Images from the article
Stupidity has never been a negligible force in human affairs,
and it has been an especially potent factor in the history of California's
relations with persons of Japanese ancestry.
A perceptive observer of California's racial tribulations
prior to World War II was the social historian Carey Mc Williams, who observed
in 1935 that anti-Japanese activity in the state had always been characterized
by its ". . . offensive stupidity."1 As these words were being penned this
particular phenomenon already reached back in time over forty years, and would,
within seven years, become a major factor in the mass evacuation of all persons
of Japanese ancestry from the Pacific Coast.
Some of California's most pernicious adventures into
anti-Japanese discrimination are known, but the great bulk of these activities
have passed public notice largely unstudied. A specific example of this type of
oversight was the struggle of Japanese fishermen in the state to earn a
livelihood in an industry that they helped pioneer.
Fishing has always represented a major element in
California's economy, and has likewise been an endeavor which welcomed virtually
any individual not afraid of hard, physical labor. The Chinese had been among
the earliest of the immigrant ethnics to capitalize on the sea's potential, and
by the beginning of the twentieth century the Italians had initiated a coastal
fishery to meet the growing demand for market fish.2 About 1910 the Japanese
began to explore the economic possibilities of the state's fishery with Southern
California singled out for special attention. These early Japanese fishermen
brought with them a wealth of experience and technology that heretofore was not
available in the area.3
This technology notwithstanding, Americans, in the first
decade of this century, were not a nation of fish eaters. It required a world
war to modify the dietary habits of the United States. Assisting Americans to
survive the patriotically inspired "meatless" days were a number of protein
alternatives, of which by far the most successful, was canned tuna.
For the firm white meat, tasting a good deal like chicken, it
was simply a matter of the right product being available in commercial
quantities at the right time. By 1914 the local supply of inshore market fish
had begun to decline to the point that fishermen were pushed farther out to sea
where they discovered, and began to harvest, large catches of tuna. During the
same period a method for successfully canning tuna was developed, making
distribution of the product to interior areas of the United States feasible.4
By 1919 the Japanese with their superior techniques had
become the dominant force in the growing industry. They represented over fifty
percent of California's tuna fishermen, and accounted for eighty-five percent of
the total annual catch.5 Their activities had become increasingly concentrated
in San Diego and San Pedro, due to the proximity of these two ports to the fishing grounds.
A small Japanese fishing community had existed in San Diego
since 1889, relying primarily on inshore fishing for the local market.6 As tuna
fishing grew in importance other San Diego fishermen quickly recognized the
advantage of adopting Japanese methods, and within a few years the long,
slender, amazingly strong bamboo pole equipped with a barbless feathered hook
known as a "squid" was in use throughout the fleet. Technique too was readily
copied. The throwing of live bait, or "chumming," to create a feeding frenzy
among the tuna was also a Japanese innovation.7 A man intimately involved with
this expanding industry and its development in San Diego was Abe Tokunosuke.8
This man, better known in local fishing circles as T. Abe or
H. T. Abe, who was to figure so prominently in the shaping of San Diego's
fishery in the 1930s, had been born in Iwate-Ken, Japan in 1885, the descendant
of a Samurai family. After completing high school and marrying he decided to
emigrate to the United States. Arriving in Seattle in 1906, Abe worked at a
variety of jobs before moving to Southern California. While employed in the Los
Angeles area he attended Woodbury Business College and graduated with a degree
in accounting and business. The offer of a job as secretary of the San Diego
Japanese Vegetable Growers Association brought Abe south. In the course of this
employment he came into close contact with the leaders of San Diego's growing
Japanese community, one of whom was the president of the Mexican Industrial
Development Company, Kondo Masaharu.9 Later Abe resigned his position with the
vegetable growers and joined Kondo's firm as the office manager and accountant.
With the onset of the Great Depression in October, 1928
Kondo's company began to experience difficulties. In 1931 the enterprise's
cannery and operation at Turtle Bay in Baja California were expropriated by the
Mexican Government, and shortly thereafter Kondo Masaharu left the floundering
company and returned to Japan.
The departure of Kondo left Abe surrounded by a financial
shambles, plagued by numerous creditors and outstanding debts. Of most immediate
concern, however, was the status of over one hundred and fifty contract
Japanese fishermen who were dependent on the company, and
scattered in isolated fish camps ranging from Cabo San Lucus to San Diego. While
he attempted to keep the company out of the bankruptcy courts, this was not to
be. Although not personally liable, Abe felt a strong obligation to clear the
debts of the now defunct operation, and placed his home, auto, and even personal
possessions up as security. His son Toshio recalls the family car being seized
during this period.10 Working virtually alone Abe was finally able to sort out
the financial obligations, and keep the fishermen in Mexico on a modified
payroll, even though Kondo's company ". . . had gone down the financial drain."11
In early 1933, after some thought and hesitation, Abe decided
to organize a completely new company known as the Southern Commercial Company,
with his brother-in-law Aizumi Kyuji, and Miura Koshiro, who had been
supervising operations in Baja California, participating in the venture as
junior partners. Like their counterparts elsewhere in California, the Japanese
fishermen in San Diego had earned the reputation of being tenacious and
innovative pliers of their craft. Abe, too, as a recognized leader of this
energetic community, had garnered stature as an extraordinarily capable
businessman who knew the industry. When he sought fiscal backing for the
Southern Commercial Company assistance was forthcoming from the Van Camp Sea
Food Company, Westgate Cannery, United States National Bank, and the Security
Trust and Savings Bank, an impressive vote of trust in those depression ridden years.12
At the beginning of 1934 the fledgling company consisted of
two regular employees, and one small boat with a ten-ton payload. Within five
years the Southern Commercial Company was in control of twenty-five tuna boats,
making theirs the largest fleet under a single management in Southern
California.13 These vessels ranged in size from sixty to 130 tons, and regularly
sailed down the west coast of Mexico to Central and South America in search of tuna.
While the company was prospering with Abe as chief executive
officer another battle was looming not only for him, but for all Japanese
fishermen in California. Beginning in the 1930s there had been a strong
resurgence of anti-Japanese feeling in the state, with much of the attention
directed to the role of the Japanese in the tuna industry.
The efforts to exclude persons of Japanese ancestry from
fishing can be traced to the year 1899, when the California Legislature
introduced an act to prohibit them from harvesting abalone. Groups such as
Native Sons and Daughters of the Golden West and the Asiatic Exclusion League
who were working actively to restrict Japanese economic activity faced two major
hurdles in their campaign. The first centered on the fact that the Imperial
Japanese Government monitored the well-being of their nationals closely, and
were quick to forward diplomatic notes when these subjects' rights were abused,
particularly when the abuse emanated from one of the states. The
second dilemma was equally difficult—how to target the
Japanese for restriction, and at the same time not affect other "white"
immigrant groups in the state who were, at least potentially, future citizens and voters.
A partial answer was found in the fact that the Japanese were
among a select group of immigrants—including, strangely enough, Native
American Indians—who were not eligible for naturalization. The basic
requirements for naturalization had been laid down by Congress in the Act of
March 26, 1790, which decreed that eligibility rested on being a " . . . free
white person."14 Although other criteria were added later, the basic
requirement remained "color," and for purposes of bureaucratic convenience
those not provided for under the Act became: "aliens ineligible for
citizenship."15
The opposition's strategy emerged in 1919 with the
introduction of AB 135, California's first piece of anti-Japanese fishing
legislation.16 The intent of the bill was to restrict commercial fishing
licenses to citizens of the United States, and aliens who had declared their
intention to become citizens, wording which would have effectively removed
Japanese from the commercial fishery without ever specifically mentioning them
by name. The act, however, failed to pass because of the organized efforts of
the Central Japanese Association of Los Angeles, the fish canning industry, and
a coalition of both Japanese and non-Japanese fishermen's organizations.
While this first attempt was unsuccessful it in no way
diminished the efforts of those opposing the Japanese. Between 1919 and 1933
seven bills were introduced into the California Legislature utilizing
citizenship, or some form of citizenship, as the basic qualification for
obtaining a commercial fishing license. All of these attempts floundered because
of the strong efforts of caucasian owned canneries, and local Japanese community
organizations.17 A new tactic was called for.
In April, 1933 the anti-Japanese forces in the legislature
were successful in amending Section 990 of the State Fish and Game Code to read:
A commercial fishing license may be issued only to a person
who has continuously resided in the United States for a period of one year
immediately prior to the time of making application for such a license.18
In addition, the amended Code mandated that all persons
involved in the taking of fish on the high seas for sale in California also be
holders of commercial fishing licenses.
California's Attorney General in 1935 was Ulysses S. Webb, a
man with both a long and active role in the state's anti-Japanese movement. In
1913 while serving as an assemblyman, Webb had co-sponsored California's alien
land law, an act still popularly known as the "Webb Act," which
forbade the sale, and restricted the lease of agricultural land to aliens ineligible for
citizenship.
Under pressure from Webb's office State Fish and Game
authorities were directed to seek out Japanese who might be in violation of the
newly amended Section 990, and initiate proceedings. So it was that one of the
first individuals to have the modified Code applied against his operation was
Abe Tokunosuke.
Abe was both eligible and a current possessor of a valid
California commercial fishing license. It was, however, common practice for the
Southern Commercial Company to regularly utilize Japanese fishermen who were
residents of Mexico, a nation which still allowed Japanese immigration, to man
their boats. As a result none of the crew of the Osprey had resided in
the United States for the required year prior to landing their catch in San
Diego. As a consequence State Fish and Game officers attempted to prevent tuna
from being unloaded upon the boat's arrival at San Diego. This action was
followed by a threat from the State Attorney General's office of immediate
prosecution if Abe did not cease and desist.
If the state expected Abe, who had been a local leader in the
fight against the discriminatory legislation of the past decade, to quietly
comply with their order, they had completely misjudged him. He was not a man to
run from a fight. Through his San Diego attorneys, Harrison G. Sloane and Fred
Steiner, who would later die on the beach at Normandy, Abe immediately filed
suit in Superior Court, naming the California Fish and Game
Commission as the defendant. On September 18, 1934, Judge C.
N. Andrews ruled in Abe's favor, finding the residence requirement of Section
990 to be a violation of the equal protection of the law clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Webb, acting for the Fish and Game Commission,
immediately appealed the decision to the State's Fourth District Court of
Appeals. One year later speaking for a unanimous court, Presiding Justice P. J.
Barnard agreed that Section 990 did indeed represent a violation of the U. S.
Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment. In his opinion, concurred with by the two
other sitting Justices, Judge Barnard cited the fact that: "The appellants
frankly concede that the statute is discriminatory." He then concluded by
noting:
In fact the discrimination thus attempted is much more onerous than mere
inequality in taxation, amounting as it does to an absolute prohibition.The judgement is affirmed.19
Once again the Attorney General immediately appealed the
decision, this time to the State Supreme Court in hopes of gaining a more
favorable review. Such was not to be the case. On November 25, 1935 Webb's
appeal was denied without comment.
Abe's victory in the courts stemmed for a time the momentum
of the legislative pressure on Japanese commercial fishermen, and allowed them
to turn their talents and energy to the expansion of San Diego's tuna industry.
By 1934 there were over 300 Japanese fishermen on thirty-four boats working out
of San Diego. The total Japanese investment in the local fishery was estimated
to be well over one million dollars.20 In the same year the Japanese share of
the catch landed in San Diego was placed at half a million dollars.21 These
figures support the contention that by the mid-thirties the local tuna industry
was progressing in an economically satisfactory manner, but again, the forces of
reaction struck out at the Japanese.
One of the continuing themes that had been used by the
anti-Japanese forces in California was the threat of potential military activity
by Japanese nationals. As Japan's military adventurism in Asia became more
pronounced in the 1930s these charges began to re-appear with increasing
frequency, and with a greater degree of public acceptance than ever before. In
some respects this thesis boded well for at least one of the organizations
traditionally opposed to the Japanese, the Native Sons and Daughters of the
Golden West. This group had been noticeably weakened by the effects of the
depression, and now grasped at this supposed threat of subversion as a
propitious mechanism for rebuilding their flagging membership.22
In August, 1934, Lail T. Kane, a marine surveyor for the
County of Los Angeles, and an officer of American Legion Navy Post 278, appeared
before a Special Committee on Un-American Activities of the U. S. House of
Representatives. Initiating an ongoing crusade , Kane charged that Japanese
fishing vessels then operating out of San Diego and San Pedro could easily
be converted into mine layers and torpedo boats within from
three to six hours, and then be utilized to hinder the operation of the United
States Pacific Fleet.23
With the movement revived, and strong backing from the State
American Legion, Senate Bill 444 was introduced into the legislature at the 1935
general session. Although the bill never made it out of committee, it did
survive long enough to receive national attention when Representative John
Dockweiler of Los Angeles brought the matter up before the House Military
Affairs Committee, testifying that Japanese and Japanese owned fishing boats in
California were a military threat to the United States.24
In May 1938 Commander Ellis M. Zacharias arrived in San Diego
to take up his duties as Intelligence Officer for the Eleventh Naval District,
an area he described in a 1946 work as:
. . . the very hub of the wheel of Japanese espionage . . .
[an] exceptionally important outpost embracing a large Japanese population and
in a position to watch Japanese espionage activities off shore centered in
the fishing fleets in which scores of Japanese sailed our seas.25
On the basis of this and similar observations found
throughout his book it is apparent that Zacharias had arrived holding the
pre-disposed belief that the Japanese fishing community in San Diego was
thoroughly infiltrated by agents of the Imperial Japanese Government.26
About this same time the Abe family recalls the navy began to
show a distinct interest in their fishing operation. Eventually pressure from
the local naval authorities compelled the company to move their offices from the
West Santa Fe Wharf to a point further down the bay at the San Diego Marine
Construction Company then located at the foot of Sampson Street, and finally, by
1940 they were forced to move off the bay front altogether. There is, in fact,
evidence of a direct correlation between Commander Zacharias's arrival in San
Diego, and the fact that naval intelligence became highly visible in the local
Japanese community.27
In like manner, the intensity and tone of Lail Kane's
anti-Japanese campaign became increasingly vocal after 1939. This appears to be
more than simple coincidence, and may be explained in part by the fact that Kane
apparently was also a naval reserve officer assigned to the Intelligence Branch
at this same time. In 1940 the Los Angeles daily Rafu Shimpo printed a
copy of a letter from Rear Admiral R. S. Holmes, then Director of Naval
Intelligence, to United States Senator Sheridan Downey stating: ". . . there is
a Reserve Officer [of Naval Intelligence] named Lail T. Kane of Los Angeles . .
. ."28
Other forces were now beginning to rally around Kane
including the United States Attorney for Southern California, Benjamin Harrison.
Harrison, who was a long time and active member of the Native Sons,
had assumed his post in August of 1937, and by his own account had immediately
and vigorously moved against alien-owned fishing craft that
he believed were in violation of title 46, section 325 of the United States
Code. In the process of preparing his cases the attorney discovered some
important facts of the state's economic life, including, among other points,
that in 1937 the annual ocean catch for California was in excess of 34 million
dollars, with an additional 10 million represented by cannery investments. This
cannery operation, he noted, employed over ten thousand people. As the attorney
was later forced to observe: "I further learned that a strict and harsh
enforcement of section 325 would seriously disrupt the industry."29 This must
have indeed been an important discovery for a publicly appointed official of a
nation struggling to come out of a severe economic depression.
Instead of an equal application of the law what Harrison
proceeded to do was to draw on his strident nativist orientations and begin a
selective application of the federal regulations against the Japanese. At the
same time he initiated a highly publicized speaking campaign directed against
"the evil," as he viewed it, of Japanese owned fishing boats.30
As Harrison's campaign began to pick up momentum the Congress
of Industrial Organizations (CIO) was organizing a fishing strike among its
members in San Pedro. Shortly after the strike began, large numbers of Japanese
fishermen left the union to join the non-striking American Federation of Labor
(AFofL), thus earning the bitter enmity of the Southern California CIO. At this
time one of the striking union's major supporters in the state legislature was a
young Democratic assemblyman, with an intense nativist perspective, named Samuel
W. Yorty. At the urging of the State CIO leadership, and working in concert with
Kane, who publicly identified himself as the "real" author, Yorty introduced
Assembly Bill 336 on January 10, 1939.31
Yorty's tactic, embodied in the bill, was to propose amending
section 990 of the State Fish and Game Code by restricting commercial fishing
licenses to citizens of the United States and legal residents of California. It
was estimated that if adopted, this amendment would have removed three out of
four Japanese fishermen from the state's commercial fishery.32 In point of fact
the Yorty bill represented the most serious and concentrated threat that
California's Japanese fishermen had faced yet, for not only were such forces
perennially hostile to the Japanese as the Native Sons represented, but this
bill was also receiving strong support from the CIO and the State American
Legion. Joining this already formidable line-up were U.S. Attorney Harrison and
Commander Zacharias.
The task of marshalling and organizing the forces opposed to
the Yorty bill fell to a young Sacramento attorney and President of the
fledgling Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), Walter T. Tsukamoto. Working
in close concert with Tsukamoto to co-ordinate activities in the
allimportant southern part of the state was Abe Tokunosuke, who immediately
set about the task of mustering local support.
On January 18, 1939 Tsukamoto notified Abe that State Senator
Jack D. Metzger had introduced SB 278, an even broader bill, which would have
additionally required that seventy-five percent of all stockholders in
commercial fishing companies be American citizens. "When taken together with
the Yorty bill . . . ," Tsukamoto wrote, "the practical effect would be to
remove all alien Japanese from ever being employed in commercial fishing."33
To further solidify their position both Yorty and Metzger
approached their long-time ally Senator Irwin T. Quinn to introduce a measure
which not only encompassed the provisions of their two proposed bills, but added
the citizenship requirements for all employees of the subject corporations. This
corollary had been appended to specifically preclude the utilization of Japanese
fishermen residing in Mexico, as was the regular practice of the Southern
Commercial Company.
As activity began to increase in Sacramento, U.S. Attorney
Harrison joined the fray by announcing that he intended to intensify his libel
actions against alien-owned fishing boats, and citing the fact that in 1938 he
had personally initiated eighty such actions.34 Within the Japanese community
there was a growing belief that the scope of Harrison's activities had narrowed
remarkably as the United States' relations with Japan had deteriorated.35
In San Diego, Abe was working with George Obayashi and George
Ohashi of the local JACL chapter to help raise funds and public support. Under
the aegis of the JACL a letter was sent to every Japanese home in the
county explaining the anti-Japanese intent of the bills and
appealing for funds.36 While Abe worked with the canneries and fishermen's
associations, Obayashi and Ohashi garnered support from local politicians like
State Senator Ed Fletcher, a long-time friend of the local Japanese.37
As Abe countered in San Diego, Assemblyman Yorty accelerated
his campaign for public support by reiterating charges that had regularly been
made by Kane since 1934 stating that there was ". . . conclusive evidence from a
reliable source pointing to Japanese espionage activity in the harbor [Los
Angeles-San Pedro] area."38 At the same press conference the
assemblyman added: "All aliens at the fishing harbors will be given time in which to become
American citizens." When reporters present pointed out that the Japanese, who
were most directly affected by his bill, were ineligible by federal statute to
become citizens, Yorty declined comment.39
On March l6th, the day before AB 336 was to receive its first
public hearing before the Fish and Game Committee Harrison, the U.S. Attorney,
speaking in Los Angeles observed that: "Japanese operating out of our ports know
every foot of the coast of North and South America, including where cables are
located and mines could be laid."40 Less than a week later John P. Cassidy, a
member of the Southern California Republican Assembly and a former secretary of
the Fish and Game Association of California told a gathering:
The past 16 years' history of these [fishing] bills,
particularly in the past two sessions of the legislature, in 1935 and 1937,
proves conclusively that these proposals are anti-Japanese.41
Cassidy continued by saying that these pieces of legislation
aimed at the Japanese had become known in Sacramento as "cinch bills," or
legislation which forced Japanese fishermen ". . . to pay a price for having
them dropped—which they always had been."42 In an immediate
response Kane told the press that: ". . . the sole motive for the so-called
anti-alien commercial fishing bills . . . has been one of national defense."43
This then was the nature of the highly charged environment in which the Assembly
hearings began, and in which Tsukamoto and Abe had to wend their wary way.
Early in the hearings, Tsukamoto filed an extensive brief
designed to offset the major arguments of Yorty and his supporters. To counter
the charges that Japanese displaced American fishermen testimony was elicited
from Wiley V. Ambrose, President of the Westgate Sea Products Company of San
Diego, and a man who had been closely involved with the industry for over twenty
years. Ambrose wrote:
The Japanese do not displace American fishermen by any
means. The field is open and American fishermen are not in the field.
Americans do not take this kind of work in any numbers, which explains the
reason.
Ambrose continued:
I hold no brief for the Japanese or any other foreigner who
comes to our shores with nothing to offer but a hungry stomach and wants us to
fill it. These fishermen are not strangers among us; some of them I have known
for twenty years. They are sturdy, hard working men, attending to their
business and doing a good job of it. You do not find them on the city, county,
or state welfare lists. You do not find them in our jails for reckless or
drunken driving. These fishermen have more important business to attend to and
they know how to attend to it.
Then in an attempt to remind the ever fiscally sensitive
legislators of the facts, Ambrose concluded:
. . . they own their own boats and at this time are paying
taxes on their property, and it is not an inconsiderable amount. They are
filing their income returns and what is more important are paying plenty of
money along with the return.44
It was no accident that Ambrose, one of the industry's
leading spokesmen presented such strong, pointed support of the Japanese, and
opposition to the pending legislation. Abe was a long-time acquaintance, and it
had been at his urging that the President of Westgate agreed to make his views
public.
The charges of subversion and espionage leveled against the
Japanese fishermen were perhaps the most immediately threatening since they
represented the major argument for exclusion. Tsukamoto, in his brief, attempted
to selectively refute those accusations he considered the most
serious. The first to be dealt with involved Lail Kane's "tuna boat to torpedo
boat" thesis, which had figured so prominently in Congressman Dockweiler's 1935
testimony. When questioned by members of the committee on the source of his
information, Dockweiler had replied that his information had come from
investigations carried out ". . . by the American Legion . . .,"45 which, in
this instance, most certainly meant Kane. Indeed, Kane admitted as much when he appeared before a Special
Committee of the House of Representatives in 1942.46
The reaction of Wiley Ambrose typified the industry's
position before the committee hearing the Yorty bill. "It was inconceivable,"
wrote Ambrose, "that a man like Dockweiler could have been led astray by such
utterly misleading statements." The San Diegan concluded: "the idea of them
having enough compressed air to fire a torpedo is silly."47
Ambrose of course was not alone in these observations. Sam
Hornstein, the President of the Coast Fishing Company, and a man with a
life-time involvement in the tuna industry observed to the committee:
One is inclined to wonder from whence the information could
have been derived, when one considers that our modern tuna boats are of such a
design as to be utterly impracticable for serving any other nature whatever,
other than their original purpose, tuna fishing.
Then to underscore his criticism of the "torpedo boat thesis"
Hornstein added: "To consider them as potential weapons of warfare is really
stretching one's imagination."48
Answering the charge that the fleet sheltered reserve officers of the Imperial
Navy, B. Houssels, a vice president of the Van Camp Sea Food Company wrote:
The Japanese government has absolutely nothing to do with
these boats, nor did they subsidize them in any way. The owners and captains
have been residents for many years (20-30). I have known them for more than 20
years, or ever since I have been in the fishing business. If they are naval
officers Japan must have had a long vision and started out 25 or 30 years ago.
In my opinion this . . . is a bunch of hooey.
In conclusion Houssels noted: "I don't believe that there is
a man in California in a position to better know the relative facts than
myself."49
In attempting to emphasize the economic tenor of the times
for the Assembly committee, Tsukamoto pointed out that Japanese fishermen
provided over thirty percent of all the fish that came to California canneries.
If this supply were suddenly to be cut off, the Sacramento attorney observed, ".
. . an estimated 2000 to 2500 cannery workers will be displaced and thrown into
an already strained labor market."50 Hornstein added this word of caution for
the committee's consideration: ". . . it would create through legislation a
situation where 'supply' would for a number of years approximate about half the
present 'demand'."51
The last major point made by the brief was to emphasize the
international ramifications of the proposed legislation by suggesting that there
might well be negative reactions in Japan to the bill including a possible
boycott of California goods. In addition, it was suggested that the Department
of State might hold serious reservations since AB 336 appeared to violate the
spirit, if not the letter of the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation which
commercially linked the United States and Japan.
In the meantime the California Senate's Fish and Game
Committee had begun their public hearings on the Quinn and Metzger bills. In
that house the forces supporting the legislation had the advantage of having
both Quinn and Metzger sitting as members of the nine-man committee hearing the
bills. With the battle now joined in both houses the Rafu Shimpo observed editorially:
. . . the outcome of the bills in both the Assembly and
Senate, in the opinion of experienced capital observers, appeared 50-50
today, more likely of passage than any time in history."52
In the Assembly Harrison and Kane renewed their charges of
espionage and subversion before the committee; testimony Tsukamoto characterized
as: ". . . suppositions and loose estimates."53 Incensed at what he believed
were distortions and wide-ranging innuendo by Harrison, Tsukamoto, in his role
as National President of the JACL, wired President Roosevelt, California
Congressman Frank Buck, and the Director of Naval Intelligence, that the U.S.
Attorney's charges had not been substantiated by any formal evidence, and added:
"If Harrison's statements are true then we strongly recommend immediate federal
indictments and a proper mopping up."54 The Nisei lawyer further suggested in
his telegrams that if such evidence or federal charges were not forthcoming, the Assembly
should be so notified. The communications were met with silence by Washington, and neither charges nor
evidence was provided.
On March 30th, 1939, with four of its fifteen members absent,
the Assembly Fish and Game Committee voted six to five to table Yorty's AB 336,
an act many thought tantamount to killing the bill. His narrow defeat
notwithstanding, the Los Angeles Assemblyman immediately announced to the press
plans to carry the bill directly to the floor of the Assembly, in an attempt to
override the committee recommendation. During the press conference Yorty stated
flatly that the bill was aimed solely at the alien Japanese.55
Under the Assembly Rules, Yorty needed the signatures of
forty-one members to withdraw his bill from the committee's control. In the
process of gathering his support, Yorty uncovered one of those bureaucratic
flukes that periodically appear to bedevil the legislative process. In printing
the rules of the Assembly, a line had inadvertently been dropped, with the
result that Yorty needed only a majority of those present, or thirty-eight
signatures, instead of the usual forty-one. After a series of frantic, and at
times heated, consultations AB 336 was ruled as being before the Assembly for
consideration.56
In the debate that followed, the bill was characterized as a
piece of vicious legislation and a subterfuge, and mainly a battle between the
AFofL and the CIO. Finally, the Assembly voted to return the bill to the
jurisdiction of the Fish and Game Committee for their recommendation.57
Realizing that they still had a long way to go in this
struggle, Walter Tsukamoto made a hurried trip to Los Angeles where he met with
representatives of the JACL and the Japanese Fishermen's Association. Then,
accompanied by H. Yokozeki of the fishermen's association, he traveled to San
Diego to consult with Abe on the developments in the Assembly and the upcoming
hearings in the Senate. 58
On his return to the capital Tsukamoto wrote Abe that after
some initial sparring both sides on the Senate Fish and Game Committee had
agreed to withdraw the Quinn and Metzger bills from consideration pending the
outcome of Yorty's efforts in the Assembly.59 Everything depended on what
happened in the Assembly.
As the Assembly committee once again prepared to deal with AB
336, John B. Pelletier, representing the 44th assembly district, told the press:
I want to call your attention to the fact that in 1935 and
in 1937, this bill was brought here in the legislature at Sacramento and the
Federal Government sent word to kill it because it was unfair and
unconstitutional.60
Kane too was seeking public support via the press. Speaking in Los
Angeles he said:
The fight has just begun, and it is serious error to
believe that an object as important as that which the American Legion is
striving for can be brushed aside so easily.
Then, in a moment of amazing candor, considering all his
public positions on AB 336 up to that time, Kane remarked: "The Yorty bill in
its present form is definitely discriminatory and is aimed solely at the
Japanese."61
As a slightly amended version of Yorty's AB 336 was coming
before the Fish and Game Committee, the San Diego Evening Tribune hit the
streets with a page one story dealing with the purported existence of a $250,000
"slush" fund provided by a "foreign" government ". . . which seeks to defeat
California legislation aimed at the asserted spying activities of alien
fishermen."62 The source of this disclosure, according to the article, was Lail
Kane. As quoted from the article, Kane told the press that:
. . . after making a phone call to Captain Ellis
Zacharias, (Zacharias was not promoted to Captain until july 1, 1939.) intelligence officer of
the 11th Naval District, he [Kane] was authorized to make the following statement:
The Federal Government is definitely interested in the
report that there is a fund of $250,000 available and being spent in
Sacramento to defeat state legislation at this time.
Quoting Zacharias further, Kane continued:
The legislation contemplates the restriction of all
commercial fishing under the jurisdiction of the State of California to
citizens of the United States and had been endorsed by the American Legion,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, and other groups as a safeguard to prevent further
espionage on fleet activities and operations.63
The Evening Tribune article is an interesting example
of Kane's handiwork. Kane was, at least as far as the public was concerned, a
private citizen, acting as a member of the American Legion. His naval
intelligence connection was apparently not public information at this time.
For Zacharias, a serving active duty officer, to become
publicly involved in a matter that was clearly one of state jurisdiction is
perhaps strangest of all. Aside from the fact that the Commander's statement is
misleading at best, there is the whole matter of his none too subtle attempt to
influence pending state legislation. This intervention in itself appears to fly
directly in the face of the traditional military-civilian role vis-á-vis
political questions. To compound this involvement Zacharias flew from San Diego
to Sacramento to testify before the Assembly committee. After a closed session
which lasted forty-five minutes, a somewhat disgruntled commander departed,
sure that the representatives of the people simply could not understand the
magnitude of this vital issue."64
Yorty and Kane's dramatic ploy to win over the committee
majority with the help of navy intelligence almost succeeded. In the end
however, they voted seven to seven to deny passage to the amended version of AB
336. An obviously pleased, but wary, Tsukamoto notified Abe of the victory,
warning him, at the same time that the bill's supporters were going to again
attempt to bring the legislation directly to the Assembly floor despite the
committee's rebuff.65
In the meantime, the Senate had decided to suspend their
hearings, pending an Assembly decision,66 and Harrison again returned to the
public forum with a blistering attack on the opponents of Yorty's bill who were
characterized as men: ". . . who struck at the very foundations of
Americanism."67
Two weeks, later, on May 18th, Tsukamoto notified Abe in a
hastily written note that AB 336 could be brought up any time, and that he had
spent the entire day on the Assembly floor, ". . . working the bill."68
Finally on June 6, 1939 came the word that Abe had
been waiting for. His diligent attorney wired:
Assemblyman Yorty's motion to withdraw bill from committee
decisively beaten today 42 to 24. I do not believe that there will be any
further action in the present session of the legislature.69
Abe replied with thanks and, from long experience, requested
that Tsukamoto continue to keep watch until all possible chance for action by
the Yorty forces had passed.70 The decisive defeat in the Assembly caused the
Senate Fish and Game Committee to allow the Quinn and Metzger bills to die quietly.
The victory gave Abe and his supporters at least a year and a
half to prepare for what they realized would be the inevitable renewal for the
struggle at the next general session of the legislature. Indeed, throughout
1940 there were continued calls for the restriction of Japanese fishermen. Early
in 1940, one of the legal protections the fishermen relied on was nullified when
the United States terminated the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation with Japan.
In June, Representative Charles Kramer of California introduced three bills into
the Congress aimed at: ". . . eliminating Japanese craft from Pacific Coast
waters, and the possible threat from tuna boats converted into torpedo boats."71
Benjamin Harrison, about to become a federal judge, continued his public
attacks, and caused another flurry of publicity in late June with a "Trojan
Boats" theme. Harrison's ideas were picked up and expanded in August by
Bernarr MacFadden's Liberty Magazine, which treated its readers to a detailed
review of the position Lail Kane had been taking since 1934. The by-line
credited the article to Jerry Lewis, a sometimes sportswriter, who informed his
readers that the "real" author was: ". . . a member of the United States Naval
Intelligence Department."72 In a style unique to this type of journalism the
author recounted a litany of potential horrors ranging from the deaths of 250,000 innocent Californians to
the roasting alive of every man in the Pacific Fleet. In a vignette replete with
racial stereotypes, the author recounted the alleged reaction of a Japanese
fruit stand operator, who, in response to a customer's concern over the
condition of some oranges reportedly said: "When we Japanese take over
California they'll be too good for you whites to eat."73 By September
Representative Kramer was telling the Congress that Japanese fishermen in
California were auxiliaries of the Imperial Navy and had to be stopped.74
Abe followed all of these developments with the deep concern
of a man fighting to protect the economic livelihood of men who had helped
create a great industry in Southern California, but the next fight was not to be his.
Abe Tokunosuke died on January 3, 1941. He was spared the
wrenching experience of seeing the destruction of the Japanese tuna fleet he
helped pioneer in California, brought on by the war that would break out eleven
months later between the two countries he loved equally well. Perhaps the best
assessment of this part of Abe's life has come from his son Toshio, who served
with distinction in the United States Army in World War II, spending twenty-two
months in the disease-ridden jungles of Burma. Of his father he has written:
My Father in his lifetime maintained a low profile. He was
one of many prominent citizens of San Diego, but he happened to be Japanese.
He was an American at heart, which might be a revelation to many. This does
not mean he was not proud of his heritage, from which he brought many fond
memories.
Yet by many who did not know this man he was regarded as a
potential enemy of the United States and no more than a second-class citizen.
He preached Americanism to his sons. Today he would be called a 'flag waver'
of the stars and stripes.
He did not live to see one of his sons come back from the wars after almost
five years.
Another son, also an American, was rejected by the services
as 'undesirable' purely as a matter of ancestry. He did not live to see this
either.75
NOTES
1. Cary McWilliams, "Once Again the Yellow Peril," Nation, June 26,
1935, p. 735.
2. William C. Richardson, "The Fishermen of San Diego," (Master's thesis,
San Diego State University, 1981), pp. 41-42.
3. Donald H. Estes, "Kondo Masaharu and The Best of All Fishermen," The
Journal of San Diego History, 23 (Summer, 1977), pp. 9-12.
4. Interview with William C. Richardson, San Diego, California, August 15,
1981.
5. California Fish and Game Commission, 23rd Biennial Report 1912-1914,p. 118.
6. Eiji Tanabe, "Behind the Takahashi Case," Pacific Citizen, March
27, 1948. pp. 2, 5.
7. Richardson, Fishermen of San Diego, pp. 41-42.
8. Abe's name is rendered here in the Japanese manner, and the form
commonly utilized by immigrant Japanese, that is family name followed by
personal name.
9. Estes, "Kondo Masaharu," pp. 9-12.
10. Letter from Toshio Abe to Donald H. Estes, September
15, 1978. The author is deeply indebted to Toshio and Hayao Abe for their
assistance in the preparation of this article.
11. Ibid.
12. Letter from Hayao Abe to Donald H. Estes, January 25, 1982.
13. Toshio Abe to Donald Estes.
14. 1 Statutes 103, March 26, 1790.
15. It would take the Congress 162 years to eliminate "color" as a criterion
for citizenship.
16. California, Assembly, Bill 135 (Mitchell), 1919.
17. Ko Murai, ed., Zaibei Nihonjin Sangyo Soran [Outline
Works of the Japanese in America], Los Angeles, California, 1940, p. 736
18. California, Fish and Game Code, Cal. Statutes, April 1, 1933, p. 479.
19. T. Abe v. Fish and Game Commission, 9 Cal. App. 2d 300, September 27, 1935.
20. M. Sasaki, ed., Minami Kashu Nihonjin Shichijunen [Japanese
in Southern California, A Seventy Year History], Los Angeles,
California, 1960, p. 183.
21. Murai, ed., Zaibei Nihonjin, p. 738.
22. John Modell, "The Japanese of Los Angeles," (Ph.D.
dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles, 1970), p. 342.
23. Ibid., p. 343-44.
24. San Diego Sun, February 13, 1935, p. 2.
25. Ellis M. Zacharias, Secret Missions (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons
1946), p. 200.
26. Ibid., pp. 200-09 passim.
27. Interviews with: Hayao L. Abe, July 21, 1978,
Joseph Owashi, March 25, 1979, and George Ohashi, February 7, 1982. All at San
Diego, California.
28. Rafu Shimpo [Los Angeles, California] August 4, 1940, p. 1.
Hereinafter: Rafu Shimpo.
29. U.S. Congress. House. Special Committee.
Investigation of Un-American Activities in the United States. 77th
Congress, 1st Session, 1942, p. 1823. Hereinafter: Un-American Activities.
30. Ibid., p. 1829.
31. Rafu Shímpo, March 21, 1939, p. 1.
32. Ibid.
33. Letter from Walter T. Tsukamoto to Abe Tokunosuke,
January 18, 1939. Hereinafter subsequent letters will be shown indicating
recipients last names only.
34. San Diego Union, February 7, 1939.
35. Rafu Shimpo, February 7, 1939. Abe, Owashi, Ohashi, interviews.
Ibid.
36. Rafu Shimpo, February 15, 1939. San Diego
Chapter, Japanese American Citizens League, Solicitation Letter, n.d.
37. Ohashi interview. Ibid. After World War II broke
out Mr. Ohashi reports that Senator Fletcher suggested having the title of
Japanese-owned fishing boats placed jointly in his and Ohashi's names to
protect them from possible seizure.
38. Rafu Shimpo, February 16, 1939, p. 1.
39. Ibid.
40. San Diego Union, March 17, 1939.
41. Rafu Shimpo, March 20, 1939, p. 1.
42. Ibid.
43. Rafu Shimpo, March 21, 1939, p. 1.
44. Walter T. Tsukamoto, A Brief Presenting Certain
Facts Offered in Opposition to Assembly Bills 336,
1883, 2414, and 2415, and Senate Bills 278 and 736,
n.d. Hereinafter: Brief. This brief was presented to the Assembly and Senate Fish and
Game Committees at the Fifty-third General Session of the legislature on
Janaury 10, 1939.
45. U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Military Affairs, To
Authorize Permanent Stations and Depots for the Army Air Corps. 74th Congress,
1st Session, 1935, pp. 103-05, 132-40.
46. U.S Congress. House. Un-American Activities, p. 1823.
47. Tsukamoto, Brief, p. 5.
48. Ibid., p. 13.
49. Ibid., p. 16.
50. Ibid., p. 2.
51. Ibid.
52. Rafu Shimpo, March 23, 1939, p. 1.
53. Rafu Shimpo, March 26, 1939, p. 1.
54. Ibid.
55. San Diego Union, April 1, 1939, p. 3.
56. Los Angeles Times, April 4, 1939, p. 4.
57. San Francisco Chronicle, April 4, 1939, p. 7.
58. Fred Steiner to Abe Tokunosuke, April 8, 1939.
59. Tsukamoto to Abe, April 11, 1939.
60. Rafu Shimpo, April 13, 1939, p. 1.
61. Ibid.
62. San Diego Evening Tribune, April 21, 1939, p. 1. San Diego
Union, April 22, 1939, p. 1.
63. Ibid.
64. Zacharias, Secret Missions, p. 210.
65. Tsukamoto to Abe, May 2, 1939.
66. Ibid.
67. Los Angeles Daily News, May 6, 1939, p. 1.
68. Tsukamoto to Abe, May 18, 1939.
69. Tsukamoto to Abe, June 6, 1939.
70. Abe to Tsukamoto, June 6, 1939.
71. San Diego Union, June 14, 1939.
72. "Yellow Peril in the West," Liberty, August 3, 1940, p. 58.
73. Jerry D. Lewis, "5th Column in California," Liberty, August 10,
1940, p. 13-14.
74. San Diego Union, September 5, 1940.
75. Toshio Abe to Donald H. Estes, September 15, 1978.
THE PHOTOGRAPHS are courtesy of the author.