Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Yoko Ono Family, Public Sources, 1933-1952

Yoko was born on February 18, 1933. Her father is listed on official documents as 'Eisuke' but he was known to Yoko as Yeisuke, as revealed on her flickr account. He was born around 1902 and started to work for the Yokohama Specie Bank around twenty years before World War II, according to an interview he gave in 1952. Yeisuke was transferred to the USA in 1933 and spent four years in the San Francisco branch and four in the New York one, according to that clipping. His travel record* shows that he left Yokohama on January 20, 1933, age listed as 30, on the SS Asama-Maru, and arrived in San Francisco on February 2. His arrival date was 16 days prior to Yoko's given date of birth, so perhaps the family was left behind due to his wife being heavily pregnant? The passenger manifest is below:





Yoko and her mother, Isoko, followed two years later, as shown in this document. Mother and daughter (Isoko aged 24, Yoko aged 2) sailed from Yokohama on the SS Chichibu Maru 
on June 13, 1935, arriving in San Francisco on June 26. Their travel was authorized under the Treaty of Commerce*:




The ship was sunk
 by a US torpedo on April 28, 1943.

Her father and other relatives took photographs and film footage in Japan and San Francisco that were included in her "Times Talks" interview in 2016; see the clips shown below:


The Lenono Photo Archive includes this photo of Yoko as a baby in Japan:



It also includes this image of her traveling to the US.

From the same archive, this image was taken in San Francisco in 1936:



Isoko took Yoko back to Japan in 1937, just after giving birth to her son, Keisuke, in San Francisco on December 20, 1936, but they had had returned to Yoko's father in New York by 1940 and were living at 4202 195th Street in Queens at the time of the 1940 census, shown below:



According to various unverifiable sources, Eisuke was transferred to Hanoi in 1941 and the family had already moved back to Japan due to growing tensions between the US and Japan and perhaps anticipating the racism that Japanese residents would experience in the US during the 1940s. Yoko reappears in US records in 1952 when she returns to the US presumably following her father's transfer to the Bank of Tokyo job there. However the travel record* shows Yoko's age as 23 so there is some uncertainty as to whether this is our Yoko




Yoko's sister Setsuko was born in Tokyo in 1941. Her Japanese autobiography contains this photo of the family taken in 1952 in Scarsdale, New York:



Her brother attended the local school and had this entry in its Yearbook for 1954-55:

Meanwhile her future husband, a pianist and future composer who was known at that time as Tossi Ichiyinagi, was attending the University of Minnesota and is pictured here on the right reciting his Sonata in 1953:


Yoko and Ichiyinagi would subsequently collaborate with numerous avant garde artists and musicians, as documented in the next article.

*Source Citation: The National Archives at Washington, D.C.; Washington, D.C.; Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at San Francisco, California; NAI Number: 4498993; Record Group Title: Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1787-2004; Record Group Number: 85

Source Information: Ancestry.com. California, Passenger and Crew Lists, 1882-1959 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Why There Were No Plans To Segregate The Beatles’ 1964 Jacksonville Concert

         This post revises our knowledge of the Beatles and segregation during their 1964 US tour.  The Beatles were unintentionally misled ...