MEDIA INFORMATION

 
 
 
COLLECTION NAME:
Asian/Pacific - Americans on the Central Coast
Record
Title:
Toshi C. Inouye, Lompoc High School, Class of 1936. Toshi was active in music and performing arts through high school. When she married, her husband, Hinode, took her name. As with all other Japanese [Americans], they too had to evacuate the coast in 1942. But Toshi and her husband came back to rear two children in Lompoc, a boy and a girl. Toshi lived there until her death in December 1993.
Creator:
unknown
Date:
circa 1936
Description:
Close up photograph of Toshi C. Inouye.
Type:
image
Format:
1 photographic print : b&w ; 21 X 26 cm.
Subject:
Inouye, Toshi C.
Subject:
Lompoc (Calif.)
Subject:
Lompoc High School (Lompoc, Calif.)
Subject:
Japanese Americans -- California -- Santa Barbara County
Subject:
Students -- Japanese American -- California -- Santa Barbara County
Language:
eng
Copyright Statement:
Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. In addition, the reproduction of some materials may be restricted by terms of gift or purchase agreements, donor restrictions, privacy and publicity rights, licensing and trademarks. Works not in the public domain cannot be commercially exploited without permission of the copyright owner. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Copyright Holder:
Lompoc Valley Historical Society
Contributor:
Black Gold Cooperative Library System
Note:
Part of "Historical Photos of Four Ethnicities on California's Central Coast" Collection
Note:
Originally published as part of Asian/Pacific - Americans on the Central Coast: a photo essay
Identifier:
AP069
Filename:
BG-AP-14-069.jpg

Toshi C. Inouye, Lompoc High School, Class of 1936. Toshi was active in music and performi...

Toshi C. Inouye, Lompoc High School, Class of 1936. Toshi was active in music and performing arts through high school. When she married, her husband, Hinode, took her name. As with all other Japanese [Americans], they too had to evacuate the coast in 1942. But Toshi and her husband came back to rear two children in Lompoc, a boy and a girl. Toshi lived there until her death in December 1993.