•
Violet Kazue de Cristoforo (1917–2007), poet. Also interned at
Jerome. •
Mitsuye Endo (1920–2006), plaintiff of the
Ex parte Endo Supreme Court case that led to Japanese Americans being allowed to return to the West Coast and to the closing of the war relocation camps. Also interned at
Topaz. •
Mary Matsuda Gruenewald (1925–2021), memoirist. Also interned at
Heart Mountain. •
Taneyuki "Dan" Harada (1923–2020), a painter and computer programmer. Also interned at
Topaz. •
Hiroshi Honda (1910–1970), an American painter. •
Yamato Ichihashi (1878–1963), one of the first academics of Asian ancestry in the United States. •
Emerick Ishikawa (1920–2006), a weightlifting champion. •
Harvey Itano (1920–2010), became a biochemist best known for his work on the molecular basis of
sickle cell anemia and other diseases. •
Shizue Iwatsuki (1897–1984), a Japanese American poet. Also interned at
Minidoka. •
Hiroshi Kashiwagi (1922–2019), became a poet, playwright and actor. •
Taky Kimura (1924–2021), martial arts practitioner and instructor. Also interned at
Minidoka. •
Daisuke Kitagawa (1910–1970), a reverend and episcopal priest •
Mary Koga (née Mary Hisako Ishii, 1920–2001), a photographer and social worker. •
Tommy Kono (1930–2016), an Olympic gold medalist weightlifter and world record holder. •
Joseph Kurihara (1895–1965), a renunciant. Also interned at
Manzanar. •
Masaaki Kuwabara (1913–1993), lead defendant in
United States v. Masaaki Kuwabara, the only Japanese-American draft resistance case to be dismissed on the basis of a due process violation of the U.S. Constitution. •
William M. Marutani (1923–2004), lawyer, judge, and member of the
Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians •
Bob Matsui (1941–2005), was elected to 13-terms as member of the U.S. House of Representatives. •
Toshiko Mayeda (née Kuki) (1923–2004), a Japanese American chemist •
Tsutomu "Jimmy" Mirikitani (1920–2012), Sacramento, California), artist and subject of
The Cats of Mirikitani, an award-winning documentary film. •
Fujimatsu Moriguchi (1898–1962), an American businessman •
Sadako Moriguchi (née Tsutakawa) (1907–2002), an American businesswoman •
Tomio Moriguchi (born 1936), an American businessman and civil rights activist •
Tomoko Moriguchi-Matsuno (née Moriguchi), (born 1945), an American businesswoman •
Pat Morita (1932–2005), an actor best known for his role in the
Karate Kid films; interned as a child with his family. Also interned at
Gila River. •
Jimmy Murakami (1933–2014), an animator and director. •
George Nakano (born 1935), a former California State Assemblyman. Also interned at Jerome. •
Alan Nakanishi (born 1940), a California politician •
James K. Okubo (1920–1967), a United States Army soldier and a recipient of the
Medal of Honor. Also interned at
Heart Mountain. •
James Otsuka (1921–1984), a conscientious objector during World War II and a war tax resister. •
Otokichi Ozaki (1904–1983), a poet. Also interned at
Jerome. •
James Sakoda (1916–2005), a psychologist and pioneer in computational modeling. Also interned at
Minidoka. •
Minako Sasaki (1943–2023), an actress. Also interned at
Jerome. •
Toshiyuki Seino (born 1938), an American competitive judo athlete. •
Joan Shigekawa (born 1936), an American film and television producer, cultural grantmaker, and arts administrator. •
Yuki Shimoda (1921–1981), an actor. •
Sab Shimono (born 1937), an actor. Also interned at
Granada. •
Hana Shimozumi (1893–1978), an American singer. •
Noboru Shirai, author of "Tule Lake: An Issei Memoir". Born in Hiroshima, Japan, he emigrated to the U.S. in 1934, married Akiko May Taketa (a UC Berkeley graduate born and raised in Sacramento) and was a graduate student at Stanford University in 1942. After his release from Tule Lake, Shirai became a successful California businessman. •
Robert Mitsuhiro Takasugi (1930–2009), first Japanese-American appointed to the federal bench. •
George Takei (born 1937), an American actor best known for his role in Star Trek. Also interned at
Rohwer. •
George T. Tamura (1927–2010), an artist. •
Kazue Togasaki (1897–1992), one of the first two women of Japanese ancestry to earn a medical degree in the United States. Also interned at
Topaz and
Manzanar. •
Teiko Tomita (1896–1990), a tanka poet. Also interned at Heart Mountain. •
Taitetsu Unno (1930–2014), a Buddhist scholar, lecturer, and author. Also interned at
Rohwer. •
Harry Urata (1917–2009), a music teacher •
Jimi Yamaichi member of the 27 draft resisters of conscience, a Tule Lake survivor who shares his memories at the biennial pilgrimages, and promotes preservation of the site. •
Koho Yamamoto (born 1922), an American artist . Also interned at
Topaz. •
Takuji Yamashita (1874–1959), an early 20th-century civil rights pioneer. Also interned at
Manzanar and
Minidoka. •
Kenneth Yasuda (1914–2002), scholar and translator. Also interned at
Jerome. •
David Ikeda (1920–2015), a painter and store owner. ==Terminology==