
Rohwer Relocation Camp, Arkansas, c.1943 Yoshikawa Family Papers

Letter from Fujino Tashida to Claire D. Sprauge, 1942
Clair Sprauge Papers
Elizabeth Carden was teacher at Stockton High School. This collection includes letters from former students who were sent to the Japanese Relocation Camp at Rohwer, Arkansas. Her papers are part of the Small California Collections.
Guy Cook was a vice-principal and teacher at Tri-State High School at the Tule Lake Relocation Camp near Newell, California. This collection contains correspondence, reports of the War Relocation Authority, memoranda, pamphlets, and clippings from camp newspapers.
Harold Jacoby was in charge of security at the Tule Lake internment camp. This collection includes War Relocation Authority reports, field notes, yearbooks, clippings, and other materials relating to Tule Lake and other camps.
Marie Mitsuda was relocated to the Rohwer Relocation Center, Arkansas, where she attended and graduated from High School. This collection consists mainly of materials generated during Mitsuda's time at the Rohwer Relocation Center, including Center and school materials, and reunion materials.
Roy Nakatani was relocated to Granada Relocation Center in Amache, Colorado, where he served as a farm worker. His papers include correspondence, reports, business accounts, and documents on farm production at Granada. His papers are part of the Small California Collections.
Claire Sprague taught in Stockton public schools, where she worked with Japanese-American children at the time of their relocation to internment camps. This collection includes letters written to Sprague by her former students, interned Japanese-American sixth graders.
James Tanji was an internee at the Merced Assembly Center, and collected copies of center's newsletter, the Mercedian, from June-August, 1942.
This collection documents the relocation experience of the Yoshikawa family from Stockton to the Rohwer Relocation Camp in Arkansas. It includes correspondence, personal papers, camp publications, and many photographs of camp life.
Images of materials in the Japanese-American internment collections can be viewed through Japanese American Relocation Digital Archives, as well as the online finding aids of each individual collection.