, head watch-maker •
Kichio Allen Arai (c. 1901 – 1966), an architect. •
Paul Chihara (born 1938), an American composer. •
May Mayko Ebihara (1934–2005), an anthropologist. •
Ken Eto (1919–2004), a Japanese American mobster with the
Chicago Outfit and eventually an FBI informant. •
Fumiko Hayashida (1911–2014), an American activist. Also interned at
Manzanar. •
Shizue Iwatsuki (1897–1984), a Japanese American poet. Also interned at
Tule Lake. •
Shiro Kashino (1922–1997), a decorated soldier in the United States Army during World War II. •
Taky Kimura (1924–2021), a martial arts practitioner and instructor. Also interned at
Tule Lake. •
Joseph Kitagawa (1915–1992), professor at the University of Chicago, known for his work in the history of religions •
Fujitaro Kubota (1879–1973), an American gardener and philanthropist. •
Frank Kunishige (1878–1960), a well-known
pictorialist photographer, and a founder of the
Seattle Camera Club. Also detained at
Camp Harmony. •
Aki Kurose (1925–1998), a Seattle teacher and civil rights activist. • Dr
Kyo Koike (1878–1947), a respected surgeon and poet, who also was a noted photographer and a founder of the
Seattle Camera Club. •
John Matsudaira (1922–2007), an American painter. •
Mich Matsudaira (1937–2019), an American businessman and civil rights activist. •
Shig Murao (1926–1999), a San Francisco clerk who played a prominent role in the San Francisco Beat scene. •
Mako Nakagawa (1937–2021), a Japanese American educator and former director of the Japanese American Cultural Heritage Program and the Rainbow Program •
William K. Nakamura (1922–1944), a United States Army soldier and a recipient of the
Medal of Honor. •
George Nakashima (1905–1990), a Japanese American woodworker, architect, and furniture maker. •
Mira Nakashima (born 1942), an architect and furniture maker. •
Kenjiro Nomura (1896–1956), a Japanese-American painter. •
Frank Okada (1931–2000), an American Abstract Expressionist painter. •
John Okada (1923–1971), a Japanese American writer. •
James Sakamoto (1903–1955), a journalist, boxer and community organizer. •
James Sakoda (1916–2005), a psychologist and pioneer in computational modeling. Also interned at
Tule Lake. •
Bell M. Shimada (1922–1958), an American fisheries scientist. •
Roger Shimomura (born 1939), an American artist and Professor of Art (ret). •
Monica Sone (1919–2011), a Japanese American novelist. •
Bob H. Suzuki (1936–2024), an educator and university administrator. •
Gary A. Tanaka (born 1943), a Japanese American businessman. •
Kamekichi Tokita (1897–1948), a Japanese American painter and diarist. •
Tama Tokuda (1920–2013), a performer and writer. •
Chiye Tomihiro (1924–2012), an activist. •
Mary Mon Toy (1916–2009), a Japanese-American actress, showgirl, and secretary. •
Herbert T. Ueda (1929–2020), an American ice drilling engineer. •
Newton K. Wesley (1917–2011), an optometrist and an early pioneer of the contact lens •
Kenji Yamada (1924–2014), a two-time U.S. National Judo champion •
Mitsuye Yamada (born 1923), a Japanese American writer. •
Takuji Yamashita (1874–1959), an early 20th-century civil rights pioneer. Also interned at
Tule Lake and
Manzanar. •
Minoru Yasui (1916–1986), a Japanese American lawyer who challenged the constitutionality of curfews used during World War II in
Yasui v. United States. == See also ==