Title:
Noboru Doi and his father, Tonokichi Doi, are showing some of their Thompson Seedless grapes on their 72-acre vineyard located ...Date:
1945-06-26Subject:
Japanese Americans--Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945--PhotographsNote:
Full title:Noboru Doi and his father, Tonokichi Doi, are showing some of their Thompson Seedless grapes on their 72-acre vineyard
located at Rt. 1, Box 53, Parlier, California, to which the family returned early in January from the Gila River Relocation
Center. Mr. Doi and his daughter, Betty, were the first evacuees to return to the Parlier district since the lifting of the
exclusion orders. They arrived home on January 6. The other members of the family joined them on January 24. Noboru Doi, who
was honorably discharged from the Army, states that they had no difficulty in marketing their plums and peaches. Mr. Doi's
brother, Toichi, is now serving with the 442nd Infantry and he is a holder of two Purple Heart medals.<lb/> Photographer:
Iwasaki, Hikaru<lb/> Parlier, California.
Local Call Number:
WRA no. I-955
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Related Item:
METACOLLECTION:
Voices in Confinement: A Digital Archive of Japanese-American Internees