Tomi, An Issei Woman
Kishiro was successful enough to make a trip back to Japan to visit his family in the countryside (Naegi) and get married to Tomi Murakami, from a prominent sword-making family in Tokyo in 1901, only four years after first coming to the U.S. Kishiro and Tomi settled in Oakland and had 7 children, all born in Oakland, many of whom he sent to U.C. Berkeley for higher education. Japanese immigration to the U.S. stopped for men after 1907 with the Gentlement's Agreement, whereby the U.S. government agreed to stop segregating Japanese children in schools and the Japanese government agreed to halt emigration from Japan to the U.S. After 1907, wives and children were allowed to immigrate to marry or re-connect with their Japanese husbands and fathers. However, none of these immigrants would not be able to naturalize as U.S. citizens.
Kishiro and Tomi immigrated before this law, which was formalized in the Immigration Act of 1924. Their romance is an interesting story. Why would Tomi leave all that she knew when she came from a prominent family? Did Kishiro intend to move back to Japan after a few years in the U.S.? Did they consider this move a temporary adventure or a permanent decision?
She went home on a few occasions to Japan. She went there in 1910 to bring her two eldest children, Kimi and Sus, to be educated in Japan and raised among family there (in Tokyo and Naegi). She also had a large Japanese community in Oakland through the Japanese Methodist Church in Oakland.
Tomi's Family in Japan
Some is known about Tomi's maternal family (Tsujikawa). There was an aunt Iyoko (could this be Tomi's aunt or great aunt?) who was recognized for her beautiful calligraphy and was a scribe in the court of Emperor Meiji.
Tomi got married to Kishiro Yamashita on June 2, 1901 in Tokyo in an arranged marriage. Kyobashi-ku (currently Chuo-ku) is adjacent to Azabu-ku where Tomi's first two children, Kimi and Sus, attended Toyo Eiwa and Hijirizaka grammar and Azabu Middle schools, respectively. [Karent Tei Yamashita's 1972 Yamashita family research]
Tomi was proud of her Samurai heritage. Tokichi was a retired samurai whose family became sword makers. Ko was a patron of the arts and held "salons" in their Tokyo home to entertain artists. Kimi and Sus were exposed to this environment at the Murakami residence. Tomi said that the Murakamis were the "true samurais" in the Yamashita family (as opposed to Kishiro's family which had bought the title of samurai.[Chiz's memories of Tomi]
Map of Tokyo Before the Kanto Earthquake of 1923. Tomi's family lived in Kyobashi-Ku a district Southeast from the Imperial Palace in Tokyo.
Becoming a Christian in Oakland
Oakland Japanese Methodist Church, Circa late 1920s, early 1930s(?).
To see the left half of the photograph. Can you find John and Sus?
To see the right half of the photograph. Can you find Tomi?
Close up, John is barely visible, with his eyes peeking over the shoulders of the adult men in the back row. Oakland Japanese Methodist Church, Circa late 1920s, early 1930s(?).
Kay described her family's conversion to Christianity after coming to the U.S.
As the Issei lived in Calfornia, they put down roots. Issei women found that they had more freedoms in the United States than in Japan. At least, they did not have their husband’s parents to care for. They could be active in their social lives, organize events with the church.
Tomi with Church Friends (?), Unknown Date. Tomi is standing in second row from bottom, at far left, holding a child.
The white stucco building pictured in the sepia tone photographs was the congregation's first building it purchased outright in 1907 at 795 10th Street (at the corner of West Street and 10th Street) in Oakland. The congregation had formed earlier, in 1887. To read a short history of the church and the congregation that survives today, see here. This history contextualizes the new building acquisition as a milestone made in the wake of the devastating fire of 1907 in San Francisco which led many Japanese to move from San Francisco to Oakland. To see a historic map of Oakland which shows this intersection, now replaced by 1960s redevelopment, see here.
When Tomi was incarcerated during the war, she got a postive reference sent to the War Relocation Authority by the two pastors of her church. Frank Herron Smith described her as a capable church widow who had sent many of her children to college because of her laundering business.
Visiting Japan
Designing & Patenting a Pregnancy Girdle
The Dry Cleaning Business & The Written Threat
Then she worked at a cleaners doing alterations until her son, John, decided she should have her own shop. He arranged to rent space in the Fox Oakland Theatre building at Telegraph Avenue and 19th Street (517 19th Street). He secured a license for Tomi to do business and operate a pressing machine. They bought a second pressing machine and John furnished the place with cleaning racks he made from steel poles he bought and painted. For a fee, Rex Cleanings, a whole sale business picked up dirty clothes to be dry cleaned and returned them to Tomi to be pressed. Tomi kept one sewing machine to make alterations.
The business was named the Mayfair Cleaning Shoppe. Tomi made money altering the inexpensive pants men bought at the Dollar Store across the street. She must have spoken English well enough to conduct business. Her youngest daughter, Kay, described her English proficiency as halting.
There were other Japanese businesses near Tomi's new business, with Olympic Produce Company across the street from her storefront. Japanese American businesses in Oakland in 1940 are recorded in an atlas. The storefront where Tomi's business was in the 1930s still stands in Downtown Oakland today.
Martha (also known as Marty), Tomi's second grandchild, recalls memories of taking lunch to her grandmother working at Mayfair:
Summers in Oakland were cooler than Fresno, would go to Uncle John's church Sunday's, roller skate with June Yamada sometimes. Chiz would pick me up in Fresno with Kix and drive north. We were given a nickel and dime for Sunday offering, We were told the small one for church and the big one for ice cream enroute home, and sometimes Kix ended up with the dime, having given the big one for offering!
[Email Correspondence, 2015]
Storefront, circa 2014 from google maps. Tomi's dry cleaning business was located (517 19th Street at corner with Telegraph and in the same building as the Fox Theatre) from 1932-1941.
Tomi's Alien Registration Card
The date on this card shows that it was registered on Feb 7, 1942. Based on the Alien Registration Act of 1940 also known as the Smith Act, all non-citizens were required to register at local post offices. Tomi registered before the proclamations were issued limiting movement of all people of Japanese descent. A curfew was instated in March of 1942 where Japanese Americans were not allowed to be farther than five miles from their house at any time other than for work or travel to work, and were required to be at home from 8pm to 6am. To read about the connections between the proposals for a Muslim Registry and the history of registration and exclusion of Japanese Americans, see this Densho post.
Grandma, not Obaachan
Tomi at the Beach | Tomi, right, being fancy | Eating Ice Cream Cones, Tomi, second to left. |
What do these images of Tomi in Golden Gate Park tell us? Does she look American? Does she look acculturated? Is her degree of assimilation to America something that defined her life and her story which dims all other narratives? Are there alternate views of this woman, insider-views? There is the view from her grandchildren, who were around her in the 1950s and 60s, long after her youthful days in the 1900s. When preparing for the day or winding down from one, she would lie on her back on the bed and move her legs as if riding a bicycle and stretch her legs. This routine was one that only her small grandkids would see or remember. She would take care of her grandkids when their parents went away. She would photograph herself and her friends in old age. She would keep photographs of all of her grandkids. She would see them disperse. And when she was dying in her 90s, her kids took care of her and tried their best to comfort her- they gave her grapes with the skin peeled off, her favorite.