Warren Nishimoto
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Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
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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 | |
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 | |
Anna Goodhue | Tsunamis in Maui County: Oral Histories |
One of twelve children, a woman discusses her family's background. She explains how the children divided their time between Oahu and Molokai, traveling on the inter-island steamships. She recalls the effect of the 1946 tsunami on family and neighbors. Also described are the traditional luaus (feasts). Goodhue was also interviewed for the Ualapue project. |
Jeanne Johnston | Puko'o, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Barbara J.H. Cannon | Tsunamis in Maui County: Oral Histories |
Young marrieds in 1946, a woman and her husband were caught in the 1946 tsunami, which destroyed their beachfront house in Spreckelsville. She details their swimming to safety along with neighbors and coping in the aftermath of the flooding. Also recalled is the 1960 tsunami as it affected Kailua, Oahu. |
Jeanne Johnston, Susan Tissot | Kula, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Bennet Baldwin | Tsunamis in Maui County: Oral Histories |
A Kula-born man speaks briefly of his family and rural lifestyle. He remembers the tsunamis from the perspective of a young child. |
Jeanne Johnston | Paia, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Betty Alberts | Tsunamis in Maui County: Oral Histories |
Betty Neary Alberts was born in California and later moved to Hawai'i as a child. Her mother was a teacher and worked for the Naval Air Station during the war. Betty grew up in Pa'ia, Maui, where she enjoyed climbing trees, going to the beach, and playing games with friends. She attended grade school in Pa'ia and later moved to California for college. Betty got married at the end of her junior year in college and had four children. |
Jeanne Johnston | Paia, 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 | |
Clare Merrill | Tsunamis in Maui County: Oral Histories |
A woman recalls the lifestyles of her mother, a teacher; father, a plantation engineer; uncle, a plantation manger; and aunt. She also describes Lahaina town and Lahainaluna School and the effect of World War II on her daily life. Safe at school when the 1946 tsunami hit, she relates how the ocean looked that day and how the tidal wave affected Spreckelsville and Mala village. |
Jeanne Johnston | Kahului, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History | |
Eddie Oliveira | Tsunamis in Maui County: Oral Histories |
A man recaps his life story from family background, Nahiku home, childhood games, Civilian Conservation Corps, defense work, military service, and marriage. Missing the 1946 tsunami because he and friends went hunting in the mountains, he recalls visiting Hamoa and describes the devastation there. |
Jeanne Johnston | Hana, HI | University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Center for Oral History |