with some responses (in English)
1989-1990
6 10
Homer Yasui correspondence with third-generation Yasui family members regarding family legacy, especially Lise Yasui, Flip Yasui, and Flip's wife, Maija Yasui (in English)
1990
6 11
Homer Yasui correspondence with family, Lauren Kessler, and University of Oregon regarding Kessler's book "Stubborn Twig," and donation of family's legacy collection (in English)
1990
6 12
Homer Yasui correspondence with family regarding donation of family's legacy collection to Oregon Historical Society and exhibit at the Japanese American National Museum (in English)
1991
6 13
Homer Yasui correspondence with family, mostly outgoing, mainly regarding donation of family legacy collection (in English)
1992
6 14
Homer Yasui correspondence with family, mostly outgoing, mainly regarding donation of family legacy collection (in English)
1993
6 15-17
Homer Yasui letters to family (in English)
1994-1996
7 1
Homer Yasui letters to family (in English)
1997
7 2
Homer Yasui correspondence with family regarding representation and speaking on behalf of Minoru Yasui (in English)
1998
7 3
Homer Yasui correspondence with family (in English)
2000-2006
7 4
Homer Yasui incoming family letters regarding Mosier ranch and identifications for 1930s photograph of students at Mosier Japanese language school (in English)
2003-2008
7 5
Homer Yasui Father's Day cards from his children Barb, Meris, John, and Kip (in English)
1950s-1980s
7 6
Homer Yasui letters to his wife, Miki, and children (in English)
1970-1975
7 7
Homer Yasui letters to family and others; includes Japanese American Citizens League and Minoru Yasui Memorial Fund activities (in English)
1980-1989
7 8
Homer Yasui letters from Lauren Kessler, author of "Stubborn Twig" (in English)
1990-1995
7 9
Homer Yasui correspondence with others, includes advocacy work (in English, 1 item in Japanese)
1990-1993
7 10
Homer Yasui correspondence with others; includes advocacy and history work (in English)
1994
7 11
Homer Yasui correspondence with others; includes advocacy and history work (in English)
1995
7 12
Homer Yasui correspondence with others; includes advocacy and history work (in English)
1996
7 13
Homer Yasui correspondence with others; includes advocacy and history work (in English)
1997
7 14
Homer Yasui letters to others; includes advocacy work (in English)
2000-2007
7 15
Miki (Yabe) Yasui letter to Rayko Yabe Konoshima and Isaku "Ika" Konoshima (in English)
1986
7 16
Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence, including with relatives and friends in Japan (in Japanese and English)
1992-2017
7 17
Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence with Lillian Oda Rogers and Bob Rogers, whom she met at Heart Mountain (in English)
2007-2013
Subseries 1.3: Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence
Subseries 1.3 is the most recent correspondence, the bulk of it from the 1970s through the 1990s, and is almost entirely in English. In addition to Homer and Miki Yasui's personal letters to and from their daughters Barbara and Meris and their grandchildren, a sizable amount of correspondence is with Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura in the 1980s and 1990s, discussing letters and documents in the collection and the translation work Yuka and her husband, Toshio, did in collaboration with Homer and Miki Yasui.
1959-2010
Box Folder
8 1-4
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Barb (Barbara) Yasui and her children (in English)
1970-1999
8 5-8
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Meris (Merideth) Yasui (in English)
1972-1979
9 1-3
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Meris Yasui (in English)
1980-1998
9 4-5
Correspondence between Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (in English)
1964-2010
9 6-8
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui letters to Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura and family (in English)
1960-1992
10 1
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui letters to Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura and family (in English)
1993-2006; undated
10 2
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui letters from Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura and Toshio Fujikura (in English)
1989-1991
10 3-7
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui letters from Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (in English)
1992-1998
10 8
Barb Yasui letters to Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (in English)
1970-1988
10 9
Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Tyra Fujikura (in English)
1982; 1993-1995; undated
10 10
Lise Yasui correspondence regarding her documentary film "A Family Gathering" (in English)
1983-1990
10 11
Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Lise Yasui (in English)
1984-1993
10 12
Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence with Lise Yasui (in English)
1987-2001
11 1
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui (primarily in English; some in Japanese)
1982-1994
11 2
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Phyllis Hoffman Yasui (in English)
1990-1998
11 3
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Mari and Danny Hoffman (in English)
1991-1998
11 4-7
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui incoming cards from their grandchildren (in English)
1979-1990
12 1
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Rachel Yasui (in English)
1986-1988
12 2
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from True Shibata Yasui (in English)
1986-1996
12 3
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Kip, Amanda, and Justine Yasui (in English)
1989-1999
12 4
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from other relatives (English; 1 item in Japanese)
1959-1999
12 5
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from friends (English; 1 item in Japanese)
1973-1997
12 6
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Carla Garrett (in English)
1969-1990
12 7
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Virginia Johnson (in English)
1987-1994
12 8
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence from Pam and Riff Canaday (in English)
1993-1995
12 9
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui correspondence with Roy Higashi regarding their corrections to his directory of Japanese Americans and their relatives in the Mid-Columbia Area (in English; contains biographical data on Yasui family members)
1993

Series 2:  Yasui family materials, 1873-2012Return to Top

7.22 cubic feet, (11 legal document cases, 2 flat boxes, 2 card file boxes, and 1 oversize flat box)
Series 2 is divided into five subseries: Subseries 2.1, Issei diaries and notebooks; Subseries 2.2, Issei personal documents; Subseries 2.3, Yasui Brothers Company business and community documents; Subseries 2.4, Nisei and Sansei documents; Subseries 2.5, Published materials.

Series 2 is chiefly composed of documents created by or about different Yasui family members during their lifetimes; most documents are originals, but in some cases only copies are available.

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 2.1: Issei diaries and notebooks
Subseries 2.1 consists of the personal diaries and notebooks of Masuo Yasui, with some items by Renichi Fujimoto and one by Ichiro Miyake, father of Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui. The diaries primarily cover the years 1903-1944, and contain entries on topics such as immigration experiences, railroad work, impressions of Portland, business and economic concerns, courtship and family life, and incarceration during World War II. Except for Masuo Yasui's diary from the period of his incarceration, all diaries are written in pre-World War II Japanese. Selected partial translations of the diaries by Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura and annotations by Homer Yasui are also included in this subseries. Notebooks in the subseries generally contain practical information, such as expenses or English phrases; language varies by notebook.
1903-2005
Box Folder
13 1
Masuo Yasui immigration diary (original, in Japanese)
1903-1905
13 2
Access photocopy, enlarged, of Masuo Yasui's immigration diary (in entirety, pages 1-242; in Japanese)
1903-1905
13 3-4
Photocopy of Masuo Yasui immigration diary 1903-1905, annotated by Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (copy of Japanese original)
1903-1905
13 5
Handwritten translation summary and transcription notes for various Masuo Yasui diary entries 1903-1908, by Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura from verbal translations by Toshi Fujikura (in English)
circa 2000
13 6
Typescript summary translations of Masuo Yasui immigration diary excerpts from May 1903-April 1905, by Yuka and Toshio Fujikura (in English)
circa 2000
13 7
Homer Yasui annotations to Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura translations of Masuo Yasui diaries 1903-1905, 1906, and 1908 (in English)
2000
13 8
Homer Yasui and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura notes and correspondence regarding translation of Masuo Yasui diaries 1903-1908 (in English)
1994-2005
14 1
Masuo Yasui personal pocket notebook (in Japanese, Phoenix Insurance cover, with enlarged access photocopy)
circa 1905
14 2
Masuo Yasui personal diary from early days in Portland (in Japanese; original with horse design cover)
1906
14 3
Access photocopy of Masuo Yasui personal diary for early days in Portland (copy of Japanese original)
1906
14 4
Partial English translation summaries of Masuo Yasui personal diary, January to April 1906, by Yuka (Yasui) Fujikara
circa 2000
14 5
Masuo Yasui pocket memo book and diary (in Japanese, original with access photocopy)
circa 1908 August
14 6
Masuo Yasui labor payment notebooks (3, in Japanese)
1907-1914
14 7
Masuo Yasui expense notebook with diary entries for August 26-31, 1909 (original, in Japanese)
1907-1909
14 8
Access photocopy of Masuo Yasui expense notebook with diary entries (copy of Japanese original)
1907-1909
14 9
English translation notes for Masuo Yasui, labeled "Frank M. Yasui" (for Japanese original dated 1907, in Box 19, Folder 2)
circa 2000
14 10
Masuo Yasui personal diary for Portland and early Hood River (in Japanese, original, blue hard cover)
1908
14 11
Access photocopy of Masuo Yasui personal diary for Portland and early Hood River (copy of Japanese original)
1908
14 12
Partial English translation and Homer Yasui notes for Masuo Yasui personal diary for Portland and early Hood River (in English)
circa 1992-2000
14 13
Masuo Yasui pocket expense record and diary (in Japanese)
1908
14 14
Masuo Yasui memo book (in Japanese, original with access photocopy)
1908
15 1
Masuo Yasui pocket cash journal (in Japanese, original)
1909
15 2
Access photocopy of Masuo Yasui pocket cash journal (copy of Japanese original)
1909
15 3
Masuo Yasui personal diary, includes courtship of Shidzuyo Miyake (in Japanese)
1912
15 4
Masuo Yasui notebook - Agricultural Certification Request records with names, addresses, dates (in Japanese)
1915-1923
15 5
Access photocopy of Masuo Yasui notebook - Agricultural Certification Request records with names, addresses, dates (copy of Japanese original)
1915-1923
15 6
Masuo Yasui pocket diary and expense notes (in Japanese, with access photocopy)
1918
15 7
Masuo Yasui personal diary, including family life (in Japanese)
1923
15 8
Masuo Yasui family Japan trip travelogue (original, in English)
1926 June-August
15 9
Access photocopy of Masuo Yasui family Japan trip travelogue (copy of English original)
1926
15 10
Masuo Yasui travelogue and expenses notes for trips to Los Angeles and San Diego (in Japanese and English, with access photocopy)
1935
16 1
Masuo Yasui incarceration diary while at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (original, in English)
1943 January-June
16 2
Partial typescript and access photocopy, Homer Yasui's notes for Masuo Yasui incarceration diary while at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (copy of English original)
1943
16 3
Masuo Yasui's pocket expense record and memo book (in Japanese, original with access photocopy)
1905; undated
16 4
Renichi Fujimoto personal diary (in Japanese)
1913
16 5
Partial photocopy and Homer Yasui notes for Renichi Fujimoto personal diary (in English with copy of Japanese original)
1913; 1992
16 6
Photocopy of Ichiro Miyake memoir (copy of Japanese original not present in collection)
1914
19 1
Masuo Yasui notebook (mostly English, some Japanese)
1907
19 2
Masuo Yasui pocket notebook - blue cover, "Frank M. Yasui" (some Japanese; see Box 14, Folder 9 for translation notes)
1907 August
19 3
Masuo Yasui financial notebook, "Money paid; Frank M. Yasui" (in English)
1908 September
19 4
Masui Yasui pocket account book (in English)
1910
19 5
Masuo Yasui check register (in English)
1911 July-1912 May
19 6
Masuo Yasui check register (in English)
1912 May-December
19 7
Masuo Yasui Christmas gift registers (in English)
1916-1937
19 8
Masuo Yasui pocket calendar (in English)
1921
19 9
Masuo Yasui pocket notebook for car trips (in English)
1924-1926
19 10
Masuo Yasui remittance and receipt pocket notebook (in Japanese)
1910
19 11
Masuo Yasui notebook or address book (in Japanese and English, cover labeled "Dry Goods")
undated
19 12
Renichi Fujimoto memo and expense notebook (in English and Japanese)
undated
19 13
Masuo Yasui memo book with English sample expressions, notes on George Y. Hirokawa (in English, green cover)
undated
19 14
Pocket notebook of Hood River history notes from "First Settlers of Mt. Hood District" by Jean Langville of Hood River County School (in English)
undated
19 15
Pocket Japanese to English phrasebook (Japanese and English)
1907
19 16
Pocket New Testament (printed in Japanese)
undated
19 17
Pocket New Testament (printed in Japanese)
undated
19 18
Pocket address books (7, in English, believed to have been Renichi Fujimoto's)
undated
Subseries 2.2: Issei personal documents
Subseries 2.2 contains a small assortment of Japanese and English documents by or about Masuo Yasui, Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui, and Renichi Fujimoto. It includes personal identification, immigration, marriage and citizenship certificates, well as a handful of contemporary War Relocation Authority and Japanese American Citizens League documents pertaining to forced removal, incarceration camps, and resettlement. Some Koseki Tohon, family registries from the Japanese government, are included, but only one appears to pertain somewhat to the Yasui family.
1873-2009
Box Folder
16 7
Masuo Yasui documents requesting to leave Japan for the United States and U.S. inspection card (copy of 1903 Japanese original with translation; 1903 English original)
1903; 1991
16 8
Masuo Yasui documents and ephemera (in English, mostly original)
1926-1953
16 9
Masuo Yasui English exercise notebooks (Japanese and English, originals and access copies)
1901-1906
16 10
Masuo Yasui draft of speech made at son Kay Yasui's funeral (in Japanese)
circa 1931
16 11
Note for Masuo Yasui commendation by the Japanese Industrial Association (copy of Japanese original with English translation)
1935 February 21; 2009
16 12
Masuo Yasui transcriptions of newspaper editorials on Minoru Yasui case, attitudes and policies towards Japanese Americans, made while incarcerated (in English)
1942-1945
16 13
Masuo Yasui horticulture class notes and ephemera from Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (in English and Japanese)
circa 1945
16 14
Masuo Yasui citizenship and naturalization documents (copies of English originals)
1953
17 1
Masuo Yasui Senryu poems (in Japanese)
1956
17 2
Masuo Yasui notes on U.S. history, possibly for citizenship exam (in Japanese)
undated
17 3
Masuo Yasui newsletter for Japanese Methodist church in Portland, Oregon (in Japanese)
undated
17 4
Hand-drawn map of Portland's Japantown (labeled in Japanese, possibly by Masuo Yasui)
undated
17 5
Masuo Yasui and Shidzuyo Miyake engagement note (undated copy of 1911 original with translation) and marriage certificate (English and Japanese)
1911-1912
17 6
Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui personal and identification documents (in English, some copies)
1911-1960
17 7
Renichi Fujimoto application documents to leave Japan (in Japanese, with access copy)
1903
17 8
Fujimoto family land and legal documents, property taxes for estate of Renichi's adoptive parents in Japan (in Japanese)
1873-1910; undated
17 9
Renichi Fujimoto Japanese to English exercise notebook (Japanese and English, original and access copy)
1902-1905
17 10
Renichi Fujimoto stock certificates, Montana tax receipts (in English)
1907-1908
17 11
Renichi Fujimoto notebook with English vocabulary, letter drafts, and facts (in Japanese with some English)
circa 1908
17 12
Renichi Fujimoto (likely) travel notebook for Yellowstone trip taken with Kay, Ches (Ray), and Min Yasui (in English)
1929 July
17 13
Renichi Fujimoto power of attorney document, granted to Masuo Yasui prior to travel to Japan (unsigned; in English)
1929 October
17 14
Death notice or obituary for Renichi Fujimoto's adoptive mother Haru Fujimoto in Japan (in Japanese)
1929 November
17 15
Notecard with travel information for Renichi Fujimoto and his wife, Matsuyo Seno, to return to the U.S. in 1931 (in Japanese)
1930
17 16
Renichi Fujimoto miscellaneous: hospital bill, property assessment (in English)
1942-1945
17 17
Japanese American Citizens League (J.A.C.L.) - Bulletin No. 1, with preparation instructions for forced removal and incarceration, survey (English with some Japanese)
1942
17 18
"Tuke Lake Interlude: First Anniversary," published by the Tulean Dispatch, a War Relocation Authority (WRA) project (in English)
1943
17 19
Handwritten list of names of Oregon Japanese Americans incarcerated in Barrack 54 at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp, including Masuo Yasui (in English)
1943 September
17 20
Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp roster, includes Masuo Yasui's name on page 38 (in Japanese; 2 copies)
1944 October
17 21
War Relocation Authority (WRA) memo to Japanese American resettlers of Hood River Valley (in English)
1946
17 22
Japanese American Citizens League (J.A.C.L.) copy of Compromise Settlement Amendment to U.S. House Resolution 3142 Evacuation Claims Act (in English)
1951
17 23
Document regarding a lawsuit of unknown context in Japan (in Japanese)
1963
17 24
Poetry by an unknown writer (in Japanese)
undated
17 25
Koseki Tohon - Family registries from Japanese government, names do not include Yasui (in Japanese)
undated
17 26
Koseki Tohon - Family registries from Japanese government for names Hamamoto and Katayama (in Japanese)
undated
17 27
Koseki Tohon - Family registries from Japanese government, various families and prefectures, filed during Meiji era (in Japanese)
undated
18 1
Koseki Tohon - Family registries from Japanese government, includes Shimahei Yasui from another branch of Yasui family, other families in various prefectures including Okayama, filed during late Meiji era to Taisho era (in Japanese)
undated
18 2
Koseki Tohon - Family registries from Japanese government, various families and prefectures including Okayama, filed during Taisho era (in Japanese; includes Kichizo Noji family related to Hood River Noji/Tamura)
circa 1912-1926
Subseries 2.3: Yasui Brothers Company business and community documents
Also consisting of materials from the first generation of the Yasui family, Subseries 2.3 focuses on the Yasui Bros. stores and the additional services they offered in support of the Japanese American community in the area of Hood River, Oregon. These materials are in English and Japanese, and span the dates of the stores' existence from 1908-1942. The materials in this series complement a much larger collection of Yasui Brothers business records, designated Mss 2949, while offering a snapshot of the family's business activities in the store and the services they sold or performed on behalf of fellow immigrants in Hood River.
1908-1942
Box Folder
18 3
Business cards for Yasui Brothers Co. store, Japanese Employment Office, and Masuo Yasui (in English and Japanese)
undated
18 4
Yasui Bros. Co. letterhead, envelopes, merchandise labels, and shipping tags (in English, some Japanese)
undated
18 5
Niguma Co. store and employment agency stationery and business card (in English)
circa 1911-1913
18 6
Yasui Bros. Co. store coupons, gift certificates, raffle tickets (in Japanese, some English)
circa 1925-1941
18 7
Yasui Bros. Co. incoming and outgoing checks, check register (includes Master Asai donation to building of Japanese Community Hall) (in English)
1908; 1928
18 8
Yasui Bros. store catalog and New Year's advertisement (in Japanese)
1914; undated
18 9
Yasui Bros. Mount Hood Railroad freight information and timetables (in English)
1915-1928
18 10
Yasui Bros. Co. store building contract and survey documents for construction of fourth location (in English)
1930-1933
18 11
Yasui Bros. Co. excise tax statements for store closure sale prior to forced removal (in English)
1942 March-April
18 12
Yasui Bros. Co. customer account statements and purchase receipts, includes some income from fruit growing (in English and Japanese, mostly blank)
undated
18 13
Yasui Bros. Co. store advertising and ephemera (mostly Japanese, some English)
circa 1915; undated
18 14
Yasui Bros. Co. store New Year's advertisements and greetings (in Japanese)
undated
23 1
Yasui Bros. Co. store advertising and ephemera (in Japanese)
undated
18 15
Yasui Bros. Co. in-store signage for products and services, gift envelopes, ephemera (in English and Japanese)
undated
18 16
Yasui Bros. Co. store product can labels, vegetables (in English and Japanese)
undated
18 17
Yasui Bros. Co. store product can labels, fish and seafood (in English and Japanese)
undated
18 18
Yasui Bros. Co. store product can labels, miscellaneous and unknown (in English and Japanese)
undated
18 19
Japanese Savings Association of Hood River letterheads (in English and Japanese, blank)
undated
18 20
Mid-Columbia Vegetable Growers account statement forms (in English, blank)
circa 1920s
18 21
Personal notes requesting paperwork and identity assistance from Masuo Yasui by Hood River Japanese American community members (in Japanese)
1912-1917
18 22
Yasui Bros. Co. U.S. government and legal document files on behalf of Hood River Japanese American community, including Department of Labor and Department of Justice identification, residence, and work history statements, applications to enter or re-enter the U.S., and for citizenship and "alien registration" (in English)
1925-1941
Subseries 2.4: Nisei and Sansei documents
Documents in Subseries 2.4 are largely in English and predominantly document the lives of Masuo and Shidzuyo Yasui's children. Highlights include first-born son Kay's writings in Hood River school newspapers in the latter 1920s; original poems composed by Min Yasui while incarcerated at the Multnomah County Jail and Minidoka Relocation Center in 1942, and his 1981 testimony to Congress regarding redress; a diary and an essay by Yuka Yasui recording her early forced removal experiences and time at the Pinedale Assembly Center; Homer Yasui's ephemera, educational, military, and professional certificates and awards; and ephemera of other Yasui children, including Michi, Roku, and Shu (Robert) from childhood through college and occasionally beyond. Also notable are requests from several of the children to visit their father, Masuo Yasui, during his incarceration at the Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Center from 1943-1946. Sansei materials include manuscripts for several historical articles by Barbara Yasui in the 1970s; and a proposal and marketing materials for Lise Yasui's 1988 documentary film, "A Family Gathering."
1924-2012
Box Folder
20 1
Kay Yasui writings in The Tickler, Hood River Junior High School newspaper, several issues (in English)
1928 October-December
20 2-6
Kay Yasui writings in Hood River Guide, Hood River High School newspaper (in English)
1928-1931
21 1
Kay Yasui poetry addressing American identity; ephemera, death announcement (in English)
1928-1931
21 2
"Seventeen Beautiful Years" - Masuo Yasui essay on Kay Yasui's death, written during incarceration (copy of English original)
1942
21 3
Ray Yasui Boy Scout Troop roster (copy of English original)
1928
21 4
Minoru Yasui poems composed in Multnomah County Jail (eleven original poems in English)
1942
21 5
Minoru Yasui requests to visit his father and other incarcerees Takeoka, Oyama, Tomohiro, Ito (copies of English originals)
1942-1945
21 6
Minoru Yasui testimony for National Committee for Redress (J.A.C.L.) to Federal Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (in English)
1981
21 7
Event programs and news clippings for Minoru Yasui's Coram Nobis case efforts; honors, awards, tributes, and symposium (in English)
1983-1998
21 8
Minoru Yasui Day proclamations for Colorado and Oregon (copies of English originals)
1984; 1990
21 9
Thank you cards for donations to Minoru Yasui Memorial Fund (in English)
1990
21 10
Michi Yasui ephemera: including report card, news clippings, passport application, University of Oregon ephemera, and memorial program (in English, some Japanese)
1928-2012
21 11
Michi Yasui Hood River High School yearbook, The Mascot, junior year (in English)
1937
21 12
Michi (Yasui) Ando request on behalf of Shidzuyo, Homer, and Yuka Yasui to visit Masuo Yasui in Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (copy of English originals)
1945
21 13
Roku Yasui report cards and school records (in English)
1928-1941
21 14
Roku Yasui ephemera, including drawing, notebook listed his friends, Boy Scout materials (in English)
circa 1930-1945
20 7
Roku Yasui artwork - 3 Japanese-style color illustrations of nature scenes
prior to 1941
21 15
Roku Yasui requests to visit his father in Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (copies of English originals)
1943-1945
21 16
Roku Yasui end of life care and funeral program (in English)
1968-1969
21 17
Roku Yasui estate documents as executed by Ray T. Yasui (in English)
1988
21 18
Shu Yasui ephemera, including schoolwork, professional award, and celebration of life program (in English, some copies)
1932-2012
Folder
Oversize 1
Shu Yasui records and news clipping for Peace Tower memorial he donated in honor of his parents at Pine Street United Methodist Church in Willamsport, Pennsylvania (in English)
1987
Box Folder
21 19
Shu Yasui plans for Peace Tower memorial in honor of his parents at Pine Street United Methodist Church in Willamsport, Pennsylvania (in English)
1988; 2012
21 20
Homer Yasui ephemera, including birth record, U.S. passports, expense notebook, and Pinedale Assembly Center items (in English)
1924-2002
21 21
Homer Yasui medical degree, license and certificates (copies of English originals)
circa 1949-1952
20 8
Homer Yasui educational and medical professional certificates (in English)
1950-1970
21 22
Homer Yasui U.S. Navy records (in English)
1954-1990
21 23
Homer Yasui hospital service award and J.A.C.L. service award (copies of plaques, in English)
1971; 1982
21 24
Newspaper articles about Homer Yasui, primarily from J.A.C.L.'s Pacific Citizen and the Oregonian (in English)
1981-2003
20 9
Newspaper feature on Homer Yasui and Portland reunion of former incarcerees (in English)
1990
21 25
Homer Yasui resume (in English)
1976
21 26
Homer Yasui Hood River High School Class of 1942 50th Year Reunion planning materials (in English)
1990-1996
22 1
Homer Yasui Hood River High School Class of 1942 50th Year Reunion program (in English)
1992
22 2
Yuka Yasui ephemera, including Hood River Japanese School homework (in English and Japanese)
circa 1930; 1945
22 3
Yuka Yasui diary, kept from Pearl Harbor attack to early incarceration (copy of English original)
1941-1942
22 4
Yuka Yasui letter from University of Oregon regarding college registration (in English)
1944
22 5
"The Land of Hope" - Yuka Yasui college essay describing life in the Pinedale Assembly Center (in English)
circa 1945
22 6
Barbara Yasui college paper manuscript for "From Seed to Blossom: The Japanese in Hood River, Oregon" (in English)
1971
22 7
Barbara Yasui manuscript for "The Nikkei in Oregon, 1834-1940" (in English)
1973
22 8
Barbara Yasui article "The Nikkei in Oregon, 1834-1940," as printed in Oregon Historical Quarterly (copy of English original)
1975
22 9
"Stalking the Wild Mushroom" - Barbara Yasui article for the Pacific Citizen (copy of English article)
1978
22 10
Barbara Yasui, news clippings about (in English)
1993-1994
22 11
Barbara Yasui reprint of essay "Changing Awareness" (in English)
1999
22 12
"Hanashi: Stories of the Yasui Family in America" - Barbara Yasui memory book for family reunion, including images, writings, and remembrances (in English)
2005
22 13
Lise Yasui proposal and correspondence for her documentary film "A Family Gathering" (in English)
1983-1990
22 14
Lise Yasui marketing materials for screenings of her documentary film "A Family Gathering" (in English)
1988
22 15
Family reunion planning documents, itinerary (in English)
1976; 2005
22 16
Yasui family directories for reunions (in English)
1990-2000
Subseries 2.5: Published materials
Materials in Subseries 2.5 are mainly in Japanese. They include a few contemporary reactions to forced removal policy and War Relocation Authority reports from the 1940s; scattered issues of several Japanese-language newspapers printed in the U.S. from 1915-1960, including a run of the Santa Fe Times incarceration camp newspaper from 1943-1945, and one issue of the Manzanar Christian Church Weekly Bulletin. Also included are various printed books, including several annotated textbooks owned by the Yasui Nisei.
1894-1960
Box Folder
22 17
Pamphlets and statements about Japanese Americans and relocation policy, including items by Hood River American Legion Post No. 22 (in English)
1942-1943
22 18
War Relocation Authority Quarterly Reports (in English)
1942
22 19
War Relocation Authority Bibliographies on Japanese Americans (in English)
1942-1943
22 20
Magazine issues about the Nisei, including from the Japanese Americans Citizens League (in English)
1945-1948
22 21
"Many Wonders" - supplement to a monthly science magazine for grade school students themed on learning language (in modern Japanese)
1988
23 2
Oregon News, Japanese American newspaper, sometimes referred to as Oshu Nippo (3 issues in Japanese)
1915 January 1; 1938 January 27 and April 25
23 5
Tacoma Times, Japanese American newspaper published in Tacoma, Washington (1 issue in Japanese)
1915 January 1
23 4
The North American Times, Japanese American newspaper published in Seattle (2 issues in Japanese and English)
1923 September 10; 1938 January 28
24 1
Ohshu Seinen, Japanese American newspaper (1 issue in Japanese)
1927 July 7
23 3
Great Northern Daily News, Japanese American newspaper published in Seattle (4 issues in English and Japanese)
1934 August 25, 1934 August 27, 1934 August 28; 1938 February 1
23 5
The Coast Times, Japanese American newspaper published in Portland (1 issue in Japanese and English)
1936 October 22
23 5
Japanese American News, published in San Francisco, California (1 issue in Japanese and English)
1939 May 30
24 2-3
Santa Fe Times, incarceration camp newspaper (multiple issues, bound, in Japanese)
1943 October 21-1945 May 13
24 4
Manzanar Christian Church Weekly Bulletin, incarceration camp newspaper (2 issues in Japanese)
1945 March 29; 1945 August 23
24 5
Oregon Nippo/Oregon News (several issues in English and Japanese)
1946 July 27-1947 February 15; 1950 December 14-21
24 6
Oregon Weekly, Japanese American newspaper published in Portland (4 issues in Japanese)
1960 October 6; 1960 November 3, 1960 November 10, 1960 November 17
Volume
25 1
Portland description and business guide for Portland Exposition visitors (printed book, in Japanese)
circa 1905
25 2
"The Old Manse and a Few Mosses," by Nathaniel Hawthorne (printed booklet, in English)
1894
25 3
"History of the Portland Japanese Methodist Church on its 55th Anniversary" (printed book, in Japanese)
circa 1948
25 4-5
Pocket bibles, New Testament (printed in Japanese)
undated
25 6-7
Pocket hymnals (printed in Japanese)
circa 1924
25 8
Bible, inscribed as gift by Hood River Japanese Methodist Church to Mr. Kagayama (in Japanese)
1955
25 9-10
Official Journal of the Pacific Japanese Provisional Annual Conference of the Methodist Church, for 9th and 11th annual conferences (printed in English)
1948-1950
25 11-12
Telephone directories for Hood River, Odell, and Parkdale Exchanges, Oregon-Washington Telephone Company (2 issues, printed in English)
1925-1926
25 13
Oregon Japanese Telephone Directory (printed, in English and Japanese)
1958 November
25 14
Published photo book of Japanese children born in the Pacific Northwest and Canada, featuring photo of Kay, Ray (Chop), and Minoru Yasui (in Japanese)
1918
26 1-29
Japanese school textbooks with annotations by various Yasui Nisei as children (29 volumes in Japanese)
circa 1921-1937

Series 3:  Research files and historical writings, 1899-2022Return to Top

5.64 cubic feet, (11 legal document cases; 1 oversize flat box)
Series 3 is divided into four subseries: Subseries 3.1: Research, writings, and government files on Yasui Issei; Subseries 3.2: Research files and collected memories of Yasui Nisei; Series 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 3 traces four decades of historical investigation, archival research and genealogical research conducted by Homer Yasui, Miki (Yabe) Yasui, Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura, and other family members from the late 1980s to 2022. Throughout this series, contextual annotations, biographical insights and interpretations of original documents reflect the Yasuis' evolving understanding of their family's history and help to fill in details. Other highlights include historical data compiled by Homer Yasui, such as lists of Japanese Americans from Oregon who were incarcerated at various detention facilities; Japanese immigration and census data for Oregon; and secondary source material on Japanese American history. Materials in this series are primarily written in English. In addition to original correspondence and writing, this series contains many copies of documents for which no original is present, or annotated copies of original documents located in Series 1 and 2 of this collection.

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 3.1: Research, writings, and government files on Yasui Issei
Subseries 3.1 begins with Homer Yasui's notes reflecting on the collection and its ideal disposition, including correspondence with Lauren Kessler, author of "Stubborn Twig," a book about the Yasui family. It also includes Homer Yasui's annotations to and interpretations of some of the earliest documents and photographs of the family, the Yasui Bros. company stores, and the family's ranch in Mosier. Biographical and historical essays on specific individuals are complemented by the early translation efforts of Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura and her husband, Toshio Fujikura, and others, and by Miki (Yabe) Yasui's historical research and writing. In addition to family and store history and individual biographies, this subseries features annotated copies of Masuo Yasui's extensive Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Justice files, dating mainly from 1941-1945, and collected primarily by Homer Yasui through Freedom of Information Act requests, as well as smaller such files for other Yasui Issei.
1899-2016
Box Folder
22 22
Homer Yasui notes on the Yasui family collection (in English)
1991; 2016
22 23
Notes and annotations on selected Yasui family photographs and albums (in English)
1992-2001
27 1
Homer Yasui correspondence with potential translators of Japanese items in collection (in English)
1991
27 2
Correspondence about and partial translations of Issei documents and letters (in English, includes copies of English and Japanese originals)
1903-1908; 2002-2005
27 3
Notes and correspondence on Ichikawa partial translation of early Yasui Issei letters and documents, including Masuo Yasui's application to emigrate to the United States (in English, includes copies of Japanese and English originals)
1903-1908; 1991
27 4
Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura draft translations and notes for 7 early Issei letters and documents, including Masuo Yasui's application to emigrate to the United States (in English, includes copies of Japanese and English originals)
1903-1908; 2002
27 5
Homer Yasui notes on Reverend Z. Kodachi's translation summaries for 1928 letter from Shinataro Yasui to Masuo Yasui (in English)
1991
27 6
Homer Yasui annotations to Japanese American newspapers held in the collection (in English)
2005
27 7
Homer Yasui annotations and interpretations of Yasui Bros. business correspondence (in English, includes copies)
1917-1923; 1991
27 8
Homer Yasui annotations and interpretations of Yasui Bros. business correspondence (copies of English and Japanese originals)
1924-1928; 1991
27 9
Homer Yasui annotations and interpretations of letters and documents from Yasui Bros. business records (mainly English, some Japanese, includes copies)
1915-1945; 1991
27 10
Homer Yasui record of Yasui Bros. store records, objects, and ephemera shared with family and Japanese American National Museum (in English)
1991
27 11
Book proposal and related correspondence with Lauren Kessler, author of "Stubborn Twig" (in English)
1988-1995
27 12
"Stubborn Twig" - comments on manuscript, related newspaper articles (in English)
1986-2009
27 13
Homer Yasui correspondence and writings to family about family stories, early Hood River, stores, incarceration, and citizenship (in English)
1989-2011
27 14
Homer Yasui writings on Japanese cancellation postmarks and annotations on family correspondence (in English; includes copies of Japanese originals)
1917-1931; 1991
27 15
Homer Yasui correspondence with friends regarding research on Hood River Japanese Americans (in English)
1991
27 16
Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura annotations of incarceration-era family letters and documents (includes copies of English originals)
1942-1953; 1996
27 17
Yasui family genealogy notes and related correspondence (in English)
1977-1997
27 18
Ship manifests and related correspondence regarding Yasui Issei and Nisei arrivals in United States (includes copies of English originals)
1899-1931; circa 2000
27 19
Research notes on Miyake and Yabe family Issei and Nisei arrivals in United States (includes copies of English originals)
1912-1920; circa 2000
27 20
Yasui family crest and related correspondence from family in Japan (in English, includes copy)
2015
27 21
Hood River newspaper articles on Yasui family and store (in English)
1987-1991
28 1
Homer Yasui correspondence regarding exhibits and articles on the family collection, in Oregon and nationally (in English)
1992-2005
28 2
Homer Yasui annotations on and correspondence regarding early family and store history (in English, with copies of Japanese originals)
1908-1945; 1991
28 3
Homer Yasui family correspondence, writings, and research notes on Yasui Bros. store history (in English)
1991-2011
28 4
Homer Yasui historical notes on Yasui Bros. stores, residential addresses and other Japanese businesses in Hood River based on 1913 telephone directory (in English; directory not present)
1991
28 5
Homer Yasui annotations on early photographs of the Yasui Bros. stores and buildings (in English, with copies of photographs)
1890-1940; 1991; 2003
28 6
Diagrams of the Yasui Bros. store exterior and interior from memory of Yasui Nisei, with Homer Yasui's annotations (in English)
2003-2005; undated
28 7
Yasui Bros. store letterhead, stationery and logo ephemera, with logo development and advertisement translated by Tomo Koike and annotated by Homer Yasui (in English with copies of Japanese originals)
circa 1910; 1990-1991
28 8
Homer Yasui correspondence, writings and research file on first Yasui Bros. store (in English, with copy of Japanese originals)
circa 1910-1912; 1991-2020
28 9
Homer Yasui writings and annotated document for second Yasui Bros. store (in English, with copy)
1911; 1991-1998
28 10
Homer Yasui correspondence, writings and annotated documents for third Yasui Bros. store (in English, with copies)
1930-1942; 1991-1998
28 11
Homer Yasui biographical notes on Japanese business contacts and friends of Yasui Bros. (in English)
1991
28 12
Homer Yasui written recollections and notes on Japanese canned goods sold at the Yasui Bros. stores (in English)
2004
28 13
Homer Yasui annotations on Yasui Bros. store correspondence, including purchase of Niguma building (in English, with copies)
1915-1942; 1991
28 14
Newspaper articles and advertisements featuring Yasui Bros. stores and Japanese Savings Association (copies of English originals)
1908-1930
28 15
Newspaper announcements for Yasui Bros. store closure and purchase of store inventory by Harry Gross (copies of English originals)
1942
28 16
Homer Yasui annotations and interpretations of correspondence between Ray Yasui and Ernest C. Smith (in English, with copies)
1945-1946; 1991
28 17
Homer Yasui annotations on Yasui Bros. Store building historic status, copies of photographs and news article (in English)
2004-2005; undated
28 18
Homer Yasui correspondence with family and historical notes on Mosier Ranch, contact with current landowners (in English)
2003-2005
28 19
Homer Yasui correspondence with Thomas Garnier regarding former Yasui Ranch in Mosier, Oregon (in English)
2003-2005
28 20
Homer Yasui correspondence with Dave Wilson and research file, annotations on Mosier school history and Mosier Nikkei (in English)
2008
28 21
Homer Yasui correspondence with Kazuko Sunamoto regarding Mosier history and identification of Mosier Japanese School students (in English)
2003-2010
28 22
Collected Yasui Nisei memories of Mosier Ranch, with diagrams, maps, and Homer Yasui's annotations (in English)
2003-2005
28 23
Annotations and historical notes on photographs of Yasui Mosier Ranch (in English, includes copies)
1920s-1930s; 2004-2007
28 24
History of the Yasui Mosier Farm, historical notes and annotations of photographs (in English)
2010
28 25
Family correspondence and ideas regarding a memorial or marker at the Mosier Farm site (in English)
2005
28 26
"Japanese Families of Mosier Oregon 1923-1942," self-published book by Dave Wilson (in English)
2014
28 27
"History of Hood River Apple Growers Association on its 50th Anniversary," an essay by Ruth Guppy (copy, in English)
1964
29 1
Homer Yasui biographical notes and correspondence about Shinataro Yasui (in English, includes copy of Japanese original)
circa 1915; 2000
29 2
Homer Yasui biographical notes on Taiitsuro Yasui (in English)
2022
29 3
Homer Yasui and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura notes on Masuo Yasui's life story (in English)
2000-2016
29 4
Homer Yasui research file, notes, correspondence on Masuo Yasui (mostly English, some Japanese, includes copies)
1900-1941; 1991-2022
29 5
Newspaper articles on Masuo Yasui (copies in English)
1919; 1930s
29 6
Homer Yasui and Shu Yasui correspondence regarding Masuo Yasui biographical history (in English)
2007
29 7
Homer Yasui research file and notes on Masuo Yasui assistance to Iola Kimura (in English, includes copies)
1931-1938; 2015
29 8
Homer Yasui research file and notes on Masuo Yasui assistance to K. Furukawa (includes copies of Japanese and English originals)
1936-1937; 2016
29 9
Research file, notes, and correspondence on Masuo Yasui awards and honors from Japanese Americans in Hood River and from Japanese government (includes copies of English and Japanese originals)
1930-1940; 2005
29 10
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice file summary and Alien Enemy questionnaire (copies of English originals)
1941-1946
29 11
Masuo Yasui Alien Enemy Basic Personnel Record with photo (copy of English original)
1942-1943
29 12
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice Alien Enemy questionnaire (copy of English original)
1942
29 13
Masuo Yasui notice of Alien Enemy Hearing and related Department of Justice files (copy of English original)
1942
29 14
Affidavits in support of Masuo Yasui prepared Alien Enemy Hearing at Fort Missoula Department of Justice Internment Camp (copies of English originals)
1942
29 15
Letters in support of Masuo Yasui for Alien Enemy Hearing at Fort Missoula Department of Justice Internment Camp (copies of English originals)
1942
29 16
Masuo Yasui Alien Enemy Hearing Board Report, recommendation and memos (copies of English originals)
1942
29 17
Masuo Yasui incarceration orders and Alien Enemy files, with related U.S. Attorney General, Department of Justice and FBI correspondence (copies of English originals)
1942
29 18
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice Alien Enemy personnnel file (copies of English originals)
1942-1946
29 19
Masuo and Shidzuyo Yasui petitions to U.S. Attorney to reunite with his family at Tule Lake Relocation Center (copies of English originals)
1942-1943
29 20
Letters and affidavits, including by family, in support of Masuo Yasui rehearings or release (copies of English originals)
1943-1944
29 21
Letters, including from family, in support of Masuo Yasui's release, and Department of Justice response (copies of English originals)
1945-1946
29 22
Letters against release of Masuo Yasui (copies of English originals)
1942-1944
29 23
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice files on rehearing or release (copies of English originals)
1943
29 24
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice file - requests for family visits (copies of English originals)
1942-1945
30 1
Masuo Yasui letters while incarcerated at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (copies of English originals)
1942-1946
30 2
Translated messages from Japan received by Masuo Yasui at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp via Japanese Red Cross Society (copies of English and Japanese originals)
1942-1944
30 3
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice and Immigration and Naturalization Service files (copies of English originals)
1926-1953
30 4
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice and Immigration and Naturalization Service detention and incarceration center records (copies of English originals)
1941-1946
30 5
Department of Justice list of incarcerees from Camp Livingston, Louisiana, transferred to Santa Fe, New Mexico, Detention Station (Department of Justice Internment Camp), including Masuo Yasui (copy of English original)
1943
30 6
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice Internee Report and partial visitation records (copies of English originals)
1943-1946
30 7-10
Masuo Yasui Department of Justice Communications and Records file (copies of English originals, 4 folders)
1942-1945
30 11
Department of Justice documents releasing Masuo Yasui from incarceration (copies of English originals)
1945-1946
30 12
Department of Justice list of Washington and Oregon incarcerees, including Masuo Yasui, released from Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (copy of English original)
1946
30 13
Homer Yasui and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura correspondence with Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) regarding Freedom of Information Act requests for Masuo Yasui's records (in English)
1981-1994
30 14
Masuo Yasui FBI dossier and file (copies of English originals)
1941-1945
31 1
Masuo Yasui FBI file, including letters advocating for and opposing his release (copies of English originals)
1942-1945
31 2
FBI memos and files on Japanese Americans, including in Hood River, in which Masuo Yasui's name appears (copies of English originals)
1935-1944
31 3
FBI memo listing Japanese American incarcerees recommended for release (redacted and unredacted copies of English originals)
1945
31 4
FBI files on Overseas Japanese Central Society (Kaigai Doho Tyuokai) organization that honored Masuo Yasui (copies of English originals)
1942-1943
31 5
FBI General Intelligence Reports from Portland Field Division, partially redacted, including Masuo and Minoru Yasui (copies of English originals)
1942-1951
31 6
U.S. Attorney for Oregon Carl Donaugh correspondence and reports regarding Masuo and Minoru Yasui (copies of English originals)
1942-1943
31 7
Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui biographical outline and related family correspondence (in English)
1992-2002
31 8
Biographical presentation on Shidzuyo Yasui by Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura (in English)
1995
31 9
Shidzuyo Yasui annotated and partially translated correspondence (includes copies of Japanese and English originals)
1910-1945; 1991-2002
31 10
English translations of selected incarceration-era letters between Shidzuyo and Masuo Yasui (translations of Japanese originals)
1942-1945; 2004
31 11
Shidzuyo Yasui War Relocation Authority records (copies of English originals)
1942-1943
31 12
Family correspondence regarding Shidzuyo Yasui's late life medical care (in English)
2001
31 13
Homer Yasui and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura biographical notes and writings about Renichi Fujimoto (in English)
1991-2005
31 14
Annotated documents and correspondence of Renichi Fujimoto (includes copies and translations of Japanese and English originals)
1902-1962; 1991-2001
31 15
Homer Yasui Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for Renichi Fujimoto's War Relocation Authority files; incarceration timeline and biographical notes (in English)
1992
31 16
Renichi Fujimoto War Relocation Authority files (copies of English originals)
1942-1945
31 17
Matsuyo (Seno) Fujimoto biographical notes and miscellaneous documents (in English, some copies)
1931-1986
31 18
Matsuyo (Seno) Fujimoto War Relocation Authority files, annotated by Homer Yasui (copies of English originals)
1942-1945; 1992
Subseries 3.2: Research files and collected memories of Yasui Nisei
Subseries 3.2 is focused on the second generation's experiences. Biographical and autobiographical accounts, oral history and interview transcripts, legal test case files, trial records, War Relocation Authority and Department of Justice files, written statements, and collected anecdotes help to document the lives of Ray (Tsuyoshi, Chop) Yasui, Shu (Robert) Yasui, Homer Yasui, Miki (Yabe) Yasui, and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura. Featured prominently are materials on Minoru Yasui's wartime civil protest actions, copies of his letters to his youngest sister, Yuka, during his incarceration, and the family's work with the Japanese American Citizens League to mark his legacy after his death.
1933-2022
Box Folder
32 1
Transcription of Ray Yasui oral history (Homer Yasui 2004 revision of Maija Yasui 1991 original, in English)
2004
32 2
Transcription of Ray Yasui "Memories of the Japanese in Hood River," as told to Barbara Yasui (in English)
1971
32 3
Homer Yasui biographical notes on the return of Ray and Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui and their children to Hood River in 1945 (in English)
circa 1991
32 4
Correspondence about and research file for Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui (with copies of English originals)
1935-1950; 1997
32 5
Inventory of Minoru Yasui letters and documents from Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura collection sent to Homer Yasui (in English)
2014
32 6
Minoru Yasui letters to his parents from college, with letter from Holly Yasui to Homer Yasui (with copies of English originals)
1933-1935; 1993
32 7
News clippings on Minoru Yasui as University of Oregon honor student (copies of English originals)
circa 1937
32 8
Chronology of Minoru Yasui's challenge to curfew order (in English)
undated
32 9
Test case brief for United States v. Minoru Yasui, lightly annotated (copy of English original)
1942
32 10
Minoru Yasui refutation of national Japanese American Citizens League (J.A.C.L.) stance against test cases (copy of English original)
1942
32 11
Transcript of phone call between Colonels Boekel and Watson and Attorney General Donaugh regarding transport of Minoru Yasui from Minidoka camp, Idaho, to Portland, Oregon, for hearing (copy of English original)
1942
32 12
Trial record for United States v. Minoru Yasui, including Judge James A. Fee opinions (copies of English originals)
1942-1943
32 13
Minoru Yasui letter regarding application to Selective Service (copy of English original)
1943
32 14
Minoru Yasui petition to President Franklin D. Roosevelt for release of Japanese Americans after announcement of their eligibility for draft into military service (copy of English original)
1944
32 15
Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura annotations to Minoru Yasui's correspondence during incarceration (with copies of English originals)
1942-1943; 1998
32 16
Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura correspondence, clipping on Dr. Barbara Bellus Upp dissertation on Minoru Yasui and his poetry (in English, with copies of original poems)
1942-1943; 1997-2000
32 17
Homer Yasui correspondence with Oregon high school teacher and transcriptions of selected Minoru Yasui letters to Yuka Yasui from Multnomah County Jail (in English, with copies)
1942-1943; 1997
32 18
Minoru Yasui letters to Yuka Yasui during his incarceration (copies of English originals)
1942-1943
32 19
Minoru Yasui letters to his parents during his incarceration (copies of English originals)
1942
32 20
Minoru Yasui letter to Masuo Yasui prior to visiting him in Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp, annotated (copy of English original)
1943; undated
32 21
FBI documents on Minoru Yasui (copies of English originals, some heavily redacted or illegible)
1935-1941
32 22
Minoru Yasui correspondence with Ronald Shiozaki, including redress activism (copies of English originals)
1962-1985
32 23
Homer Yasui files on Minoru Yasui memorial, press releases, and related Japanese American Citizens League records (in English), 1 of 2
1986-1987
33 1
Homer Yasui files on Minoru Yasui memorial, Coram Nobis appeal, and related Japanese American Citizens League records (in English), 2 of 2
1983-2002
33 2
Holly Yasui files as Secretary-Treasurer of Minoru Yasui Legacy Fund (in English)
1986-1988
33 3
Japanese American Citizens League files on Minoru Yasui Memorial Fund and Coram Nobis case (in English)
1987-1988
33 4
Maija Yasui correspondence and files for Min Yasui Legacy Committee (in English)
2022
33 5
Robert Hayashi letter to Holly Yasui with copies of Minoru Yasui outgoing letters (including to Wall Street Journal) while incarcerated (with copies of English originals)
1942-1943; 2000
33 6
Flyers advertising Portland performance of Holly Yasui's play "Unvanquished," based on her father, Minoru Yasui (in English)
1992
33 7
Homer Yasui biographical notes on Roku Yasui's Army service (in English)
2003
33 8
Biographical and autobiographical notes on Shu Yasui (in English)
1997; 2005
33 9
Shu's stories - anecdotes and recollections compiled by Homer Yasui (in English)
2013
33 10
Homer Yasui recollections of childhood in Hood River, incarceration camp experiences, his family's influence, and his Navy service (in English)
2004-2011
33 11
Homer Yasui Remembers Camp - written autobiographical account (in English)
2001
33 12
Homer Yasui recollections of Tule Lake Relocation Center to Joan (Yasui) Emerson (in English)
2001
33 13
Homer Yasui War Relocation Authority files (copies of English originals)
1942
34 1
Homer Yasui, M.D. Life History Interview - transcriptions for oral history conducted by Dr. Gwenn Jensen for the Japanese American Medical Association (in English)
2002-2003
34 2
Homer Yasui interview - revised transcription of Margaret Barton Ross interview for Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center (in English)
2004
34 3
Homer Yasui recollections of visiting his father in Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp in 1944 and the La Fonda Hotel, with article about his return pilgrimage (in English)
2010-2011
34 4
Homer Yasui account of family visit to Nanukaichi Yasui Family cemetery in Okayama, Japan (in English)
2006
34 5
Family anecdotes about Homer Yasui, gathered for his 88th birthday celebration (in English)
2012
34 6
Miki (Yabe) Yasui autobiographical writings, including early marriage, incarceration experiences (in English)
2000-2005; undated
34 7
Timeline of Homer and Miki Yasui, 1953-2014 - Homer Yasui's dated notations of important and daily life events (in English)
2015
34 8
Miki (Yabe) Yasui obituary, with Homer's notes (in English)
2018-2021
34 9
Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura biographical information, recollections and related correspondence (in English)
1992-2005
34 10
Memorials, recollections and writings for or by Sansei (third generation) Yasui (in English)
2007-2016
Subseries 3.3: Research, census data, and writings on Japanese Americans in Hood River, Portland, and broader Oregon
Subseries 3.3 includes Homer Yasui's assembled information about the history of Japanese immigration to Hood River and Portland, Oregon, and the lives, families, and communities built there, as well as presentations and notes by other family historians on these specific places and on general Japanese American history topics. Highlights include census extracts and other data assembled by Homer Yasui, which tracks data points such as ship arrivals of Issei to Oregon cities, lists of Hood River Issei, heads of household, and Hood River Nisei births as recorded by Masuo Yasui.
1897-2014; 1973-2014
Box Folder
34 11
Homer Yasui letter to Yuki Sumoge regarding papers of James Tomeji Katayama of Hood River (with copies of English and Japanese originals)
1922-1925; 1998
34 12
Biographical notes and annotated documents for Takashi Katayama, Iuemon Yasui, and Moto Karasawa of Hood River (in English, with copies of Japanese originals)
1905-1936; 1992; 2022
34 13
Homer Yasui correspondence and annotations on photograph of Yoshinari family burial at Idlewild Cemetery in Hood River (in English, with copy of photograph)
circa 1906-1908; 2009
34 14
Homer Yasui correspondence on Hood River Japanese Community Hall, Methodist Church, Reverend Isaac Inouye, and Hood River children (in English)
2002-2007
34 15
Hisako Yoshihari memo regarding upkeep of The Dalles, Oregon, Japanese cemetery (in English)
1988
34 16
Homer Yasui annotations to Hood River historical calendar photographs (in English)
2005
34 17
Homer Yasui correspondence with and biographical note on Frank Yasui of Dee, Oregon (in English)
2008
34 18
Obituary and related correspondence for George (Ichiro) Azumano of Portland (in English)
2013
34 19
Homer Yasui census extracts for Hood River area Nikkei in 1928 (in English)
1992
34 20
Homer Yasui list of Hood River Issei, with source documents from Yasui manuscript collections for their identification (in English)
1993
34 21
Homer Yasui compilation of Issei heads of household in Hood River circa 1942 (in English)
2008
34 22
Hood River Nisei births as recorded by Masuo Yasui form 1913-1934; data gathered and annotated by Homer Yasui (in English)
1991
34 23
Research file on World War I draft registrations of Hood River County Japanese men (in English)
2002
34 24
Anti-Japanese pamphlet/postcard with poem, published in Hood River (in English)
1920
34 25
"Japanese Americans in Hood River: 95 Years in the Valley," a memoir by Homer Yasui (in English)
1993
34 26
Historical notes and bibliography for Japanese Americans in Hood River, including Maija Yasui notes and presentation text (in English)
1992
34 27
Maija Yasui historical notes on Mid-Columbia (formerly Hood River) Chapter of Japanese American Citizens League (in English)
1992
34 28
The Japanese Experience in Hood River (news article, in English)
2009
34 29
Portland ship arrival lists for Japanese immigrants by arrival date and ship name (copies of English originals)
1897-1904
35 1
Homer Yasui correspondence and related information on Japanese buried in Portland cemeteries (in English)
1993; undated
35 2
Annotated documents and photographs of Japanese Methodist Church in Portland (copies of English originals)
1905-1960; 2000; 2015
35 3
Historical notes on 75 years of judo in Portland (in English)
circa 2000
35 4
City of Portland, Oregon Resolution No. 22113 to remove and incarcerate all persons of Japanese descent (copy of English original)
1942
35 5
Elizabeth McLagan testimony to Portland City Council and Regional Consortium on the effects of exclusion laws (in English)
1996
35 6
Annotated book chapter on ethnic and gender discrimination in Portland from 1844-1980 (in English)
circa 2000
35 7
Timeline and biography for Tama Nitobe and Miyo Iawakoshi, first Japanese immigrants to Oregon (in English)
1988-1999
35 8
Homer Yasui correspondence with and writings about Robert Takaki, son of Tama Nitobe Takaki (in English)
1973-1992
35 9
Research file on Ranald MacDonald, born in Oregon, who became first native English speaker to teach English in Japan (in English)
1944; 1986-1994
35 10
Homer Yasui census extracts of Japanese Issei who arrived in Oregon prior to 1900, by name and city (in English)
1992
35 11
Homer Yasui census extracts for Oregon Nikkei by county, 1900-1990 (in English)
1992
35 12
Census: Japanese Population in Oregon 1928 as compiled by Oregon Bureau of Labor (copy of English original)
1928
35 13
Issei Pioneers in Oregon - two historical essays by Homer Yasui for Issei Appreciation Committee (in English)
1973
35 14
Homer Yasui correspondence with Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center regarding history of Japanese Association of Oregon (Nihonjin Kai) (in English)
2007
35 15
Miki (Yabe) Yasui historical notes on Japanese language schools in Oregon, with annotated document and photo (with copies of English originals)
1919; 1937; 1999
35 16
"The History of the Japanese People in Oregon," a thesis by Marjorie R. Stearns, University of Oregon (in English)
1937
35 17
Eiichiro Azuma articles: "History of the Japanese in Oregon" and "Japanese Farmers in California" (in English)
circa 1994
35 18
Research file on first documented Japanese visitors to America, three sailors wrecked at Cape Flattery in 1832 (in English)
circa 1989
35 19
Japanese American chronology 1778-1941, by Eric Saul for Go for Broke! Exhibit (in English)
2014
35 20
"The Anti-Japanese Agitation" - pro-citizenship pamphlet by Reverend U. G. Murphy of the Seattle Ministerial Union (copy of English original)
1920
35 21
Homer Yasui correspondence regarding Japanese dual citizenship issues in the 1920s (in English)
2011
35 22
"Naturalization and the Issei" - historical essay by Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in English)
1993
35 23
Miki (Yabe) Yasui historical essay on Japanese picture brides (in English)
1999
Subseries 3.4: Research and writings on forced removal, incarceration camps, redress, and memory
Subseries 3.4 includes copies of wartime documents such as government notices and preparation instructions for incarceration, loyalty questionnaires, "evacuation" data, and lists of people held at the particular incarceration camps where the U.S. government sent most Japanese Americans from Oregon, as well as a few editorial pieces of the time, arguing both for and against forced removal. The research of Homer Yasui and others in this subseries offers insight on the incarceration and wartime experiences of individuals, as well as the Oregon Nikkei experience overall.
1942-2012
Box Folder
35 24
Loyalty pledge to the United States signed by Hood River Issei, with annotations and related correspondence by Homer Yasui (with copies of 1942 English originals)
1942; 2003-2008
35 25
The Columbian article on Civilian Public Servicemen protests against planned discharge and incarceration of Serviceman George K. Yamada of Cascade Locks, Oregon (copy of English original)
1942
35 26
Hood River American Legion Post No. 22 rationale for removing names of Japanese American veterans from Honor Roll, as published in Hood River News (copy of English original)
1945
35 27
Anti-Japanese resettlement activity in Hood River Valley, and Hood River News list of signatures for petitions against Japanese Americans returning to Hood River (copies of English originals)
1945
35 28
War Relocation Authority letter to Japanese American resettler of Hood River Valley (copy of English original)
1946
35 29
Mid-Columbia Chapter of J.A.C.L (Japanese American Citizens League) information and instructions on preparing for evacuation, Bulletins I, III, and VI, including pre-incarceration surveys, with historical note by Homer Yasui (copy of English originals)
1942
24 7
Excerpts from Portland City Council meeting minutes, January 1942 to February 1942, regarding Japanese Americans (copies of English originals)
1942 January-February
35 30
Wartime Civil Control Administration (WCCA) exclusion order and evacuation instructions to Seattle- and Portland-area Japanese (copy of English original)
1942
35 31
WCCA List of Evacuees at the Portland Assembly Center, from Miki (Yabe) Yasui's files (copy of English original)
1942
35 32
Homer Yasui biographical notes on eleven Japanese Americans from Portland area held at Fort Missoula Department of Justice Internment Camp (in English)
1996
35 33
Notes and copies of artifacts from Carolyn Cook presentation on Tarao Takahashi, incarcerated at Fort Missoula (in English)
1996
35 34
Homer Yasui compiled list of Oregon Issei incarcerated at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (in English)
1999
35 35
Homer Yasui correspondence, research file, notes, and annotated photographs regarding Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (with copies of photographs)
1943-1944; 2001
35 36
Homer Yasui biographical notes and correspondence on Oregon Nikkei MISLS Veterans in Pacific theater during World War II (in English)
1991
36 1
Oregon Journal clippings on forced removal policy and curfew (copies of English originals)
1942
36 2
Homer Yasui compiled and annotated list of incarcerees (referred to as evacuees) at Portland Assembly Center from May-September 1942 (in English)
1992
36 3
Exclusion and Evacuation Data for December 1942 listed by date and city, Western Defense Command and Fourth Army WCCA Statistical Division (copy of English original)
1942
36 4
Homer Yasui compiled and annotated lists of Oregon and Washington (Portand and Hood River areas) Nikkei residents incarcerated at Tule Lake Relocation Center, May 1942-October 1943 (in English)
1993
36 5
Martha Nakagawa profile of Tetsujiro Nakamura and the No-No Renunciants stopping deportations at Tule Lake Relocation Center (in English)
2004
36 6
Gus Tanaka letter to Homer Yasui regarding a No-No boy formerly incarcerated at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp (in English)
2009
36 7
Research file on loyalty questionnaires and leave clearance, with Homer Yasui's annotations and copies of forms WRA 126 REV, DSS Form 305, DSS Form 304A and 304A Revised (with copies of English originals)
1942-1943; 2001
36 8
Homer Yasui historical notes about Nikkei killed in camp (in English)
2012
36 9
Minidoka Interlude, a statement on behalf of Minidoka Relocation Center incarcerees by Tom Takeuchi (copy of English original)
circa 1943-1944
36 10
Tanka poems from World War II, written by Shizue Iwatsuki, translated with biographical notes by Stephen Kohl (with copies of Japanese and English originals)
circa 1940s; circa 1980s; 1999
36 11
Map of United States Assembly Centers, Relocation Centers, Justice Department Internment Camps, and Citizen Isolation Camps (undated copy of book page in English)
undated
23 11
"The Japanese in Hawaii" (reprint of English article)
1942
36 12
List of U.S. Supreme Court Justices in 1994, annotated for dissent on Korematsu case (in English)
undated
36 13
"History of Tule Lake Relocation Center and Japanese American Resistance," by Barbara Takei (in English)
2005
36 14
Annotated Selective Service System report on policies affecting Japanese Americans, with Homer Yasui letter (with copies of English originals)
1953; 1990-1992
36 15
Research file on "Tokyo Rose" Iva Toguri case (in English)
1975; undated
36 16
Copy of President Gerald Ford Proclamation No. 2714 terminating Executive Order 9066 (copy of English original)
1976
36 17
Research file on incarceration experiences of Nikkei in the United States and Canada (in English)
1981-2001
36 18
Homer Yasui historical notes on Greenwood, British Columbia incarceration camp (in English)
1993
36 19
Evacuation claims, with Japanese American Citizens League reports and copies of forms and related U.S. laws (in English, with copies)
1942-1956; 1973
36 20
J.A.C.L. (Japanese American Citizens League) Redress Committee materials, including pamphlets, position statements, newsletters, press releases (in English)
1979-1992
36 21
Redress Monitor - J.A.C.L. (Japanese American Citizens League) Legislative Education Committee newsletter (in English)
1988-1990
36 22
Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians press releases, hearings, testimonies to, and reports (in English)
1980-1982
36 23
Civil Liberties Act of 1988 and Office of Redress Administration materials (in English, some copies)
1987-1990
37 1
Go For Broke Nisei Veterans Association endorsement statements for H.R. 442 (Civil Liberties Act of 1988) and S. 1009 for redress, (in English)
1987
37 2
Articles and editorials about redress (in English, some copies)
1978-1988
37 3
"The Return of a People: Japanese Americans in Oregon after World War II," a thesis by Stefan Tanaka, with critique by Homer Yasui (in English)
1975
37 4
"The Search for Spies: American Counterintelligence and the Japanese American Community from 1931-1942," article by Bob Kumamoto (in English)
1979
37 5
Excerpts of Portland Public Schools curriculum materials regarding treatment of Japanese American incarceration (in English)
1980
37 6
Homer Yasui response to Page Smith's "Democracy on Trial" (in English)
1995
37 7
"Japanese Internees and the Kooskia Internment Camp, Idaho, 1943-1945," report by Dr. Priscilla Wegars (in English)
1998
37 8
Japanese Americans Disunited, report on creation of National Japanese American Memorial and protest against actions of National Park Service and Commission of Fine Arts, by Sogi and Kuyama (in English)
2000
37 9
"The Japanese Evacuation," historical essay by Toshio Raul Sidney-Ando (in English)
2001
37 10
"Words Can Lie or Clarify: Terminology of the WWII Incarceration of Japanese Americans," series of essays with a glossary of terms, by Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga (in English)
2010

Series 4:  Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui community leadership, advocacy work, and pilgrimages to incarceration camp sites, circa 1942-2022,   (bulk 1967-2022) Return to Top

Series 4 documents advocacy work by Homer Yasui and his wife, Miki (Yabe) Yasui, from the late 1970s to the late 2010s. Topics include their speaking engagements, projects, and events in support of Japanese American history and remembrance, the Yasui family's efforts for redress and history education, and their leadership and involvement with various organizations, including the Japanese American Museum of Oregon, which they helped to found in 1993 as the Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
37 11
Miki (Yabe) Yasui Folkfest of Portland bylaws, planning, program materials and award for leadership (in English)
1975-1983
37 12
Portland Nikkei Organizations - Miki (Yabe) Yasui contact list (in English)
1990
37 13
Portland Chapter of Japanese American Citizens League (J.A.C.L.) programs, newsletters, meeting minutes, agendas, reports (in English)
1970-1971
37 14
Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. rosters of members, officers, and board members (in English)
1971-1990
37 15
Miki (Yabe) Yasui letter as co-president of Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. (in English)
1981
37 16
Homer Yasui correspondence on behalf of Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. and related materials for "Our Family Had a Number" event (in English)
1992
37 17
Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. Directory (in English)
1967
37 18
Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. and Japanese Community Directory for Greater Portland Area, Salem, Mid-Columbia, and Vancouver, Washington (in English)
1990; 1995
37 19
Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. Nikkei Community Directory for Greater Portland Area, Salem, Mid-Columbia, and Vancouver, Washington (in English)
2001
37 20
Portland Chapter of J.A.C.L. monthly newsletter (in English)
2010 February
38 1
Spokane Chapter of J.A.C.L. directory (in English)
1990-1991
38 2
Materials from other J.A.C.L. chapters (in English)
1975-2002
38 3
Bylaws of the Pacific Northwest District Council (PNWDC) of the National Japanese American Citizens League (J.A.C.L.) (in English)
1971
38 4
Pacific Northwest District Council of the National J.A.C.L. constitutional amendments (in English)
1973
38 5
Pacific Northwest District Council rosters of local J.A.C.L. chapter leadership (in English)
1974-1993
38 6
Pacific Northwest District Council of the National J.A.C.L. memos and meeting minutes (in English)
1975
38 7
Pacific Northwest District Council of the National J.A.C.L. memos, meeting minutes and agendas (in English)
1976
38 8
Pacific Northwest District Council of the National J.A.C.L. memos, meeting minutes and agendas (in English)
1977
38 9
National J.A.C.L. 25th Biennial Anniversary Convention in Salt Lake City, Utah, souvenir booklet (in English)
1978
38 10
National J.A.C.L. 30th Biennial Convention in Seattle, Washington, convention book (in English)
1988
38 11
National J.A.C.L. Legislative Education Committee board roster (in English)
1988
38 12
Homer Yasui correspondence with Denny Yasuhara regarding the latter's campaign for president of National Japanese American Citizens League and anti-Asian incident in Spokane, Washington (in English)
1994
38 13
Outline and essay for Issei Pioneers in Oregon, lecture given July 1973, probably by Homer Yasui (in English)
1973
38 14
Schedule, outline, and notes for classroom history talks on forced removal, Nikkei experience, and redress, given by Miki and Homer Yasui at Portland area middle and high schools (in English)
1975-1985
38 15
Classroom worksheets for history talks given by Miki and Homer Yasui (in English)
circa 1979-1985
38 16
Notes for history talk on the Japanese American experience given by Homer Yasui and Peggy Nagae at Portland State University (in English)
1980
38 17
Notes and outline on Nikkei history in Portland and chronology of forced removal to Portland Assembly Center, for lecture by Homer Yasui (in English)
1981; undated
38 18
Homer Yasui outline and notes for history lecture on forced removal (in English)
2012
38 19
Notes, outline, and bibliography for unspecified history lectures on forced removal and other topics, likely by Homer Yasui (in English)
1983-1995; undated
38 20
Day of Remembrance event flyers, schedules, press releases, Portland and other locations (in English)
1979; 1992; 2002
38 21
Miscellaneous advocacy event flyers, including redress, veterans issues (in English)
1986-1988; 2022
38 22
Greater Portland Reunion materials (in English)
1990; 1995
38 23
"Strength and Diversity: Japanese American Women 1885-1990," exhibit materials and classroom study guide (in English)
1990
38 24
Event materials for exhibit about Portland Assembly Center titled "Our Family Had a Number"; includes numbers for Yasui and Yabe families (in English)
1992
38 25
Program, news clippings and correspondence regarding Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui's talks in Fort Missoula, Montana (in English)
1996
38 26
Tule Lake incarceration camp pilgrimage program materials and ephemera (in English)
2002
38 27
Correspondence, historical notes, and program materials for Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp historical marker dedication (in English)
2001-2002
38 28
Agenda for Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui trip to Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp site to be interviewed, with La Fonda Hotel ephemera (in English)
2011
39 1
Heart Mountain Sentinel - reprints of newsletters originally published at Heart Mountain Relocation Center during World War II, compiled by Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in Japanese)
circa 1942-1945
39 2
Miki (Yabe) Yasui research on preservation and historical representation of Heart Mountain Relocation Center site (in English)
1988-2000
39 3
Heart Mountain newsletters compiled by Miki (Yabe) Yasui (in Japanese, unconfirmed content)
1992
39 4
Heart Mountain Relocation Center exhibit text and captions (labeled in English, original computer files on nine 3.5-in floppy disks)
Due to technical limitations, files on floppy disks are not available for access by researchers.
circa 2000
39 5
Miki (Yabe) Yasui Heart Mountain incarceree reunion materials (in English)
1982; 1994
39 6
Miki (Yabe) Yasui Heart Mountain incarceree reunion materials (in English)
2007
39 7
Miki (Yabe) Yasui remembrances of working at Seabrook Farms, New Jersey, and 50th reunion materials (in English)
1994-2014
39 8
Canadian Nikkei reunion and pilgimage program materials and ephemera (in English)
2002
39 9
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui travel journal for Northwest United States and British Columbia, Canada pilgrimage (in English)
2002
39 10
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui Northwest United States and British Columbia, Canada pilgrimage travelogue transcription by Homer Yasui (in English)
2002
39 11
Historical account of Japanese Canadian exiles, for American Nisei on Canadian Internment Camp Tour (in English)
circa 2000-2002
39 12
Convention of Pan-American Nikkei (CoPaNi) XIII, Vancouver, British Columbia, program materials and Homer Yasui notes (in English with some Japanese)
2005
39 13
Convention of Pan-American Nikkei (CoPaNi) XIV, Sao Paolo, Brazil, program materials, itinerary, and historical notes (in English, with some Japanese and Portugese)
2007
39 14
History of Pan-American Nikkei Association (CoPaNi) on its 30th anniversary (in English)
2011

Series 5:  Photographs, 1901-2022Return to Top

1.8 cubic feet, (4 legal document cases)
Photographs in this series are divided topically into four subseries: 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 Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui photographs.

Series 5 features family photographs and albums, focusing mainly on Homer and Miki Yasui's advocacy-related travel in the latter 20th century, but also providing glimpses of the Issei generation, their activities and young family life, stores and businesses, and community in Hood River.

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 5.1: Early Yasui family photographs
Subseries 5.1 includes a mix of original photographs and reproductions of some of the earliest known images for this family. Mostly taken in Hood River during the first half of the 20th century, these photographs include a small number of images depicting Masuo Yasui, Shidzuyo (Miyake) Yasui, and Renichi Fujimoto, as well as individual and group photographs of their children; their businesses, such as stores and orchards; and gatherings on their land. A handful of photographs depict Masuo Yasui during his incarceration and afterward.
1907-1957
Box Folder
40 1
Yasui Issei and family group photographs (approximately 15 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1907-1950s
23 6
Group portraits of school or class in Japan, including Shidzuyo Miyake (2 black and white prints)
prior to 1912
40 2
Yasui Nisei photographs (15 black and white prints, some reproductions)
circa 1913-1925
40 3
Yasui Bros. stores (approximately 9 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1908-1941
40 4
Views of Mosier apple orchards, Yasui Mosier Ranch and strawberry farm (4 black and white prints)
1910-1935
40 5
Yasui family trip to Japan (5 black and white prints)
1926
40 6
Gatherings for Undokai (Japanese sports or field day) at Yasui Mosier Ranch (6 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1935
40 7
Young Peoples Christian Conference (YPCC) Northwest region meetings, some Yasui Nisei pictured (5 black and white prints, some reproductions)
circa 1926-1936
40 8
Masuo Yasui receiving the Silver Loving Cup Award at Hood River Japanese Community Hall and later photos of his Pawlonia Cup
1935-1939
40 9
Incarcerees at Santa Fe Department of Justice Internment Camp, New Mexico, including Masuo Yasui (5 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1943-1944
40 10
Tule Lake Relocation Center Christian Conference (1 black and white print)
1943
40 11
Norakuro Dance Band, Minidoka Relocation Center (2 black and white prints)
1943
40 12
Hood River American Legion Honor Roll plaque from which names of Nisei soldiers were removed (2 black and white prints, reproductions)
1944-1946
40 13
Americanization School classes taught by Masuo Yasui in Portland (4 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1953
40 14
Yasui family portrait at Renichi and Matsuyo (Seno) Fujimoto's 50th wedding anniversary (1 black and white print)
1954
40 15
Yasui family portrait at Willow Flat Ranch for Masuo Yasui's funeral (1 black and white print)
1957
Subseries 5.2: Photographs of Japanese American people and places in Hood River and Portland
Subseries 5.2 consists largely of group portraits of community gatherings, class photos, and images depicting events, activities and sports, primarily in Hood River and Portland. These photographs date to the first half of the 20th century.
circa 1901-1964
Box Folder
40 16
Views of of Hood River Valley (2 black and white prints)
1924; 1934
40 17
Hood River Japanese American community gatherings (13 black and white prints, some reproductions)
circa 1908-1953
23 7
Group portrait of Japanese American men at funeral gathering in Hood River, possibly for death of Japan's emperor (1 black and white print)
circa 1912
23 8
Group portrait of Hood River Women's Society gathering at a cemetery (1 black and white print)
1927
23 9
Funeral gathering for Chogoro Shimamoto, Evergreen Cemetery (1 black and white print)
1937
40 18
Japanese Americans in Hood River parade or chautauqua (3 mounted black and white prints)
circa 1914-1915
40 19
Mosier Japanese language school class photo (1 black and white print, reproduction)
circa 1934
40 20
Class photos for Mosier High School in Hood River Valley (5 black and white prints, reproductions)
1941-1942
40 21
Japanese American baseball teams in Portland, Hood River, and nearby towns (7 black and white prints, some reproductions)
circa 1919-1941
40 22
Portland judo and kendo clubs, dojos, and tournaments (7 black and white prints)
circa 1935-1952; undated
40 23
Oregon Japanese American wrestlers and sumo tournament (4 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1930; 1939
40 24
Portland Japanese American organizations and individuals (25 black and white prints, some reproductions)
circa 1920-1964
40 25
Class photos of Portland Japanese language school (7 black and white prints, mostly reproductions)
circa 1919-1930
40 26
Portland Buddhist churches and temple buildings (11 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1905-1959
40 27
Portland Rose Festival Nikkei community float and queen's court (2 black and white prints, some reproductions)
1927; undated
40 28
Iwakoshi-Takaki family photographs (earliest family in Oregon; 11 black and white prints, some reproductions)
circa 1901-1912
Subseries 5.3: Later Yasui family photographs
Photographs in Subseries 5.3 date from mid-century well into the 21st century. They depict the Yasui Nisei in their later adult lives; their children and grandchildren; events such as family reunions and trips to Japan; and activities such as matsutake mushroom hunts.
1950-2022
Box Folder
41 1
Minoru Yasui and family, memorial honors (12 black and white and color prints, some reproductions)
1950-2015
41 2
Japanese American Citizens League award to Minoru Yasui (8 color prints)
circa 1984
41 3
Oregon Minoru Yasui Day proclamation signing by Governor Neil Goldschmidt, Salem, Oregon (3 color prints)
1990 March 28
41 4
Ray Yasui and Mikie (Kageyama) Yasui 50th wedding anniversary photos (3 color prints)
1989
41 5
Michi Yasui at University of Oregon special graduation (5 color prints)
1986
41 6
Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura at Minoru Yasui Plaza in Denver, Colorado (2 color prints)
1999
41 7
Homer Yasui (6 black and white and color prints)
1958-2022
41 8
Homer Yasui U.S. Navy photographs (4 black and white and color prints)
1960-1996
23
Panoramic group portrait of Navy field training class including Homer Yasui (1 black and white print, rolled)
1963
Folder
41 9
Miki (Yabe) Yasui dipnetting in Sandy River, Oregon (1 color print)
circa 1990s
41 10
Miscellaneous group photos of Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui and extended family (5 color prints)
1979-1983; 2015
41 11
Barbara Yasui, Bob Hayman and children on family trip with Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (6 color prints)
1992
41 12
Shu and Phyllis Yasui's grandchildren (7 color prints)
1996
41 13
Yasui family visit to Tsubaki Shrine in Granite Falls, Washington (10 color prints)
2002
41 14
Yasui family group portraits in United States and Japan (3 color prints)
2005
41 15
Yasui family trip to Japan (approximately 30 color prints, featuring Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui, and Yuka (Yasui) Fujikura); includes Yasui family cemetery in Nanukaichi and Yasui exhibit at Japanese Overseas Migration Museum in Yokohama)
2006
41 16
Homer and Miki (Yabe) Yasui trip to Japan to visit Yabe family (5 color prints, featuring Meris Yasui and family)
2006
41 17
Camp bench made by Renichi Fujimoto while at Minidoka Relocation Center circa 1944 (1 color print)
1999
41 18
Yasui family portrait at Shu Yasui's funeral in Hood River Valley (1 color print)
2014
41 19
Funeral gathering for Sakamoto Shigeko (6 color photographs; possible Japanese relative, unconfirmed)
1999
41 20
Family matsutake mushroom hunts (17 color prints featuring Meris, Homer, and Barbara Yasui)
1976-2013
41 21
Yasui family reunion at Gearhart, Oregon (32 color prints with matching negatives)
1977
41 22
Yasui Nisei together as adults, including Minoru, Shu, Ray, Homer, and Yuka (7 color prints)
1986-2008
41 23
Sansei and later photos, including grandchildren of Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (8 color prints)
1979-1986
41 24
Kajito and Kao family visit to Mosier, Oregon (5 color reproductions)
circa 2010
41 25
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - itinerary and related correspondence
1986
24 8
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - hand-illustrated color itinerary for Cedar Lane Tour
1986
41 26
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Tokyo (9 color prints)
1986
41 27
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Japan Alps (8 color prints)
1986
41 28
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Takayama (7 color prints)
1986
41 29
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Shirakawa Village (7 color prints)
1986
41 30
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Eiheiji Temple (4 color postcards)
1986
41 31
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Amano Hashidate (7 color prints and postcards)
1986
41 32
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - group and party photographs (10 color prints)
1986
41 33
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Kyoto (13 color prints)
1986
41 34
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Jyoko relatives (10 color prints)
1986
41 35
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Yasui relatives in Japan (10 color prints)
1986
41 36
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Okayama, including Yasui family cemetery (8 color prints)
1986
41 37
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Iwakuni (4 color prints)
1986
41 38
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Miyajima (3 color prints)
1986
41 39
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Nagasaki and Hiroshima (13 color prints)
1986
41 40
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Shimonoseki (4 color prints)
1986
41 41
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Kagoshima (8 color prints)
1986
41 42
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Okinawa (5 color prints)
1986
41 43
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - miscellaneous sights (7 color prints)
1986
41 44
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Yabe relatives (6 color prints)
1986
41 45
Yasui Nisei Japan tour album - Tokyo again upon return (7 color prints)
1986
Subseries 5.4: Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui photographs
Subseries 5.4 includes a small quantity of photographs from Homer and Miki Yasui's early family life together and documents their advocacy work through images of conferences and events they led or attended from the 1970s-2000s, especially Japanese American Citizens League and Day of Remembrance events. Also included are a substantial quantity of images from their speaking engagements and memorial pilgrimages to incarceration sites in the Western U.S. and Canada.
1940-2022
Box Folder
42 1
Homer Yasui and Miyuki (Miki) Yabe wedding album photographs (16 black and white prints)
1950
42 2
Humorous scrapbook about motherhood and housekeeping (including 17 black and white prints, plus ephemera)
circa 1950s
42 3
Humorous scrapbook about motherhood and housekeeping (preservation copy of original)
circa 1950s
42 4
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui family trip to Japan with their daughters (10 black and white prints)
1955
42 5
Barbara Yasui, Bob Hayman, and Miki (Yabe) Yasui visit to Okayama (1 color print)
1979
42 6
Early J.A.C.L. (Japanese American Citizens League) conventions and events (6 black and white prints, reproductions)
1940-1955
42 7
J.A.C.L. conventions and events (14 color slides; 1 black and white print; 31 color prints)
1974-1977
42 8
J.A.C.L. conventions and events, including Folkfest booth (39 color prints)
1980
42 9
Photographs of J.A.C.L. conventions and events (1 black and white, 15 color prints)
1981-1985
42 10
J.A.C.L. conventions and events (17 color prints)
1991-2009
42 11
Convention of Pan American Nikkei (COPANI), Mexico City, featuring Miki (Yabe) Yasui (27 color prints)
1981
42 12
COPANI, Vancouver, British Columbia, featuring Miki and Homer Yasui (25 color prints)
2005
42 13
COPANI, Sao Paulo, Brazil, featuring Miki (Yabe) Yasui (1 color print)
2007
42 14
Issei Appreciation Committee dinner, Portland (7 color prints)
1973
42 15
Asian/Pacific American Heritage (APAH) celebration (33 color prints)
1976; 1980
42 16
First Day of Remembrance event at Portland Livestock Exposition Center (1 black and white and 3 color prints)
1979
42 17
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui visit to "Go For Broke" exhibit at San Francisco Presidio Army Museum (5 color prints)
1981
42 18
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui visiting Portland Japanese American Plaza memorial site (15 color prints)
1990; 1999
42 19
Miki (Yabe) Yasui at Portland fundraiser for Robert Matsui, U.S. Representative of California (6 color prints)
1991 December
42 20
Miscellaneous events and awards with Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui (16 color prints)
1990-2022
42 21
Issei Pioneers of Oregon exhibit at Oregon Historical Society (4 color prints)
1993
42 22
Miscellaneous photographs from Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui visits to Western U.S. memorial sites (11 color prints)
1993; 2010-2011
42 23
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui tour of Ranald MacDonald memorial sites in Washington state (11 color prints)
1994
42 24
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimage to Heart Mountain, Wyoming, incarceration camp site (25 color prints)
1994
43 1
Fort Missoula speaking engagement in Montana (approximately 40 color prints, ephemera, schedule)
1996
43 2
Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center building (later the Japanese American Museum of Oregon (3 color prints)
1997
43 3
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimages to Heart Mountain, Wyoming, incarceration camp site (12 color prints)
1997; 1999
43 4
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimage to Tule Lake incarceration camp site (43 color prints)
2002
43 5
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimage to Canadian Nikkei Internment Memorial Centre site in New Denver, British Columbia (14 color prints)
2002
43 6
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimage to Japanese-Canadian memorial sites including Kaslo and New Denver, British Columbia (17 color prints)
2002
43 7
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimage to Minidoka, Idaho, incarceration camp site (10 color prints)
2003
43 8
Events for veterans of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a Nisei unit of the U.S. Army during World War II (2 color prints)
2009-2010
43 9
Homer Yasui and Miki (Yabe) Yasui pilgrimages to Heart Mountain, Wyoming incarceration camp site (18 color prints and negatives)
2012; 2014
43 10
Yakima Valley Nikkei Reunion (3 color prints)
2013
43 11
Group portrait from Nisei Appreciation luncheon, Portland (1 color print including Miki and Homer Yasui)
2015
43 12
Western U.S. Tour Album - Trip Itinerary
1995
43 13
Western U.S. Tour Album - Portland, Pendleton, Flagstaff Hill (ephemera)
1995
43 14
Western U.S. Tour Album - Bend, Oregon and Malad Gorge, Idaho (6 color prints)
1995
43 15
Western U.S. Tour Album - Snake River and Grand Tetons National Park (3 color prints)
1995
43 16
Western U.S. Tour Album - Yellowstone National Park (14 color prints)
1995
43 17
Western U.S. Tour Album - Heart Mountain, Wyoming Symposia (14 color prints)
1995
43 18
Western U.S. Tour Album - Sheridan Devil's Tour and Deadwood, South Dakota (12 color prints, ephemera)
1995
43 19
Western U.S. Tour Album - Badlands, Mount Rushmore, and Black Hills (11 color prints, ephemera)
1995
43 20
Western U.S. Tour Album - Chimney Rock and Scotts Bluff (5 color prints)
1995
43 21
Western U.S. Tour Album - Denver Minoru Yasui Memorial (2 color prints)
1995
43 22
Western U.S. Tour Album - Postcards from the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona
1995
43 23
Western U.S. Tour Album - Taos, New Mexico (approximately 20 color prints, ephemera)
1995
43 24
Western U.S. Tour Album - Albuquerque, New Mexico (6 color prints, postcards)
1995
43 25
Western U.S. Tour Album - Canyon de Chelly in Second Mesa, Arizona (10 color prints, postcards)
1995
43 26
Western U.S. Tour Album - Grand Canyon (9 color prints)
1995
43 27
Western U.S. Tour Album - Lunch with Fumi and Kenji in Phoenix, Arizona (4 color prints)
1995
43 28
Western U.S. Tour Album - Imperial Valley, California (8 color prints)
1995
43 29
Western U.S. Tour Album - Japanese American Gallery, Pioneers Park Museum, Imperial, California (3 color prints, ephemera)
1995
43 30
Western U.S. Tour Album - Japanese American National Museum, Los Angeles, California (10 color prints)
1995
43 31
Western U.S. Tour Album - Visiting with friends (6 color prints)
1995

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • General stores--Oregon--Hood River
  • Hood River (Or.)
  • Japanese American families--Oregon--Hood River
  • Japanese Americans--Civil rights--History--20th century
  • Japanese Americans--Correspondence
  • Japanese Americans--Forced removal and internment, 1942-1945
  • Japanese Americans--Oregon--History
  • Japanese Americans--Oregon--Hood River Valley
  • Japanese Americans--Oregon--Portland
  • Race discrimination--Oregon--Hood River

Personal Names

  • Yasui, Homer, 1924-2023
  • Yasui, Masuo

Corporate Names

  • Japanese American Citizens' League. Portland Chapter
  • Yasui Bros. Co. (Hood River, Or.)

Family Names

  • Yasui family
  • Yasui family--Correspondence
  • Yasui family--Photographs

Geographical Names

  • United States--Emigration and Immigration

Form or Genre Terms

  • correspondence
  • histories (literary genre)
  • photographs
  • research (documents)

Other Creators

  • Personal Names
    • Yasui, Homer, 1924-2023 (compiler)
    • Yasui, Masuo (creator)
    • Yasui, Miki, 1926-2018 (compiler)
    Corporate Names
    • Yasui Bros. Co. (Hood River, Or.) (creator)