Box 1908-001-1
Contains 45 Results:
Evacuees A, 1942
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees M-N, 1943
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees H, 1943
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees I, 1943
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees K, 1943
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees M, 1943
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees A-C, 1943
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees W-Y, 1942
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees S, 1942
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.
Evacuees T-U, 1942
Letters to Emery Andrews, primarily from members of Seattle Japanese Baptist Church, 1942-1946. Correspondents include Japanese Americans incarcerated at Minidoka and other camps, as well as those who had relocated out of camps during and immediately after WWII. Letters deal mainly with requests for Andrews to retrieve personal property from Seattle, contact friends and family members, and intervene on behalf of incarcerees.