Description
A collection of 36 videotaped interviews with Japanese Americans (primarily Nisei) in the San Joaquin Valley. Funded by the
Japanese Americans Citizens League (JACL), the oral histories were initiated by the late Izumi Taniguchi, a retired professor
of Economics at California State University, Fresno.
Background
In 1998, Izumi Taniguchi, a retired professor of Economics at California State University, Fresno, wrote a grant to begin
an oral history project with Japanese Americans in the San Joaquin Valley. This grant was funded by the Japanese American
Citizens League (JACL) and allowed the group to purchase a video camera and get some training in how to conduct oral histories.
The San Joaquin Valley Japanese American History Project, as it was named by Taniguchi, was later sponsored by the Asian American
Studies Program in the School of Social Sciences at California State University, Fresno. The purpose of the project was to
document "the history and contributions of Japanese Americans and their organizations in the San Joaquin Valley, [the] state,
and the country" (Box 1, Release agreement, undated). Volunteer interviewers from the Fresno Chapter and the Central California
District Council of the JACL videotaped interviews with Japanese Americans, primarily the Nisei (second generation) from Merced
County to Kern County to make them available for research and other scholarly purposes. Izumi Taniguchi and Grace Kimoto
of the Livingston-Merced Chapter of the JACL took a lead role in the keeping the project going although the goal was always
to have people in every JACL chapter in the Central Valley take an active role in conducting interviews.