Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/journal/2011/10/16/shinmoto-family-1/

Shinmoto Family - Part 1

The Shinmoto family history in America dates back to 1923, when Tsuneo Anthony (Tony), then five months old, and his father, Tsunetaro (1897-1972) and mother, Haruyo Tanaka Shinmoto (1902-1982) landed in San Francisco from Hiroshima, Japan. The new arrivals moved south to Upland, California, where second and third sons, Kiyoto (Herky) and Minoru (Min) were born in 1924 and 1925, respectively. Then to Salinas, where their fourth son, Hiroshi was born. The next move was to Kingsburg, a small farming community about 20 miles south of Fresno, where daughter, Mitsuko (Mitsy) was born.

L to R (front row): Father, Tsunetaro, Mitsuko and mother, Haruyo Shinmoto (back row, standing): Sons Minoru, Kiyoto and Tsuneo (1940)

Around 1929, the family moved to the Uptown area in Los Angeles, where Hiroshi (1927-1929) died at the age of 2½ years old of spinal meningitis. He had contracted the illness from a family friend who had stayed overnight, by sleeping in the same bed with him.

In the early 1930s, the family moved to the Seinan (Southwest Los Angeles) area, where the kids attended the 37th Street School and Foshay Junior High School. Tony attended Manual Arts High School. After public school let out in the afternoon, they attended Senshin Japanese Language School for one hour each day during the week. Homework for both schools was done after every dinner, which left little time for play.

Only during summer, was there time away from studies. The older children in our family helped father with his gardening work every Saturday throughout the year and most summer days. There was also work at the local nurseries (Iba Nursery and Mr. Watanabe’s Western Avenue Park Nursery). The Shinmoto family moved back to Kingsburg during the summer of 1939 because we were not able to make ends meet in Los Angeles.

The Shinmoto family lived here at 1528 W. 36th Place in Seinan until 1939, when they moved to Kingsburg (south of Fresno). The house on the left was home to Warren Lewis, a Black American who participated in Seinan Judo back in the day and was employed by Mr. Kiro Nagano’s wholesale produce market.

Relatives helped to make life easier. Japanese School on Saturdays felt like a picnic. My siblings and I helped earn extra money for the family by doing farm work after school. Temperatures over 100 degrees in the fields during the summer made the prospect of going back to school a happy one.

Tony graduated from Kingsburg High School in June 1941. Instead of continuing his education at the local college, he was content with the family’s purchase of a new, lime green Chevrolet sedan rather than that money being spent on his education. All dreams of a secure future appeared to come to an end on Sunday, December 7th, 1941.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066 forced the family’s newly purchased Chevy to be sold at a fraction of its purchase price. Herky cried after having to give up his 500 pound hog that had been raised under the high school’s Future Farmers Association (FFA) program from a little piglet. The unforeseen future held little hope for a better life for the Shinmoto family.

Part 2 >>

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*Editor’s note: “Seinan” is an area in Southwest Los Angeles, California, where a thriving Japanese American community existed before World War II. Japanese American Living Legacy has gathered stories and personal experiences from people who lived in Seinan before World War II. This article presents an excerpt from the book Seinan: Southwest Los Angeles, Stories and Experiences from Residents of Japanese Ancestry (2011) published by JA Living Legacy.

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SEINAN PANEL
Sunday, October 30, 2011 • 2pm
Japanese American National Museum

Come hear how Southwest Los Angeles was a thriving Nisei community that was almost wiped out with the forced removal and events of World War II.

For more information >>

Presented in collaboration with JA Living Legacy and the Japanese American National Museum.

© 2011 Japanese American Living Legacy

Arizona California Canal Camp comunidades campos de concentración historias familiares genealogía río Gila (Arizona) campo de concentración de Gila River Los Ángeles barrios Seinan (Los Ángeles, California) suroeste de Los Ángeles Estados Unidos campos de la Segunda Guerra Mundial
Acerca del Autor

Minoru "Min" Shinmoto nació en Upland, California, el 30 de junio de 1925. Era el tercer hijo de cinco hijos de Tsunetaro y Haruyo Shinmoto de Hiroshima, Japón.

Recuerda haber vivido y crecido en el área de Seinan a mediados de la década de 1930. La familia se mudó en 1939 a Kingsburg, California, en el Valle de San Joaquín, cerca de Fresno. Cuando Estados Unidos entró en la Segunda Guerra Mundial, la familia Shinmoto fue internada en el campo de reubicación de Gila River, Arizona, donde Min se graduó de Canal High School en 1943.

Min fue reclutado por el ejército de los EE. UU. en 1944 y recibió entrenamiento básico en Fort McClellan, Alabama. Pasó los siguientes meses en Fukuoka, Japón, con las Fuerzas de Ocupación, y luego dirigió un contingente de diez MISers, interrogando a repatriados de Manchuria. Finalmente, fue dado de baja del ejército estadounidense en noviembre de 1946.

Min pasó los siguientes 51 años en el negocio minorista de guarderías de la familia, Southern California Nursery, Inc. en Culver City. La empresa familiar cerró el 1 de marzo de 1999 y Min se jubiló con su esposa durante 55 años en Torrance, California. Tuvieron tres hijos, dos nietos y un bisnieto.

Actualizado en octubre de 2011

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