Sunday, November 17, 2013

1940 Census

One thing about being a history nerd, I love researching information.

I also love that the government releases census reports eventually, giving us a chance to see what America was like before we had the chance to be a part of this wonderful nation.

I found my family on the U.S. Census Bureau website after a little research and a lot of scrolling.  Sadly, in this pre-digital age, it's hard to search these hand-written documents other than good old click and scan.  With thousands of names to scroll through, I was blessed with a true gift from my great-grandmother: she had a knack for being on time for everything she did.  Instead of scrolling through hundreds of names, my great-grandmother registered her family as numbers 15-19 in their district.  Thank you, great-grandmother!

(Click to enlarge)

At first this just seems like a boring chart that no one but a nerd would be interested in, but that's only partially true.  This census form is a moment captured in time, as if my great-grandmother pressed pause on her family's life to give us a peek into what was going on in the Kumasaka's life in 1940.  Think about the time: Germany was at war with Europe, the Japanese in the Pacific were engaging in extremely aggressive behavior that would eventually drag America into the war, and the Kumasaka family, as a Japanese-American family, was watching it all unfold daily in the newspapers and on the movie theater news reels.  And in the midst of this all, my great-grandmother filled out this census form, telling us about her family and their lives.

There are a few things I want to point out to you, because I find them really fascinating.  First off, in the spot where "nationality" is listed, my great-grandfather is listed as a Japanese, and my great-grandmother is listed as "white".  My grandfather and his two sisters are listed as Japanese too, which is surprising because just 2 1/2 years later my grandfather would list his nationality as "white" on his army enlistment paperwork.


Interesting...very interesting.

Also, as you can see on the far left of the chart, my great-grandfather was one of the few citizens in his area (or at least on this census page) who owned their own home.  Home ownership as we know it today didn't become as commonplace as it is until after WWII, when returning GIs were able to head to college on the GI Bill, essentially helping the creation of the middle class.  It's somewhat significant that my great-grandfather owned  not only the home he lived in with his family, but the store downstairs where they made their business.

Finally, as you can see from their employment records, my great-Aunt Violet, two years my grandfather's senior, was already employed in the family business, helping out in the store as a shop girl.  My grandfather, who also worked their before and after the war, had not yet started stocking shelves with his father and sister, but it would happen shortly.  Remember those months of childhood where your only responsibilities were school work and friendships?  In this moment, that was my grandfather.

If you have some time, I definitely recommend looking up your family's past with the US. Census.  There are so many amazing things you can see through the eyes of someone else.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Letter 2/18/45

Guess what yesterday was...go on, guess!  And no, it wasn't Hump Day (that Geico commercial needs to go away).

IT WAS MY GRANDFATHER'S BIRTHDAY!


I wish I had the chance to post on his actual birthday, but I was on my way across the state in my car, and it's a little hard to blog when you're behind the wheel of a moving vehicle.  So please accept my deepest apologizes for this post coming a day late.

Anyway, my grandpa is 91 years young now, I can't believe that.  Sometimes your grandparents and parents seem immortal, because they've been a part of your life since the beginning.  At 91, though, I know I should be thankful for each day my grandfather has, and on his birthday I really am appreciative that he's still around for me to have a relationship with.

I thought I'd share the next letter with you, since it's a Saturday and we all need something to celebrate on the weekend.  Enjoy, and I'll be back to update soon!


Mr. A. Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg N.J.
U.S.A.

T/5 A. Kumasaka
ASN 32609377
Hq Btry 863 FA Bn
APO 410 c/o P.M.
N.Y. N.Y. 18 Feb

Hello Folks,

     I received your V mail letters of Feb 8 & 9 today.  9 days is fast service, isn't it?  I've also received 2 air mail letters written before those dates, and 2 V letters from Vi.  So that about brings you up to date with me, doesn't it?  I hope my mail has been reaching home promptly too.
     I went to church this morning.  No, it wasn't like the services back home, but I still got a lot out of it, about 5 guys from the wire section and I were the only ones to attend the service, which was held on the second floor of a nearby building.  The windows had been previously blown out, but it was warm outside, and we were comfortable.  When we first entered the room, the air was filled with smoke, which came from a low stove pipe downstairs.  The chaplain took care of it, though, and soon had the room cleared.  We had a small portable organ to accompany us, and the alter he set up provided the proper atmosphere.  By the way, I received the Lenten book Vi sent me and am reading it daily.
     I've taken some pictures with the camera, and if I can get them printed and censored I'll send them to you.  Nothing else to report at this time.  Hope every-thing is all right at home.

Love,
Archie

Monday, November 11, 2013

Letter 2/14/45

When I was in college I traveled to Italy for a month, and can say without a doubt that I don't pick up second languages well.  I was dependent on English-speaking Italians, Italian-speaking classmates, and a well-worn English-Italian phrase book to make it through the month. On one of our last nights in Italy I remember being able to FINALLY count to 50 in Italian and acting like I had just won my first Super Bowl tournament.

Linguist I am not.

My mom has always told me a funny story about my grandfather's language barrier issues when they went on a family trip to Germany.  As you will see in the letter below, my grandfather had studied German in high school, and had a decent enough grasp on the language when my mom went to Europe with the family.  I wouldn't call him fluent, but he could make it work.  My mom tells a story about how he went into a market to order some sliced ham for sandwiches, and swapped a few German words around in his head.  He ended up ordering a kilogram of ham (for you Americans like me who had to look this up, that's 2.2lbs) and my mom had to eat a lot of ham sandwiches while she explored Germany.

This is why I love my grandfather, though.  Seriously it is.  He's so doggedly determined to make things work, he will order too much ham just so he had a chance to practice his German.  I wish you all could meet him, I promise you'd enjoy the conversation as much as I have over the years.

Here's today's letter.  Please enjoy!


Mr. A. Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg N.J.
U.S.A.

T/5 A. Kumasaka
ASN 32609377
Hq Btry 863FA Bn
APO 410 c/o P.M.
N.Y. N.Y.

14 Feb 45

Dear Folks,

     I received your air mail of Jan 29 today.  I had already heard about Mrs. Stratton's visit to the house -- from Amos himself.  he is all right, for I see him at least once a day.  I imagine that his mail was delayed somewhere along the way, be-cause I know that he writes as often as he can.
     As for my learning French, well I may not get too far with that language.  You see, the people in the neighborhood speak German, and I'm sure the further east we go, I'll be making more and more use of my high school German.  It certainly comes in handy, right now, because I can make out a lot of what people are saying and too, I can make myself partially understood.
     Nothing new to report just now.  I'm still getting good food and enough sleep.  Haven't picked up any souvenirs yet, because I haven't been up front.  I'll put in a request for the box Vi wants to send me, because she can't send it without one.
     Hope all is well at home.  Will close now for lack of spare and time.
     P.S. P. Blane sent me a package ^include^ a roll or two of 127 film.

Lots of love,
Archie

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Letter 2/10/45

Today's letter is a special one, and a bit rare from the stack of letters I received from my grandfather when he was cleaning out his storage unit.  Since his mother saved the letters he mailed home during the war, 90% of the ones that have survived until 2013 are letters he wrote to my great-grandparents.  From his writings we know he wrote regularly to his grandparents, his two sisters, and his friends, but most, I presume, have been destroyed over time.  It's rare that one sneaks through that isn't addressed to Mr. A. Kumasaka.

Today's letter is addressed to my grandfather's sister, my great-aunt, who at the time was still living at home with her parents, which I believe is why the letter has survived.  Living in the same house as her parents, it's only natural for my great-grandmother to bundle it in with the rest of the letters once they were done reading it.  It brings out a different side to my grandfather, though, showing him as a brother instead of a son.

Anyway, enjoy!


Miss Viola Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg, N.J.
U.S.A.

#32609377
T/5 A. Kumasaka
Hq Btry 863 FA Bn
APO 410 c/o P.M.
N.Y. N.Y.
10 Feb 45

Hello Vi,

     Received your letters of Jan 20 and Jan 25 yesterday.  It was good to get your letters because they are the first I've received from you folks, and I was anxious to learn if you had received any of my mail.  I'm glad, now, that I sent the cablegram, because I see that it was my first message to reach you.  Since then, you should have received my Vmail letters, which I try to write every other day.  I note that you have.
     I saw the picture "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay" twice, once in New York and once in camp, and thought it was very good.  "Casanna Brown" was at my summer camp, I think, and I liked it too.
     No I haven't heard or received anything on the Time magazine subscription yet.  There's nothing that I need badly right now.  We get rations of 1 pkg cigarettes, 1 stick of gum, one candy bar per day, plus soap, blade, tooth powder every week or so.  My laundry is done by the lady in the house which we sleep; she does it for a bar of GI soap -- doesn't want money.  The food is good -- 3 hot meals a day.  In short, the situation is ideal, and I couldn't ask for better, considering the circumstances.
     That's all for now, Sis.  Will write more soon.

Love, Archie

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Racism During WWII

I'm lucky to have lived in a country for the past twenty-seven years where racism, and prejudices based on skin color are in a decided minority.  I'm not saying they don't exist, because I know that evil like that exists everywhere, no matter what we do to eradicate it, but it is such a rarity that when it does happen, it tends to make front page news, and fires people up.

I'm also not naive enough to know that cultural acceptance of race has not always been the norm.  Hello, we fought a civil war rooted deeply in our beliefs of race.  My parents generation saw on their black and white television sets as National Guard forces were sent into school districts to help desegregate schools.  A country that was founded on freedoms, had, at one point, limited voting and citizenship rights to white men.  I'm not going to try to sugar coat the problems of our nations past, because I know they've existed.

For my generation, though, much of what has happened in our nation's history with slavery, segregation, and race limitations has been limited to text books, made-for-television movies, and history classes in the public education system.  We understand what happened, but don't understand what it truly felt like to live in that moment, because we were not alive when it happened.  I feel someday our children will ask us what it was  like to witness the terrorist attacks of 9/11 firsthand, and thought they may study it, they'll never truly understand the raw emotions we felt in those first moments, the disbelief that something like that could happen.

My search to uncover my grandfather's past deals a lot with his letters, and his journey throughout the war.  But it also has to do with looking at how a Japanese-American young man dealt with being what many considered to be an enemy minority during a world war.  It was hard enough for young men to leave their homes and families to go across seas and fight a war they knew they may never return from; to do so with the added weight of being a Japanese-American, well, I can't imagine how that must have felt.

Years ago I read a story in Life Magazine from 1941, and I remember my 20 year old self being shocked at the publication of the article.  Again, growing up in the generation I did, I cannot imagine anything like this ever being published in a major news source today.  Yet there it was, plain as day: How To Tell Japs From Chinese.

Wow.

Could you imagine if you turned on CNN today and they had a report like this?  Could you imagine the back lash they would have to deal with?  All the rights groups, all the citizens, all the advertising that would be lost because of something like that being run.  I can't even imagine the fall out of today's media pulling a stunt like that.  Yet there it was, plain as day, a two page spread complete with pictures:



The first page of the article breaks down the facial features of a Japanese-American, and noticeable characteristics of their face and bone structure, while the second page comments about how Japanese-American often have longer torsos and shorter legs (I KNEW I had super short legs for a reason!)  If you were so inclined, this Life magazine was giving you the opportunity and power to stereotype, segregate, and ostracize a person based solely on this magazine article.  

Again, can we just take a minute to say WOW!

This article was published seventy-two years ago, when my grandfather was 20 years old.  I have a hard time looking at it now, I don't know how he or his family could have seen this on newsstands in 1941 and not felt ashamed for who they were.  

I told you in one of the very first entries on this blog that my grandfather bears no ill-will towards the discrimination he faced as a child and young man growing up as a Japanese-American.  I can partially understand his stance on this, he served in the military during the war and then continued to work for the US Government until he retired.  His career was not based on his race, but on his skills as an engineer.  I know he finds himself truly blessed for the life he has lived.

It's just hard for me to wrap my head around that idea of such a blinding forgiveness, though.  And maybe that's the difference between my grandfather's generation and mine: my grandfather was raised on the belief that he was owed nothing in life, and what he made of his life was determined solely on his ability to work for it.  My generation, as thousands of you Baby Boomers have pointed out, has been raised on the idea that the world "owes us", and we shouldn't have to work hard for things that should just be handed to us.  What a generational mind shift in a half a century.

I guess if this article shows us anything, it's about the powerful force of forgiveness.  My grandfather is not an angry man, in fact, he's one of the most happy-go-lucky people I've ever had the pleasure to know.  Yet after seeing articles like this, I don't know if I'd fault him if he was a little bitter at the world.  He's not, though.  His main concerns are about a small store he now runs in his senior center, and his yearly WWII reunion that is slowly dwindling in numbers.  He's a genius of a man, with too big of a heart, and it really helps to put my life in perspective when I get annoyed that someone cut me off on the road.  We are all blessed with the life we have, and if this article shows us anything it's that we don't often take the time to appreciate it.

I'll leave you with that thought, and ask you to do a simple thing this week: let something go.  Maybe it's a huge fight you've been holding onto for years.  Maybe you, like me, hate when someone cuts you off on the road.  Whatever that thing is, let it go.  It's not worth it.  There are so many bigger problems in this world, and we are the only ones who have the ability to solve them.

Have a wonderful week, friends!

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Letter 2/5/45

Hello readers!

It's been a few days and I apologize...sometimes life gets in the way!  Not that I'm complaining, just letting you know what's going on.

I was going to write a longer post today, but perhaps I'll save that until tomorrow evening instead.  Sadly this blog will always take a back seat to work, family, life in general.  Sadly no one pays me to research all this, so until they do I'm at the mercy of my real job.  If you pay me I will complete it. :-)

So here's the next letter in the series from my grandpa.  We're getting to an interesting point in the letters, but I don't want to ruin it for you, so I don't want to say too much and give it away.  Let's just say I've seen a side of my grandpa in these letters I've never seen before.  And I can't wait to show you.

Have a great rest of the week.  Let's chat again tomorrow!

E



Mr. A. Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg, N.J.
U.S.A.

#32609377
T/5 A. Kumasaka
Hq Btry 863 FA Bn
APO 410 c/o P.M.
N.Y.
5 Feb 45

Dear Folks,

     It is now 2 in the morning and I think I'll retire after I finish this letter to you.  I am also sending a few post cards of Marseilles to some of my friends tonight.  The one you'll get of Canebiere St is a good picture of the Main St.  I thought the trolley cars are funny to see, because people will pack into them tighter than a N.Y. subway car; in fact, they hang on the sides of the cars.  A lot of the buildings are damaged by shellfire, but the stores still con-tinue to operate, that is, all except the food stores (Epiceries) because food is scarce.  In the France I've traveled through so far, almost every ^person^ I've seen has a loaf or two of bread under his arm.  They'll sell it to you for 50 francs ($1.00) a loaf.
     You know, that in the time I've been over here, I haven't seen a German plane, or saw a German soldier with the exception of P.W's.  It's a quiet war, isn't it?
     I've told you in my last letter, but in case this one gets to you before it, I'll write it again: I'm somewhere in the Alsace Lorraine sector, attached to the 7th Army.  That's all for now, folks.

Love,
Archie

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Letter 2/4/45

Happy weekend everyone!

Please, can someone, somewhere, invent a 4 day weekend?  Week ends are wonderful, but they seem to pass us by so quickly!  One minute it's Friday night, and the next we're trying to figure out what we're wearing to work on Monday.  Give us more weekends!

I skipped updating yesterday because I was out enjoying my last day of summer, and the wonderful weather.  Today, then, has become catch up/laundry/dishes day, so I'm also updating everyone on here too while the dryer rumbles on the other side of the wall.  It's an exciting day, haha!

We're officially into February 1945 with our letters, and we're starting to really see some movement going on in my pop's letters.  I've been researching exactly where he was during all of this, and later this week I hope to give you an awesome play-by-play on what was going on while he's writing these letters.

For now, enjoy the rest of your weekend, and the next letter in the series.  

E


Mr. A Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg, N.J.
U.S.A.

T/5 A. Kumasaka
ASN 32609377
Hq Btry 863 FA Bn
APO 410 c/o P.M.
New York, N.Y.

4 Feb 45

Hello Folks,

     Just a few lines to let you know that I'm O.K., since I haven't written to you in a few days.  The reason I haven't written, of course, was because I have changed my station, and am now at the front.  We are attached to the Seventh Army and are located in the Alsatian Sector.
    At present, I'm stationed comfortably in a house, enjoying a heated room which I didn't have even back in the states.  It is so different from the pup tents we had back at Marseilles, that it hardly seems possible that we are closer to the conditions of combat.  The food is good, and we get two full meals a day; so I've nothing much to complain about, except that I could use a shower.
     Hope everything is O.K. at home, I received a letter from Catherine today, dated the 30 of Dec.  So long for now, will write as often as often as possible at present, the weather is mild; it's raining outside.

Love,
Archie

Friday, September 20, 2013

Letter 1/28/45

Happy Friday folks!!  A weekend's in front of us, and I couldn't be happier.  Fall weather, baseball games, baking (for those of you who don't know, I own a bakery.  I like to blog, so if you're done with these posts, head on over and check out the sillier side of my life).

Today's letter sheds a bit of light onto another side of my grandfather's life, his spiritual/religious side.  My grandfather has always been the strong/silent type of person in my life, and I don't know if he's always been this way, but for most of the time I've known him he's much more content to sit and listen (unless we're having a political debate).  This may be because I'm his granddaughter, and he's interested to hear more about me, and my active life, than what he's doing in his 4th decade of retirement.

That being said, he's always had this aura around him, an aura that gives you this sense of security and calm.  I've never seen him freak out ever, even when he's driving in rush hour New Jersey traffic (how do you people drive there all the time), and I can count on my one hand the number of times he's yelled at me.[1] 

I always thought that his calm attitude was due to years of life he had managed to rack up by the time I entered his life, years of dealing with wars, work, family matters, and children.  Reflecting on who my grandfather is now, I'd say that definitely is a large part of his identity, but his faith is also a huge part of who he is.  Like most of his personality, it's not something that's obvious at first, and not something that he parades about at will.  But his faith is always there, just under the surface, and I feel it shapes his character just as much as his life experiences have.

I've read through all of his letters, and he talks about devotionals and attending church services several times throughout his writings home.  It's something that he's eager to share with his family, because it's something that greatly shaped who he was and had become by 1945.  Yet there's more to it than that, in my opinion: my grandfather excels in stable, predictable environments, and the war was anything but that.  As we've already seen from his early letters, there is a lot of unpredictability, a lot of moving around, and a lot of different roles he needs to fill as a soldier.  Through all this chaos, then, his faith, and the worship he participated in weekly with fellow soldiers, gave him the chance to relax in a familiar atmosphere that reminded him both of home, and of bigger things outside the theater of war.

I'm rambling a bit, and I apologize, but this blog is more than just posting letters and hitting "Publish".  I want to unravel the mysteries of my grandfather, and sometimes letters like this one give me the opportunity to do so.

Have a wonderful weekend, readers.  I'll be back soon with more updates.

E



Mr. and Mrs. A. Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg, N.J.
U.S.A.

T/5 A. Kumasaka #32609377
Hq Btry 863 FA Bn
APO 410 c/o P.M.
New York, N.Y.

28 Jan 45

Hello Folks,

     I have just attended the Protestant Services over at the Red Cross building for officers.  At the 9 o'clock service there was only one other buddy besides my-self who attended but we got just as much out of the meeting as if all the seats were filled.
     After the service I had a talk with the chaplain and was surprised to learn that he was an assis-tant to the minister of the Central Presbyterian Church in Montclair.  His name is Derivan.  I asked him then, if he knew Grandmother, and he said the name was familiar.  He asked me to have Grandma talk with Mrs. John Freeman, whom he knows very well and who would be glad to learn a bit of news like this about him.  As I have just recently written to Grandma, will you relay this on to her?
     I am now writing this letter in the Enlisted Men's Red Cross building.  Outside it is quite cold and there is a very strong wind blowing. I'll have to b____ this wind eventually to return to the battery area.
     I'm getting along O.K. to date.  At night I have a sleeping bag, which I crawl into, and get as warm as toast.  I'll close for now.  Hope everything is O.K. at home.

Love,
Archie


Notes:
[1]One of those times might have involved his very expensive pool liner.  Pop, I'm sorry, my 5 year old self did not understand the value of money in 1991 and failed to understand why you didn't want me to break the liner.  Now that I'm $30,000 in debt from college I understand, and promise I'll never step on another pool liner again!

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Letter 1/24/45

Today's letter was translated during my lunch break.  I love having an hour in the middle of the day to geek out on history in my cubicle.  Of course, I'd like it better if I didn't have to work at all, but sadly that lucky Powerball ticket doesn't seem to be in my hands yet.

I'm researching a lot more of my grandfather's military career outside of these letters, and I must say it's quite interesting.  I'm trying to compile it all into a few additional posts throughout this project, but I'm only using reputable sources, so it's taking longer than usual.  Darn you, Wikipedia! :-)

Anyway, here's the next letter I transcribed.  There's a section towards the end of the letter that is illegible, because my grandfather wrote into the blackened part at the bottom of the paper.  I've had several people take a look at the physical original, and no matter how much we stare at it there's no telling what was originally written there.  Again, another moment lost to history.

Take care, tomorrow's Friday!! :-)

E

Mr. A. Kumasaka
287 Main St.
Keansburg
New Jersey, U.S.A.

T-5 Archie Kumasaka
ASN 32609377
Hq Btry 863 FA Bn
APO 410 c/o PM N.Y. N.Y.

24 Jan 44

Dear Folks,

     Have a few spare minutes tonight, so I thought I'd write you a few lines.  I imagine that my first letters from overseas are reaching you by this time, so you should know by this date that I arrived safely.  I haven't received any letters from you yet, but I'll be watching the next few mail calls in antici-pation of a petter.  I'm writting all my letters on V-blanks because they are faster in travel.
     I had a pass last night and went to visit the largest city in this area.  It was there that I took a shower--my first in days; it cost 02 7m and was well worth it.  There are no restaurants open in the city, because food is too scarce.  Wine, beer, and cognac are available to quench the GI's thirst, but these are weak compared to U.S. standards.  The city on a whole, looks drab and dull, as any place should that has seen war.  I have bought a few post cards which I shall try to send later.
     What is the weather like in Keansburg?  It has been comparatively mild here the past few days, and with the milder weather comes plenty of that gooey "mud".
     So long for now. _________________________ Archie

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Reporting for Basics

So I've been doing some thinking these past few days...

...as wonderful as my grandfather's letters are (once we can decipher the scrawling handwriting), and they are an absolute treasure, there's only so much his letters can tell us.  I mean, it's not like he could actually talk about what he was doing in Europe.  From the sounds of some of his letters, he sounds like he was on a nice little international vacation.

I'll admit, even though I'm a history major, my background on military history is somewhat weak.  You're only as strong as those who taught and encouraged your education, and I've never really had anyone in my life who was a huge military history lover.  I've always viewed the military and its history as part of a bigger picture.  It's not that I'm not interested in learning more, I have just never had a reason to.  Now I do.

Looking over his letters, I realized I didn't even understand everything that was in his address line.  I mean, look at this:


That looks like coding for some super secret society.  I realized I didn't even know what half of it meant...

So that's where the investigating came in.  For those of you with a solid background in military history, I apologize, you're going to probably be bored with this post.  For the 98% of you who are not well-versed in your USMH, you better pay attention, because there's a quiz at the end!

The first thing I looked at with my research was the top line, "T-5 Archie Kumasaka".  What did T-5 mean?  Was that even a 5?  Was it an S?

Thankfully, the internet had the answer.  It was a 5, and T-5 stood for my grandfather's ranking.  I hate Wikipedia (HATE IT!) but someone with too much time on their hands created a pretty awesome chart that explains where and what a T-5 ranked as during WWII:


If you'd like to see the entire article (you nerdy person you!) you can click here to have a history moment.

So to sum it up, a T-5 is a technical Fifth Grade, which is the same ranking as Corporal.  They were identified by the "T" marking under their Chevron-style bars.  They were also classified into the 5th grade pay scale, that's 5th from the top, 5th highest.  They obviously earned the same as any Corporal would.

That led us to the next question, then (we're falling down a worm hole here)....what would a Corporal in WWII make?  How much were these young men getting paid to fight for their country overseas?  

Thankfully, Barron's National Business and Financial Weekly published a great report on April 24, 1944 charting how much a single or married serviceman could expect to make while overseas.  Since my grandfather wasn't married at the time, I figured it's best to use the Single Man's Chart.  They do not use pay grades to list the different pays in the military, so I highlighted the one my grandfather would receive:

[1]
Not too shabby, gramps!  You'd be making what amounts to four thousand dollars a year after income tax, why that must be worth...well, how much would it be worth?

I'm so glad the U.S. government has put some of my tax dollars to work and found a way to provide inflation answers for me before I even realized I needed them...

[2]
Big money big money!!!  He was earning overseas what most middle class people earn today.  At least he was able to leave the war with a little money in his pocket, after everything was said and done.

Next I took a look at the second line of his address, "ASN 32609377".  Again, Google is our best friend, because we typed that in and found that ASN stood for Army Serial Number.  Makes sense, the government had to figure out a good way to take track you, not only to figure out who was where, but to determine pay, communications, just about everything.

The really interesting thing I found while I was searching for this is that you can bring up a ton of information dealing with Army Serial Numbers on the internet.  Again, I'm glad the government has been forward thinking in all of this, saving me many hours of frustrated hunting.  The National Archives have a fantastic search option that lets you look up anyone you may know who has a military background.  An ASN is the most surefire way to get an exact hit, but they also allow you to search by name, or even place.  Click here if you're curious and want to play around with the system.  Be warned, there are some errors in the system that time will never help to repair: if an application form was illegible, or left blank on accident, a "#" will be placed in the answer area showing no information was able to be gathered from the form.  The originals have been destroyed, which means anything we might have been able to gleam off of them today is null and void...they've gone to the great big recycling bin in the sky.

The next line is a complete jumble of letters, and it's what initially led me to start looking into this return address: "Hq Btry 863 FA Bn".  Hq Btry is short for Headquarter Battery, or as we call it today, simply headquarters.  You know, where you're reporting back to, and, more importantly, where your mail is going in and out of.  This is important for the people who need to send letters back to him.  863 FA Bn is stating what division and group my grandfather was in.  FA Bn stands for Field Artillery Battalion (more on that in another post), which lists not only what he was doing in the war, but where he was located.

To sum it up, if you were sending mail to my grandfather, you were sending it to the headquarters of the 863 Field Artillery Battalion.  Wherever that happened to be on that particular day.

The last line is fairly easy, "APO 410 c/o PM N.Y. N.Y."  APO is short for Army Post Office, and you were to reply to the Postmaster in New York City.  Seems silly, since NYC is a few thousand miles away from France and Germany where my grandfather was stationed, but it was a way for the military to keep everything organized.  You can't have my grandfather's return address reading "Paris France, north side, gonna push these Nazi's back!"  

Whew!  You still with me?  That's a LOT of history talk right there!  I hope you hung in there, because the more I dive into this, the more I want to know.  I've definitely been digging up some more information, but I'll leave that for another post.

As the hunt for my grandfather's life continues, I hope this inspires you a little bit to find out more about your relatives lives.  I know I'm blessed that my grandfather is still alive, that I can talk to him and ask him questions, but even if you do not have that opportunity anymore, don't let that deter you.  The internet is a great tool, and you'd be amazed at what you can find with a simple search.

That's all for now, gonna take a break from my research for the evening.  Have a wonderful day!  Before you know it the weekend will be here.

E

Notes
[1] Army-Navy Pay Tops Most Civilian's Unmarried Private's Income Equivalent to $3,600 Salary. American Merchant Marine at War. September 4, 2013. http://www.usmm.org/barrons.html
[2] CPI  Inflation Calculator. US Dept of Labor. http://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Letter 1/22/45

Hey all,

Another day, another chance to transcribe one of these letters.  I hope you guys are taking a look at my grandfather's atrocious handwriting...considering this is a smaller image of what he originally wrote, sometimes it's darn near impossible to read.  I love my grandpa, but I wish he had paid more attention in penmanship class when he way younger.

Here's the third letter he sent to his family in 1945.  Enjoy!




====================================================
Mr. A. Kumasaka
287 Main St
Keansburg, N. Jersey
U.S.A.

T/5 Archie Kumasaka
ASN 32609377
Hq Btry 863FABn
APO c/o PM N.Y. N.Y.

22 Jan 45

Dear Folks,

Another day has just about ended for me, although it is 6 hours earlier where you are, — a day spent in a country strange to us and our manner of living.
I saw how some of these people lived when I went on pass to a nearby city yesterday afternoon. The streets of the city are narrow, and automobiles burning charcoal can be seen riding about. The kids roaming the streets will approach the GI with an extended hand and the single expression “Gum”. Of course, we don’t carry our pockets full (rationed to 2 pkgs per week) so most refuse most requests.
The city runs a dance Sunday afternoon and evening, and I judge that people for miles around assemble to talk affairs, because the place was packed. A few GI’s were there, and some were dancing; I tried it but found it difficult to lead in my style of dancing.
My French is improving each day. I might be able to understand them better if they would speak ^more^ slowly.
I just have enough space to say so long for now. Hope you is all well.

Love,
Archie

Monday, September 16, 2013

Letter 1/16/45

Hey folks,

Skipped a day, hope you don't mind, the Renaissance Fair was calling me.  Knights, jousting, ladies in waiting, it's all I dream of! :-)

Hope you had a great weekend!! :-)  Here's the second letter I transcribed. Enjoy.

Until next time,

E



Mr. A. Kumasaka
287 MAIN ST
KEANSBURG, N.J.
U.S.A.

T-5 A. Kumasaka
ASN 32609377
Hq Btry 863FABn
APO 410 c/o PM N.Y. N.Y.

Jan. 16, 1945

Dear Folks,

I have completed my sea journey and am now “somewhere in France”. The trip across proved un-eventful, after I did not even once suffer the loss of appetite and subsequent sickness. Some of the others were not quite as fortunate as I, however.
From the little I have seen of France so far, I am not much impressed by the scenery, people. The towns are similar to the French Quarter in New Orleans – narrow streets, style of houses, etc. The landscape is picturesque, but I wouldn’t trade it for any of the scenery back home. And as the people don’t speak my language, and I theirs, I don’t think I’d get along to well around here.
I find the weather to be pretty cold where I am, and as we are living in pup tents it is pretty rough, but we are well dressed.
This is all I have to tell about at present. I shall write more soon.
I hope you’re all well. I am feeling fine.
Love,
Archie

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Letter 1/11/45

Hey all,

I've transcribed the first V-Mail my grandpa sent home.  I can't format it in blogger to look like it does in real life, however, in the middle there is obviously a page break. This letter to his family took up two sheets of V-Mail.




Mr. A. Kumasaka T15 A. Kumasaka
287 MAIN ST. ASN 32609377
KEANSBURG, N.J. Hq Btry 863FABM
U.S.A. APO 410 c/o PM N.Y. N.Y.

Hello Folks: Jan 11, 1945

I’m somewhere on the high seas today as I write this letter. I am enjoying the best of health, and the food we get is excellent. Some of the boys were quite sick for awhile when the water was a little rough, but now most everyone has recovered. The trip hasnt bothered me that way yet, and the only reason I miss a meal now and then is when I’m somewhere else, such as church service, PX line (cigarette & candy), or the ice cream & cookie line.
My bunk is below decks, and the quarters are rather cramped, so I try to spend the day on deck, reading, napping, or playing cards. Lights go out on the ship about 4:30 every afternoon and after that time we must grope around as best we can under dim red lights. Usually about 5 every night, a buddy with an accordion comes into the compartment and plays for about an hour. We get a lot of enjoyment from his play and
(continued)
Page 2 Jan 11, 1945
we usually request numbers which we know the words to.
Also, of course, we can go on deck and listen to the radio programs which are sent out over the Public Address System. Last night, I heard a rebroadcast of a Bob Hope program, and got a few belly laughs from it.
Although drinking water can be obtained at all times, fresh water for washing, shaving, etc is rationed. We have its use between 7 30AM & 8:30AM and 5:30 & 6:30PM. The situation is such, however, that the latrine is closed about 8 in the morning in order to be cleaned for inspection, and as lights are out at 430 we have only the red light to wash and shave under at night. The latrine has salt water showers – I took one the other day and can’t say too much for them.
I won’t try to cram all my experiences of the trip into this one letter, so I’ll close now. Hope all of you are well.

Love,
Archie


Will write more tomorrow. Until then,
E

Friday, September 13, 2013

Just the Facts, Please Pt. II

Hey folks,

Back from my errands. It's so cold out today my car wouldn't start right away. Good thing I was due for an oil change--they're going to check my battery too.

However, that's not why you're here. You are here, right? ;) Let's continue with the story. What I know of it so far.

During my senior year in college my grandpa actually allowed me to interview him about his time during the war. I was ecstatic that he gave his consent, until he answered my questions. One or two words here, a phrase or sentence there. Suddenly my assignment became much harder--what my grandfather told me was good, but I would have to fill in the gaps myself with some hard core research. Being a history major I hit the library. And I found what I needed.

When the American public first heard that the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, my grandfather does not remember where he was. His only concern, when he first heard the news, was one any 19 year old would have. "I [was worried] I would be called up to serve," he told me.

His family's concerns were not so simple. My grandfather told me, "They were apprehensive. [They were worried] regarding how the neighborhood would treat them." And rightly so. This was a Japanese-American family living in New Jersey. About as far from the West Coast as one could get without actually climbing into the ocean. My grandfather remarked that growing up, he was the only minority kid at his school. Everyone else in his neighborhood was a typical WASP. It was understandable, then, that his parents would worry how they would be treated following the attacks. There was no denying that they were a Japanese-American family.

The government did investigate them. My grandfather was born November 15, so his nineteenth birthday had passed about three weeks prior to the attack. For that particular birthday he had received what, in his opinion, was a phenominal present: a small battery-powered walkie talkie radio system. The two devices could be used to send small signals to each other, up to a half a mile away, and could tune into certain radio frequencies, depending on the weather. For my grandfather, who eventually majored in engineering, it was a dream gift.

When the government came to investigate his family, they were concerned the radio might be used to contact Japanese spies or, even worse, the Japanese government itself. Against my grandfather's better judgement the U.S. government employees sent to investigate the Kumasaka family confiscated the walkie talkies. Archie never saw them again. To this day, it is one of the things he was most upset with.

As a family, though, the goverment felt the Kumasaka's were a safe, American family. Partially because they lived in New Jersey. Partially because they had no previous record of any ties back in Japan. Partially, though, it must be made clear, they were deemed a safe family because of the community. My grandfather remarked that in the days following the attack, his parents worried what might happen to their stores, now that the Japanese were the "enemy". He told me their concerns were useless. In his words, "My father had such a friendly relationship to his customers, we soon realized that we would be treated in a friendly manner." Neighbors still shopped at the Kumasaka Department Store, as they always had. And when the government came questioning, these same neighbors, who had known the family for years, assured the government there was nothing to worry about with these five. Story after story was told about what an assest they were to Keansburg, how their store was a staple in the town, how they could never be involved in any sort of spy affairs with the Japanese Imperial Government. And so the government left, trusting that the Kumasaka family was who their town promised they were.

They certainly didn't let them down.

When President Roosevelt passed Executive Order 9066 in December of 1941, what most people remember about the order was that it allowed, by law, for the government to take any Japanese immigrants or Japanese-American families living on the West Coast and place them in internment camps for the duration of the war. The government's reasoning behind the order was that the majority of Japanese-Americans lived on the West Coast, and, with some skill, could help Japanese communications and operations here in the states. To remove them from their homes and lives, then, would help to prevent this from becoming an issue. By the end of the war almost 120,000 Japanese-Americans had been sent to these camps throughout the United States. {1} It is said, though I have not found the concrete evidence to support it, that only 3,000 Japanese-American families did not fall under Executive Order 9066. All of them lived on the East Coast. One such family was the Kumasakas.

While Executive Order 9066 did not force them to relocate, and allowed them to still keep their string of department stores, my grandfather still was not allowed to enlist. The same order that allowed the government to move Japanese-American families away from the West Coast also allowed the military to "exclude any or all persons from military areas." {2} Though the language is vague, it was written specifically to exclude the service of any person of Japanese desent. This included my grandfather.

Unable to serve because of his heritage, my grandfather continued to work in his father's stores while attending college. His dream was to become an engineer; he attended nearby Rutger's University in hopes of seeing that dream fullfilled. It might not have been the life he wanted, but it was a life he could live with.

By 1943 the U.S. government was rethinking Executive Order 9066. They had noticed that young men in internment camps were bored and frustrated with their situation, and felt that it would do them well to serve their country. The U.S. government formed the 442nd division, an all-Japanese unit, to fight in Europe. By early 1944 any and all Japanese-Americans could serve in the military again, even in non-segregated divisions, though most chose to stay with the 442nd. By the commencement of the war, the 442nd was the most decorated division in the U.S. Army.

My grandfather, though, had played a few tricks on the government and was able to enlist by January of 1943. When his application was submitted to the government, this was what the one section read:


That's right. Under the heading "race" my grandfather put "white". Apparently his mother's past was acceptable enough for him to put this down. He was drafted into the army, in the 63rd Infantry Division. The division was called up on June 15, 1943, and was in Europe by the year's end. {3}



(You tell me, how "white" does my grandfather look?)

The one stipulation, apparently, that the local recruiters had with my grandfather checking "white" on his application, was that they did not want him to serve anywhere in the Pacific. He still was, afterall, half-Japanese, and they feared that if he ended up in Japan the Japanese could and would use him for spy work. He was sent to Europe instead, then. As part of the 63rd Infantry, he saw action in France and Germany. His division was part of the final push to Berlin in 1945, and was in Germany when the war in Europe finally ended.

My grandfather was injured in the war, though no one (as in my mother and uncle) know exactly what happened. From what they learned over the years, he was hit while in combat--they aren't sure if it was from a bullet, or the impact of something else, but he was knocked unconscious and left in a ditch. He woke up days later, covered in water, completely soaking wet. He made it to a medical hospital, where they determined that, after spending days in a water-filled ditch, he had caugh pneumonia. His recovery was slow, and eventually they determined that part of his one lung was ruined because of his experiences. It would have to be removed. The opperation was successful, and to this day my grandfather still only has about 1 1/2 lungs.

The war ended, and eventually, after six additional months of service, my grandfather came home. He returned to Rutger's on the G.I. bill, and finished the three years he had left for his engineering degree. He graduated and actually returned to the army, working for the government at Fort Monmouth, NJ. He worked there until he retired in the 1980s.

While in college, however, he met a girl from Utica, New York, named Edith Snyder. Edith was the youngest of three children, having an older brother, Arthur, and an older sister, Ruth. Her father had been a Postal worker for years, so she came from a typical middle class family. She fell in love with my grandfather and, much to her parent's dismay (he was, after all, still half Japanese) married him in New Jersey in 1952. Found the happy couple yet? They're in the back of the photo, dead center. You can see my grandfather looking very happy. It's very cute.

They settled into Middletown, New Jersey, in a yellow house that I came to know very well in my early childhood. In 1954 they had their first child, a boy they named Alan. In 1958 their second child, a girl, was born. Her name was Sharon. She died 4 days after being born, having been born with serious health problems. This could be due to the fact that Edith smoked through her pregnancy. This was the 1950s, after all, before pregancy health had become a major issue.

In April of 1960 my mother was born. She was several weeks early, and very small, due, again, to what we believe is her mother smoking. While she was tiny, she survived, and suffered no other complications from her birth. They named her Lynne.





By my mother's account, she lived a normal childhood. Her father worked all day, her mother stayed at home. Typical 1960s family. She had her own bedroom, didn't bother her older brother too much, and played with her friends in the neighborhood. She went to Catholic Mass every Sunday, though she went to public school.

In 1975 her mother died from lung cancer. My mom was 15, my uncle 21. My grandfather, unsure of how to raise a daughter by himself, or a son for that matter (he was still at home at the time) decided to marry Edith's sister, Ruth, who had never married. He has been married to her since then.

As odd as it is, she is the person who I call my grandma. I call her Nana. She is, technically speaking, my great aunt. But I never knew my real nana. She died long before I was born. So my nana is my nana because, well...I guess you could say she was in the right place at the right time. She married my grandfather after his first wife died. So she became my grandmother, in her own way.

My grandfather still resides in New Jersey. One of those life-long residents, I guess. He lives in Princeton now, in a retirement community. He runs a small community store there, that sells groceries and basic goods to the people. Like his father, he seems to have a knack for operating small businesses. He does the invintory, prices things, and hires volunteers to come in and work five days a week. The only difference, he claims, is that he orders a lot of his items online in bulk. His father never had that opportunity.

My great-grandfather passed away in 1976, a year after my mother's mother passed away. His wife, however, lived until 1992. She was ninety-nine years old when she finally died. Being born in 1986, I had the opportunity to meet her while she was alive. So did my sister, actually. Up until the day she died, my grandfather cared for her as only a son can. You could tell he really loved her. And all that she provided for her children.

And that's it. Well, not it. But that's what I know. Every piece of my family history, at least on that side. It seems like a lot, but I know it's not. I don't have every date, I don't have all the information. There are large gaps in people's lives. I don't exactly know what they did. But that's the goal of this blog. I hope to fill in some of those holes. Make sense of this entire mess. And hopefully discover something new about my family, and it's history, that I didn't know before.

That's all for today. That's a lot, really. I usually don't write for this long. We will have to keep these shorter. Tomorrow I will post some letters. I started to go over them. They're really fascinating.

Until next time,
E


{1} Resch, John P. "Japanese Americans in WWII". 2001. .
{2} Resch, 2001.
{3} "63rd Infantry Division (United States)." 2009. .

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Just the Facts, Please

So my research has begun.

I knew some of it from my family. We're talkers, you know. When we get together, on those rare occasions, we tend to talk about the past. Isn't that just a natural thing in life, to talk about things you can all relate to? My mom and her brother, my uncle, will talk about growing up. How he punched his fist through their wall. When she knocked her mother's tooth out. Their trips to the Boardwalk, and the beach, all piled into the station wagon with no seatbelts. Going to that Elton John concert with her neighbor. Graduation. College. It's all there, tucked away in the back of their minds, these stories that emerge when families come together. Stories that make you laugh, and make you cry. Stories that make you wonder what the hell you were doing. Stories that make you really look back upon your childhood and appreciate it. And realize how much you failed to appreciate it when you were living in that very moment.

So my family tells stories. We gather round my grandpa's living room, some sitting some standing, because there's not enough room for all of us anymore, and we tell stories. My grandpa has a big family, all things considered. Two kids, two in-laws, and six grandkids. Not bad for a guy who only had two kids. My mom talks about her neighbors growing up, how they all had lots of siblings. It was a Catholic New Jersey neighborhood, after all, where birth control was shunned and new family members were looked at as a blessing from God. Her friends growing up had large families: 4 siblings, 5, 6. My mom had an older brother, six years her senior, who didn't have time for her. The stories they tell reflect that.

My mom tells me stuff about my grandpa, too, when he's not around. Some of it she got from her mother, before she died. My mom's mother died in 1975. So my mom's own information is a bit limited. But she tells me information when she knows it, or remembers it, and I store it away for future opportunities, such as this one.

What I do know about my grandpa, then, is a collection of facts, stories, and pictures. He's not one to talk about himself. We don't ask him about the war, because he doesn't ever talk about it. My mother claims she can remember him saying one thing about the war the entire time she was growing up. It's not a subject he talks about, so it's not a subject we talk about. The internet is an amazing thing, though. One quick google search can start anyone on the path to looking up information. Since 2004 the National Archives has posted more war documents online for people to look up. About more than just WWII. WWI, Vietnam, Korea (ok, if you're reading this, I know the last two were just "conflicts", not wars. But in the National Archives they're all grouped together). It's all there. Type in a key word, phrase, or number, and you can receive a plethora of information on the screen in front of you, all waiting for you to dig through it. It's amazing.

So here's what I know about my grandfather. The short, the dirty the ugly. The weak foundation I'm starting my search on. What I know, you know.

My great grandfather, Archie K. Kumasaka, was born in Japan in 1890. His family immigrated to Hawaii when he was still a child (remember, Hawaii was not a U.S. state at this time. His family could not get a full passage into America, and so they used Hawaii as a stepping stone) where his father worked on the sugar plantations. Eventually, at an unknown time, they made their way to America, settling in San Francisco. My great-grandfather and his family were in the city during the 1902 earthquake. Don't worry, though, they were all fine. Made it out, and, eventually (again, the time is unknown) my great-great-grandfather moved his family to New Jersey. He traveled cross-country in hopes of better work.

So in enters my great-grandfather. It's early in the 20th century. He's young, a Japanese-American, and is trying to make a name for himself. He settles into Keansburg, New Jersey and does what any young hopeful does: he opens a store.




Kumasaka's Department Store, as seen here in a postcard. He opened it on Main Street in Keansburg, and hired some employees. One was a young woman by the name of Florence Riker.

Florence came from a fairly affluent family. Her family name was also attached to a fairly well-known island in New York City. Yeah, that Riker's Island. As in the one where the prison is built. What a claim to fame. :) She grew up in a nice neighborhood, though, with a nice family. When she was in her early 20s she got a job at Kumasaka's Department Store. She was a cashier, at, what my family assumes, was her first real job. And she fell in love.

It was a match made for no one but themselves. When Florence came home and announced that she was marrying her boss, a Japanese immigrant, her parents were furious. She was a white American, her family didn't associate with people like that. They worried what the town would say, what the neighbors would think. Florence didn't care. On the other end, I'm sure Archie was receiving the same sort of lecture from his family. Not only was he marrying one of his employees, but he was marrying a white girl, someone who didn't understand his family, or his culture, or his way of life.

They were married not soon after.

The marriage was a happy one for both of them. They were the odd couple, by all accounts, but it worked for them. My great-grandfather worked hard at his store, and became well known in his neighborhood. People began to look past his image as an immigrant, as a Japanese man, and saw him for the honest, caring person he was. His store was successful, and he opened more of them. Some opened on the New Jersey beach, others in small communities like Keansburg. Florence helped him run the stores, when she wasn't caring for her kids.





They had three children. The first child, a girl, was born in 1920. They named her Violet. In 1922 Archie, my grandfather, was born. He was named after his father. In 1934 a final child, a girl, was born. They named her Florence, after her mother.

In the back rown, from left to right is my mother's mom, Florence, her mother Florence, and Violet.

The family grew in happiness, encouraged by the success of their stores. My grandfather worked with his father in his spare time, helping him with inventory, stocking, and cleaning. He grew up considering himself to be an American first, with his Japanese heritage just a characteristic of who he was.

As the war approached, it would soon change.

I am going to leave off there. Duties around the house call. Oil changes for cars, laundry, that much. I will try to continue later today. Maybe tomorrow.

Until then,
E

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Beginnings

I am 27. According to adults older and wiser than me, I am just starting out in life, just truly discovering who I am. People ask me all the time, "Who are you?". How do I answer? A name, an adjective, a phrase. I am so many things, as I am now discovering, and only with all of them am I whole.

I am a daughter, a sister, a friend. I am quiet, and unorganized, and passionate. I am easily amused, a college gradute, a story teller. I laugh when things aren't funny, I procrastinate, I don't get enough sleep. I am a teacher. I am a sports fan. I am patriotic, and an American. I like sushi. I am left-handed. I love to read.

I have generations of family members who have come before me, from different countries around the world. I am German, and Swedish, and English, and Japanese. My family has a distinct and unique past, that has, in some form or another, shaped who I am today. I have become the person I am with the help of my family. Generations of people, each living their lives, each having an impact on shaping mine. Sisters, brothers, fathers, mothers. Laughter, tears, unexpected surprises. Life, simply put. Their lives have touched mine, and molded me into the person I am today.

It is this thought, then, this idea of my family directly impacting my own life, that has brought about this blog. The purpose of this blog, plain and simple, is to research my grandfather's life, through his own letter's and other resources, and put together a better understanding of who he is.

There may never be another soul who wanders onto this website. I realize that. This is not so much a quest to reach the masses, but a journey to help me understand not only my grandfather, but myself. I am, after all a history major. These things come easily to me. When my grandfather recently handed me a stack of letters from his service in WWII, I knew immediately what I wanted to do with them: I want to transcribe them, and research them further. There may never be another person in the world who appreciates this. But for me, in my own way, it is something that needs to be done.

As I transcribe the letters, and dig up more of his past, I will post here. I don't know how often it will be. I'm a busy girl, working two jobs to make ends meet. But this is a passion I have, so I hope to be back often to share more.

Until next time,
E