Descriptive Summary
Access
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Acquisition Information
Processing Information
Biography History
Scope and Content of Collection
Arrangement
Indexing Terms
Related Material
Descriptive Summary
Title: Claire (Tsuyuko Fukumitsu) and Isao Suzuki papers
Dates: 1913-1999
Collection number: 2003.2
Collection Size:
10 linear feet
Repository:
Japanese American National Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.)
Los Angeles, California 90012
Creator: Suzuki, Claire (Tsuyuko Fukumitsu)
Creator: Suzuki, Isao
Abstract: This collection contains artifacts, photographs, and papers pertaining to Claire (Tsuyuko Fukumitsu) and Isao Suzuki’s family
history, childhood, their incarceration at Tule Lake during World War II, and their post-war business careers.
Physical location: Japanese American National Museum. 100 North Central Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012.
Access
By appointment only. Please contact the Collections Management and Access Unit (collections@janm.org). Advanced notice is
required.
Publication Rights
All requests for permission to publish, reproduce, or quote from materials in this collection must be submitted to the Collections
Management and Access Unit at the Japanese American National Museum (collections@janm.org).
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Claire (Tsuyuko Fukumitsu) and Isao Suzuki papers. 2003.2, Japanese American National Museum. Los
Angeles, CA.
Acquisition Information
Gift of Yukie Kawase.
Processing Information
This collection was processed by staff at an earlier date. The finding aid was written in 2018 by Mariah Sander and updated
in 2024 by Jamie Henricks.
Biography History
Tsuyuko and Yukie Fukumitsu grew up in Ogden and Brigham, Utah where their father worked various jobs on sugar beet farms,
in restuarants, and for railway companies such as Western Pacific. When Tsuyuko was five and Yukie, was three, their mother,
Tazu Fukumitsu, took them to Hiroshima to live with relatives and receive a Japanese education. While Yukie shortly returned
home, Tsuyuko remained in Japan until she was fifteen years old. When the Fukumitsu family moved to Nevada, Tsuyuko attended
an intensive English language program for four years. The family moved to Sacramento in 1935, and would lived there until
1942 when they were incarcerated in the Tule Lake concentration camp. During this period, Yukie had a child with her husband
and Tsuyuko taught sewing classes. Tsuyuko was accepted into fashion design school.
Isao Suzuki was born in 1917 and grew up in Montebello, California, close to Los Angeles. He attended primary school in Japan
from 1928 to 1937 and graduated from Montebello High School in 1939. He was deported to Santa Anita temporary detention center
in 1942 and transferred to Jerome incarceration camp in 1943. At Jerome, he was employed as a manager for Block 5, the same
block where his family resided. He was paid $19 per month, common for the WRA’s artificially low wage scale that prevented
inmates from earning more than soldiers and white employees. When the WRA issued the loyalty questionnaire in early 1943,
he was deemed “disloyal” for answering “no” to one of the questions and transferred to Tule Lake in May of 1944. When the
camp closed in 1946, he lived in Cleveland, Ohio until he returned to Montebello in 1948. He would live and work in Los Angeles
area for the next several decades.
Tsuyuko Fukumitsu and Isao Suzuki married on November 27, 1949. The couple lived and worked in Los Angeles during the post-war
era. From the 1950s to early 1960s, Isao operated a Snowbird Ice Cream store, a chain that would later become Baskin Robbins,
and Tsuyuko ran the store at night. During the day, Tsuyuko worked as an assistant for fashion designer Dorothy O’Hara. After
O’Hara fell ill and could no longer run her business, O’Hara’s husband encouraged Tsuyuko to pursue her own company. Tsuyuko
and Isao established Claire & Ken, Inc., which they named after their respective English names. Their manufacturing business
officially opened in the mid-1960s, operating out of a warehouse built in Buena Park, California. O’Hara, Saks Fifth Avenue,
and Georgette Trilere hired the company to produce their clothing designs.
Scope and Content of Collection
This collection contains correspondence, photographs, albums, scrapbooks, diaries, documents, and artifacts that relate to
Isao and Tsuyuko Suzuki’s early lives, their incarceration at American concentration camps during WWII, and their post-war
business careers. Kawase owned the empty box of fingertip service cards and compiled the family photograph album included
in this collection.
Arrangement
The collection is organized into the following series:
- Series 1: Tsuyuko (Fukumistu) Suzuki collection
- Series 2: Isao Suzuki collection
- Series 3: Wayne M. Collins citizenship documents and correspondence
- Series 4: Japanese American Evacuation Claims Act compensation documents
- Series 5: Fukumitsu and Suzuki photographs
Indexing Terms
Japanese Americans--California--Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945
Tule Lake Relocation Center
Jerome Relocation Center (Ark.)
Santa Anita Assembly Center (Calif.)
Cleveland, Ohio
Redress for historical injustices
Japanese American women teachers
Fashion Design
Sewing
O'Hara, Dorothy
Related Material
The museum holds other collections that document Claire (Tsuyuko Fukumitsu) Suzuki’s life as a Kibei Nisei, her study of sewing
techniques in Japan, and contain her annotated scrapbooks.