Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/journal/author/inouye-herbert/

Herbert Hideyo Inouye


Herbert Hideyo Inouye nació el 14 de noviembre de 1928 en La Jara, Colorado. En 1939, debido a la condición médica de su madre, la familia se mudó a Los Ángeles, CA, pero con el estallido de la guerra, fueron evacuados voluntariamente a Colorado en febrero de 1942. Inouye se graduó de la Universidad de Colorado en 1950 y sirvió en Corea como parte de las fuerzas armadas estadounidenses. En 1991 se jubiló después de 31 años en una gran empresa de ingeniería y construcción. Inouye se casó con Dorothy Natsuko (Yanaru) en 1953 y tienen cinco hijos y cinco nietos.

Actualizado en octubre de 2008


Historias de Este Autor

Memoirs - Part 4 of 4: Amache and School Days

19 de noviembre de 2008 • Herbert Hideyo Inouye

Read Part 3 >>  Visit to Amache In mid-September 1942, after our first harvest was virtually done and before my freshman classes were to begin, I took my mother to visit my sister Helen and her family (Mrs. T. lino, her mother-in-law, Ken lino, her husband, and Glen lino, her son) at the Amache Relocation Camp. We had last seen them in Los Angeles some seven months earlier—seven months seemed like eternity considering all the trials and tribulations that occurred …

Memoirs - Part 3 of 4: Farming in Colorado

12 de noviembre de 2008 • Herbert Hideyo Inouye

Read Part 2 >> Starting a New Farm Starting a farm operation from scratch in the San Luis Valley is a very difficult task at best. The growing season is short and the crops require extra personal care. Add to this, the time is the middle of February 1942 and all of the established farms are already rented out by this time. Certain vegetables need to be started from seed in hot beds in Mid-March. New equipment and tools need to …

Memoirs- Part 2 of 4: Caravan to Colorado

5 de noviembre de 2008 • Herbert Hideyo Inouye

Read Part 1 >> The Volunteer Migration Around January 14, 1942, a Presidential Proclamation required all Japanese aliens to register and forever carry with them papers that identified them as "enemy aliens." By the end of January 1942, General John De Witt of the 6th Army Area Defense declared all Japanese aliens and their families be rounded up from the "sensitive areas" and incarcerated. The designated "sensitive areas" included San Pedro, San Diego, Long Beach, etc., mostly all sea ports …

Memoirs - Part 1 of 4: War Breaks Out, Everything Changes

29 de octubre de 2008 • Herbert Hideyo Inouye

Friends and family have asked me to chronicle my life experiences during World War II. Since I was barely thirteen when Pearl Harbor, Hawaii was attacked by the Japanese, my remembrances and interactions are limited to an early-teenaged Japanese American growing up in a chaotic, prejudiced, "Japan-hating" society. However, family and friends who shared these experiences with me are rapidly diminishing. For example, one of the more memorable experiences was my family's volunteer evacuation from California to Colorado which was …

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