Certificate of Citizenship - Hawaiian Islands
1 2017-02-14T17:58:46-08:00 Steve Kutay 2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3 14072 2 plain 2017-02-14T18:02:10-08:00 Steve Kutay 2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3This page is referenced by:
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Introduction
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This exhibit of the CSU Japanese American Digitization Project (CSUJAD) presents a documentary narrative of Japanese nationals in America (Issei) and their American-born children (Nisei) before, during, and after World War II. The textual and photographic materials are selected from digitized documents residing in the CSUJAD Database (CSU Dominguez Hills) and the Japanese American Archival Collection ImageBase (Sacramento State). Through the generous support of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Park Service, Japanese American archives from fifteen CSU and UC campuses will continue to be added to the CSUJAD Database through 2018. Through photographs, correspondence, news digests, maps and more,u this exhibit offers researchers, teachers, and students a glimpse into the unjust incarceration of approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans from 1942-1945.
Navigating the exhibit: Users may follow a linear path through the exhibit by following links provided at the bottom of each page. Alternatively, users can hover over the upper leftmost icon to produce the navigable menu, "Table of Contents". Hovering over the compass icon will produce links to navigable and interactive visualizations such as "Contents" and "Connections".
Lesson plans: This exhibit supports student learning by providing lessons for each of the main sections (chapters), and is intended to facilitate critical analysis of this important time in United States history.
Posters: As part of the CSUJAD team's commitment, posters regarding the incarceration of Japanese Americans were created and distributed to project partner to display in local exhibit spaces. These posters are available to all at no cost for download to be used in relevant events as needed.CSUJAD Partners
- Cal Poly Special Collections and Archives (SLO)
- CSU Bakersfield Special Collections (CSUB)
- CSU Channel Islands University Archives (CSUCI)
- CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Archives and Special Collections (CSUDH)
- CSU East Bay Archives and Special Collections (CSUEB)
- CSU Fullerton University Archives and Special Collections (CSUFu)
- CSUFullerton Center for Oral and Public History (CSUFu)
- CSU Long Beach Special Collections and University Archives (CSULB)
- CSU Northridge Special Collections and Archives (CSUN)
- CSU San Bernardino Special Collections (CSUSB)
- Fresno State Special Collections Research Center (CSUFr)
- Sacramento State Department of Special Collections and University Archives (SAC)
- San Diego State University Special Collections and University Archives (SDSU)
- San Francisco State University Special Collections and Archives (SFSU)
- San Jose State University Special Collections and Archives (SJS)
- Sonoma State University Special Collections (SSU)
- University California Santa Barbara Special Research Collections (UCSB)
CSUJAD Sponsors
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About CSUJAD Project
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Description of the CSUJAD Project and call for historical resource donations
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The California State University System has an enrollment close to 437,000 students at 23 university campuses throughout the state of California. It is the largest university system in the United States. All of these campuses are defined by their community and take an abiding interest in the people and history of those communities. Throughout the last 40 years CSU Libraries and Archives have focused attention on the history and progress of Japanese Americans in their communities. As a result, the collections that have been accumulated at CSU Libraries have a highly local flavor and remarkable depth.
The Archives at several different CSU institutions, including those in Dominguez Hills, Fresno, Fullerton, Northridge, Sacramento, San Jose, Sonoma, and San Francisco have collaborated on the initial planning grant to create a digital archive of the CSU's holdings on this subject. San Diego, Bakersfield, and San Bernardino have also contributed materials.
Collections at CSU Sacramento have mostly come from citizens of the Florin neighborhood in Sacramento and throughout Northern California. CSU Fullerton's oral histories focused on the Japanese American experience were generated by residents of Orange County and other Southern California locales. SJSU's Flaherty Collection consists of materials from Colonel Hugh T. Fullerton of the Western Defense Command. The collections at CSU Dominguez Hills originate mostly from the South Bay of Los Angeles County, where one of the largest concentrations of Japanese Americans resided. CSU Fresno's materials come from the agricultural areas of the San Joaquin Valley. Other archival information, especially camp or WRA materials have come from community groups, collectors or individuals with an abiding interest in the topic.
The collections represent approximately 300 linear feet of archival materials that focus on some of the most striking events related to the treatment of minorities in U.S. history. The topics cover an enormous range of subjects central to Japanese-American life before, during and after World War II, including immigration, the California Alien Land Acts of 1913 and 1920, the War Relocation Authority (WRA), organizations supporting Japanese Americans, redress, Japanese Peruvians, hostage exchanges on the S.S. Gripsholm, sports, and the U.S. Army's 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Camps represented include Jerome, Gila River, Rohwer, Manzanar, Tanforan, Poston, Amache/Granada, Heart Mountain, Crystal City and more. Among the archives are letters, photographs, oral histories, camp publications, papers of camp administrators and counselors, poetry, art works, leases, certificates and other documents to prove citizenship , and school yearbooks. The project tends to focus on the digitization of paper, photographs, and media such as audio and video.
Hidden within the business operation records of the Rancho San Pedro Collection (CSUDH) are scores of leases and letters both business-like and heartbreaking that document a tenant farmer's "removal by the Federal Government" or the pleading of a former tenant to his former landlord to vouch for a relative's loyalty to the U.S. The attempt of businesses to work within the policies of the Alien Land Acts of the early 20th century are integral to understanding how immigration clashed with prejudice and commercial interests and contributed to World War II incarceration. Strikingly, a 1930s Gardena High School Yearbook includes a photograph of a group of Japanese American students who were the majority of students in the Spanish Club--focusing on a time when integration into the mainstream was assumed.
In 1942, an estimated 250 Japanese American students were forced to leave their CSU campuses and relocated to camps. Many other students were removed from other west coast colleges. In September 2009, the CSU Board of Trustees unanimously voted to honor the academic intentions of these students by awarding them Special Honorary Bachelor of Humane Letters degrees. The videos of those ceremonies are among the archival materials included in this project.
The intention of the CSU Japanese American History Digitization Project is to expand upon the resources and develop an ongoing workflow to support the digitization and online access of these archival collections as they continue to grow through community donations and collaborations.
If you would like to discuss a possible donation to the collections, please contact your local California State University Library or Director of Archives and Special Collections Gregory Williams at California State University, Dominguez Hills.
Steve Kutay - exhibit design and placement, document selection, text
Exhibit Credits
Greg Williams- document selection, chapter introductions
Maureen Burns - document selection, copyediting
Documents and their descriptions are provided in part by library personnel from the following institutions:
California State University, Dominguez Hills
Sacramento State
San José State University
California State University, Northridge
Sonoma State University
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
University of California, Santa Barbara