Showing posts with label Congressional Gold Medal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congressional Gold Medal. Show all posts

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Mas Masuda: A hero's century in Orange County

ABOVE: Masao Frank Masuda receives recognition at the Orange County Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum on the grounds of the Fullerton Arboretum, on January 15, 2017, with remarks by Professor Emeritus Arthur Hansen (at podium), with his son, Marvin (standing behind him).  Born in Orange County in September 1917, Mas was a graduate of Huntington Beach High School and served in the U.S. Military Intelligence Service during World War II.  He received a Congressional Gold Medal in 2011, also receiving an honorary degree from Santa Ana College where he had been enrolled at the time of the attack by Japan at Pearl Harbor. (Photograph, M. Urashima, January 15, 2017) © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

   "Acts of courage can be remembered for ages", wrote columnist Stephen Greenhut fifteen years ago, in November 1992, as he recalled R.C. Hoiles, publisher of the Santa Ana Register (later, Orange County Register and Freedom Communications).  Hoiles bought the newspaper in 1935 with a guiding philosophy to "believe in moral principle and have enough courage to express these principles and point out practices and beliefs that violate moral principles."

   Greenhut provided an example of moral courage in his 1992 column by citing a recent visit by an 84-year-old Japanese American gentleman, Mas Masuda. He said Mas "showed up at the Register building looking to thank someone" for what R.C. Hoiles did for the Masuda family and others in the 1940s. The Santa Ana Register was one of the few newspapers to publicly oppose the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, while other publications were stirring the pot of mistrust.

LEFT: Excerpt of a column penned by Stephen Greenhut--published nationally--which mentions the visit by Mas Masuda. (The Odessa American, November 24, 2002)

   At the time, the Orange County Register staff would not have known they were speaking to a future Congressional Gold Medal honoree, but they knew the significance of the actions taken by R.C. Hoiles and the sacrifice of the Masuda family.  Acts of courage seem to come second nature to the Masuda family and Mas Masuda was no exception. 

   Mas was one of the four Masuda brothers who served in the U.S. military during World War II.  He was 24 years old when his family was forcibly removed from California and sent to confinement in Jerome, Arkansas, and later, Gila River, Arizona.  On the night of December 7, 1941, the Orange County sheriff came for his father, Gensuke, at their Talbert (Fountain Valley) farm, while his wife, Tamae, and nine children watched.  

   Long a civic leader in Orange County, Gensuke had been among the Japanese pioneer community--including elders of the Wintersburg Mission--who helped fund a community school in Talbert in 1927.  Gensuke and others in the Japanese American community had written a check, and provided equipment and food for children attending grammar school, prompting the teachers to voice their gratitude to the Santa Ana Register.

   "It was so sudden," Mas told Los Angeles Times reporter David Reyes in 1992, of that night on the Orange County farm on December 7, 1941. "They loaded my dad and other parents who were Issei and put them on a bus.  We asked where they were taking them, but they didn't give us any answers." 

RIGHT: The Santa Ana Register posted the draft registration of Masao Masuda and his brother, Kazuo, in October 1940. Kazuo and Takahashi Masuda entered the U.S. military in September 1941. Kazuo was killed in action in Italy with the "Go For Broke" 442nd in 1944, in an act of valor for which he was posthumously presented the Distinguished Service Cross in 1945. (Santa Ana Register, October 23, 1940) 

   After first leaving for Fresno, California, the family was sent to Jerome, Arkansas, and later, to Gila River, Arizona. While waiting to enter the U.S. military, Mas helped support the family by working in camp as a mechanic.  

   Mas was in the U.S. Military Intelligence Service (MIS), when he learned his brother, Kazuo, had been killed in action in Italy with the "Go For Broke" 442nd.  (Read more in the December 10, 2017, post, "Two Decembers: 1934 and 1948", http://historicwintersburg.blogspot.com/2017/12/two-decembers-1934-and-1948.html


LEFT: A report of the federal War Relocation Authority in 1945 cited the threats directed at Mary Masuda as the family returned to their farm in Talbert. After this incident--which gained the attention of General Joe Stillwell--the War Relocation Authority issued a national bulletin calling for an end to threats and violence as Americans of Japanese descent returned to their homes. (Problems of Resettlement, War Relocation Authority, June 1945)

   It was while serving in the MIS that Mas learned of his sister, Mary, being threatened verbally and physically as the family began returning to Orange County from the Gila River camp in 1945.  The threats by the Native Sons of the Golden West, or what the De Moines Register referred to as "town hoodlums", prompted a stern response by the War Relocation Authority--and later, by General Joe Stillwell--and made headlines across the country.  

   The Courier-Journal newspaper of Louisville, Kentucky, was more direct, with a headline "Gang last May menaced sister" on December 9, 1945. The Courier-Journal reported a group of men had "attempted to terrorize" Mary Masuda and that 'the War Relocation Authority listed her case as an 'incident of planned terrorism' against Japanese Americans in California". 

   The Distinguished Service Cross is the second highest military award that can be given to a member of the U.S. Army for extreme gallantry and risk of life in actual combat with an armed enemy force.  General Stillwell stated during the presentation of the medal that "the Distinguished Service Cross is only a little thing, but in making this presentation, we want to convey to you and your family the deep respect and admiration of every decent American."

RIGHT: Private First Class Masao Masuda returns the salute of General Joe Stillwell at the Masuda family farmhouse in December 1945, at the posthumous presentation of the Distinguished Service Cross for his brother, Kazuo Masuda. (Los Angeles Times, December 9, 1945)

   Private First Class Masao Masuda was at the family's Talbert farmhouse, in uniform, as General Stillwell presented posthumously the Distinguished Service Cross for his brother, Kazuo. As has been reported on this blog previously, the future President Ronald Reagan--then an Army captain--was present at the ceremony.  Reagan again remembered the Masuda family when signing the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, forty years after the funeral services for Kazuo Masuda in the Wintersburg Japanese Church in Wintersburg Village--now Huntington Beach--in 1948.


LEFT: A photograph, circa 1945, of Masao Masuda in his Army uniform on a tractor at the family farm in Talbert, now Fountain Valley, Orange County, California. (Photograph, M. Urashima, December 16, 2017) © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

   The legacy of his brother, Kazuo, the family's bravery in the face of threats, and his own service during World War II in the MIS is something Masao Masuda carried for a lifetime as a point of honor.  It is a reminder to have courage and stand one's ground for moral principles, the sentiment voiced by the Santa Ana Register's R.C. Hoiles when he defended the Masuda family.

   When he returned to Orange County after World War II, Mas wanted to return to farming.  Mas gathered his family and constructed a large roadside farm stand that became a popular destination for the best of locally-grown produce.  Mas created a good life for his family, while continuing to take a leadership role in community affairs with the Japanese American Citizens League and the Veterans of Foreign Wars.


LEFT: Mas Masuda is installed on the board of directors for the Orange County chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) in 1960, along with other congregants of the Wintersburg Japanese Mission, Clarence Nishizu and Leonard Miyawaki.  The Orange County JACL had held its first meeting in the second church building of the Wintersburg Japanese Mission in January 1935. (Los Angeles Times, February 11, 1960)

   Mas got to see his brother, Kazuo, honored as the namesake of Kazuo Masuda Middle School in Fountain Valley and for the Kazuo Masuda Memorial VFW Post 3670. He got to hear President Ronald Reagan speak about his family and their contributions and sacrifice at the signing of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, the formal apology and reparation to Japanese Americans.  

   Mas was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2011, along with an honorary degree from Santa Ana College where he had been enrolled when America entered World War II.  He was honored at the Orange County Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum in January 2017.  And, in February 2017, he got to see his brother's uniform and story shared this year on the 75th anniversary of Executive Order 9066 at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.


RIGHT: The "Go For Broke" Congressional Gold Medal displayed at the Orange County Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum when Masao Masuda was honored in January 2017. Congressional Gold Medals are awarded to individuals "who have performed an achievement that has an impact on American history and culture that is likely to be recognized as a major achievement in the recipient's field long after the achievement." (Source: Congressional Research Service, Congressional Gold Medals, 1776 - 2016, CRS Report RL30076)  (Photograph, M. Urashima, January 15, 2017) © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

   Mas saw generations of Masudas take their place in Orange County and passed on his ethics for hard work, along with a love for the sweeter things in life, including his love of sports and fishing. The Santa Ana Register reported his catch of a whopping 33 1/4-pound dolphin fish at the San Diego albacore grounds in September 1976, when he was 59.  Mas also passed on his sense of duty in giving back to the community and was a presence at the annual Memorial Day program with Kazuo Masuda Memorial VFW Post 3670 each year, including Memorial Day 2017.  

   Masao Masuda was as a congregant of the Wintersburg Church--the legacy of the Wintersburg Japanese Mission his family had attended--where his memorial was held on Saturday, December 16, 2017.  An Orange County hero.


ABOVE: A photograph tribute to Masao Masuda at his memorial services at the Wintersburg Church, capturing moments from his life over the past century.  Far right, he stands with Los Angeles' KABC Channel-7 news anchor David Ono at the annual Memorial Day program in 2015 at Westminster Memorial Park in Orange County, California. (Photograph, M. Urashima, December 16, 2017) © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

© All rights reserved.  No part of the Historic Wintersburg blog may be reproduced or duplicated without prior written permission from the author and publisher, M. Adams Urashima.

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Kazuo Masuda VFW Post 3670 Memorial Day

ABOVE: A 21-gun salute in honor of all fallen veterans at the VFW Post 3670 Kazuo Masuda Memorial Day program at Westminster Memorial Park. (Video, May 30, 2016 M. Urashima) © All rights reserved.

   Historic Wintersburg in Huntington Beach author and preservation task force chair, Mary Urashima, was asked to speak at the annual  Kazuo Masuda Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3670 program on Memorial Day.  It is an honor to be part of this day, recognizing the remarkable men and women fallen in their service to our country.  This event---which bears the name of Congressional Gold Medal and Distinguished Service Cross recipient Kazuo Masuda---honors, in particular, the Nisei soldiers of World War II and all service men and women who have fallen in the line of duty.

   An excerpt of her remarks:

   "...This is a chapter of our country’s history we are reminded of today, as we stand near the grave of Kazuo Masuda, whose family was incarcerated during the time of his service.  Four of the Masuda brothers served during World War II.  Kazuo was awarded posthumously in 1945 the Distinguished Service Cross for extraordinary heroism in action.

RIGHT: Marvin Masuda (second from left) lays flowers at the grave of Kazuo Masuda, with his father, Masuo Masuda (center). Masuo Masuda is the brother of Kazuo Masuda and also a WWII veteran.  Both were Huntington Beach High School graduates. (Photo, M. Urashima, May 30, 2016, Westminster Memorial Park) © All rights reserved.

    On July 6, 1944, when his observation post became the target of heavy mortar and artillery fire, Staff Sergeant Masuda crawled 200 yards to the mortar section, secured a mortar tube and ammunition, and returned to the observation post.  

   Using his helmet as a base plate, he single-handedly directed fire at the enemy for 12 hours, repulsing two enemy counter-attacks.                         

   A month a half later, on August 27, 1944, he voluntarily led two men on a night patrol across the Arno River and through the heavily-mined and booby-trapped north bank.  Hearing movements, he ordered his men to cover him while he crawled forward. He discovered that they had been surrounded.   
   
   Kazuo Masuda ordered his men to withdraw while he engaged the enemy.  At the sacrifice of his life, he enabled them to escape.  Kazuo Masuda’s family would hear of his death, while confined at Gila River.

LEFT: A news clipping from 1945 announces the War Relocation Authority had taken "steps to end threats against a West Coast Japanese American girl who has four brothers with honorable army service records."  The article is paired with another article noting the reception received by a northern California Japanese American family attempting to return home after WWII confinement.  Acts of violence and vandalism toward Japanese Americans were widely reported and the return home was difficult, for those who chose to return to their prior home. Many lost their properties or chose not to return after WWII confinement.        
    
   The return of the Masuda family to Orange County in 1945 was not easy. Kazuo’s sister, Mary Masuda was confronted with threats of violence. Hearing this, the War Relocation Authority issued a national bulletin against such acts, reminding the public these were American families returning home. 
   
   General Joe Stillwell, determined to make a statement, traveled to the Masuda’s farmhouse in Talbert to present posthumously the Distinguished Service Cross.  It was on the front page of the Los Angeles Herald on December 9, 1945, and carried by the news reels of the day.  With General Stillwell, was a young Army captain, Ronald Reagan.


ABOVE: A Nisei military honor guard holding American flags flanks the entrance to the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Church as the Masuda family departs the memorial service for Westminster Memorial Park in 1948. This was three years after leaving confinement at the Gila River Relocation Center in Arizona and three years after Mary Masuda confronted threats of violence during her attempt to return home to Orange County. (Photo snip courtesy of Dennis Masuda) © All rights reserved.  
   
   As a historian, I have written about the Masuda family’s story and the impact it had in 1988 when President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act.  He remembered the Masudas from that December day in 1945.  This was an American family, in the farm country of Orange County, whose story would resonate all the way to the White House.  
   
   It would be several years before Kazuo Masuda could be brought home to rest.  Finally, in 1948, the family and community were able to memorialize this hero who had walked on.   
   
   The funeral services were held with a full house in the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Church with a Nisei military honor guard, before proceeding here, to the Westminster Memorial Park, to this place where we are today.   
   
   Looking at the photographs of that day, I am struck by the dignity, sadness and pride I see in the faces of those gathered to honor him.  It is what we feel here today

LEFT: The Congressional Gold Medal awarded posthumously to Kazuo Masuda and other Nisei soldiers of World War II. Kasuo Masuda is one of twelve Nisei soldiers featured in the Smithsonian Institute's 2016 digital exhibit, The Nisei Soldier: Congressional Gold Medal, http://cgm.smithsonianapa.org/ The Smithsonian explains, "This exhibition presents the extraordinary life stories of 12 Nisei soldiers who served in the US Armed Forces in World War II. While some had families in America’s concentration camps, all served with a highly uncommon and commendable sense of patriotism and honor. This is their American story."  

   
   The story of Kazuo Masuda continues to resonate seven decades after his death, as he is one of twelve Nisei soldiers featured in the Smithsonian Institute’s new exhibit on Congressional Gold Medal recipients, of whom Kazuo Masuda is one.    
   
   We gather on Memorial Day to remember those who have fallen during their service to our country, those who have walked on during the past two and a half centuries.  As is the nature of America, their service was not easy and not always understood.  Not all have received the hero’s welcome they deserve.

RIGHT: The Japanese American soldiers of World War II are one of the few military groups who have not been honored with a U.S. postal stamp, yet they remain the highest decorated units of all time. Learn more at Stamp Our Story, http://niseistamp.org/

   There are generations of soldiers and families of soldiers who have persevered when the political climate made that difficult.  We live in a time when manners and respect seems to have faded.

   This brings me back to what I was taught by my parents in my childhood.  It is the message conveyed by General Stillwell in 1945 and President Reagan in 1988.  It is still timely today, it is a message we still should be teaching our children, and the message I wish to close with.  
     
   On Memorial Day, we remember the fallen. Those who have walked on.  What we must remember is they walk past us every day.  Stand.  Show respect.  Cheer for them. Every day.  These are heroes."

All rights reserved.  No part of the Historic Wintersburg blog may be reproduced or duplicated without prior written permission from the author and publisher, M. Adams Urashima.