Warren Nishimoto

Interviewee Sort descending Collection Description Interviewer Date of Interview Location of Interview Affiliation
Albert L. Stanley Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

Albert Louis Stanley was born August 31, 1930 in Hilo, Hawai'i. His father, Clyde LeGrand Stanley, was originally from Missouri. He journeyed to Hawai'i as a young man in 1916 in search of excitement Settling flrst in Hilo working for Hawaiian Dredging Company, Clyde Stanley married Rosina Bassler, a public health nurse in Hilo. The couple eventually moved to Laupahoehoe, where he worked as a maintenance superintendent for Hawaiian Consolidated Railway, Ltd.

Warren Nishimoto Honolulu, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Albert O. Adams Kalihi: Place of Transition

Albert Oliveira Adams, Portuguese, was born May 21, 1909, in Nuuanu, Oahu.

Warren Nishimoto Kalihi, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Alexander M. Riviera Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

The seventh of thirteen children, Alexander M. Riviera was born in Hakalau, Hawai'i on August 9, 1931. His father was John Fernando Rivera, who immigrated from Puerto Rico in 1901, and Mary Dejesus Rivera, who was of Spanish descent and born in Hawai'i. [Note: Alexander changed the spelling of his last name.] Like many laborers, Riviera's father took on contracts at various sugar plantations on the Big Island. Riviera and his siblings spent their childhoods living in sugar plantation camps at Hakalau, Kukuihaele, Papa'aloa, and Papa'ikou.

Warren Nishimoto Hilo, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Bunji Fujimoto Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

Bunji Fujimoto, the sixth of ten children, was born March 22, 1930 in N"mole, Hawai'i. His parents, Saiji Fujimoto and Ei Sorakubo Fujimoto, were immigrants from Hiroshima, Japan. Saiji Fujimoto was a laborer and independent sugarcane grower for Wailea Milling Company which later (1944) merged with Hakalau Plantation Company. As a youth, Fujimoto helped his father in the sugarcane fields. His chores at home included cutting grass for livestock, feeding livestock and poultry, and tending the family garden.

Warren Nishimoto Hilo, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Catherine Diama Campainha Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

Catherine Diama Campainha was born to Visayan immigrants, Catalina Buscas Diama and Agapito Diama, in Hilo, Hawai'i on March 28, 1938. She has five brothers and four sisters. Her father owned and operated Mamo Pool Hall, a billiard parlor located below their living quarters, and rented out rooms to bachelors in a boardinghouse. Her mother leased and ran the Ideal Meat Market until the mid-1940s. The Diama home on Mamo Street was a gathering place.

Warren Nishimoto Hilo, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
David T. Souza Kalihi: Place of Transition

David Souza, Portuguese, was born February 7, 1906, in Honolulu. His father, a former storekeeper, died when David was three years old. The family then moved to Kalihi Valley, where David has lived ever since. He attended schools in Kalihi Valley and Kalihi Waena and graduated from St. Louis in 1926. During this time, David participated in community- and school-sponsored sports. After graduating from St. Louis, David worked as a wharf clerk for the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company. He remained there until 1952. He then became a wharf clerk for Thea H. Davies and Co., Ltd.

Warren Nishimoto Honolulu, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Eloise Ahuna Pung Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

The middle of three children born to Randolph Ahuna, Sr. and Adeline .Kame'ekua Ahuna, Eloise Ahuna Pung was born in Kukuiopa'e, South Kona, Hawai'i on December 16, 1933. Her paternal grandfather, Loo Ahuna, had a farm where he grew coffee and raised poultry and livestock.

Warren Nishimoto Hilo, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Eric McD. "Iki" Moir Koloa: An Oral History of a Kauai Community

''Iki" Moir is the only child of Hector Moir and Alexandria Knudson Moir. Hector Moir was the manager of Koloa Sugar Company from 1933 to 1948; he stepped down when Koloa Sugar Company merged with Grove Farm. Alexandria Knudson Moir is a descendent of the Sinclair, Gay and Robinson families who owned Ni'ihau and parts of Kaua'i.

Warren Nishimoto Poipu, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Fusae Takaki Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

Fusae Tanaka Takaki was born May 28, 1923 in Hilo. She was the youngest of four children born to Eijiro Tanaka and Kura Hano Tanaka, both immigrants from Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. Eijiro Tanaka worked as a stone crusher, stevedore, and merchant marine. Her mother sold lunches and snacks from her car near Coconut Island and the Hilo wharf area. Takaki was raised in the Shinmachi district of Hilo, home to a large portion of Hilo's Japanese population.

Warren Nishimoto Hilo, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History
Harold P. Luscomb Tsunamis Remembered: Oral Histories of Survivors and Observers in Hawai‘i

Harold P. Luscomb was born April 27, 1926 in Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Pittsburgh. His Hilo-bom father, Harold P. Luscomb, Sr., had moved to Pennsylvania to work for Westinghouse Electric Company and to work toward a degree in electrical engineering. There he met his wife, Helen Jones Luscomb. Harold Jr., the couple's only child, was raised at the home of his maternal grandparents in Pittsburgh. At the age of ten, Harold, his father, and mother moved to Hilo, where his father was employed by Hilo Electric Light Company.

Warren Nishimoto Hilo, HI University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History