Tuesday, March 31, 2020

It Runs in the Family

My Great Grandfather, Yon Miyasaki
Growing up, I never heard much about my dad's family. They lived all the way across the country, so for a while our only communication was the occasional Christmas card. In the summer of 2015, I finally got to sit through a 7 hour flight, packed full of delays, and go see them for the very first time. Meeting the family on my dad's side was an honor as they had so many interesting stories to tell and much to teach me, mainly about my great grandfather, Yon Miyasaki.


My great grandfather and his father

On April 21st, 1908, my great grandfather was born near Los Angeles, California. I don't know much about his childhood other than he was born and raised a farmer. He lived a pretty average life, until the 1940s, when WWII began. 





The entrance of Manzanar

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the US government decided to initiate the forced relocation of Japanese Americans into places called internment camps. They were forced to give up their belongings and houses and taken to be locked up in their designated camp. My great grandfather was placed in the Manzanar camp in California. Here, my grandfather and all of his siblings were raised alongside 10,000 other incarcerated Japanese Americans.

Life on the camp was hard for the people living there. They had no privacy in the barracks, often sharing a room with strangers. The lines to get food and use the bathrooms were always long, yet the people at the camp were determined to make the best of it.



"Manzanar Co-op Fish Market"
"Yon Miyasaki Manzanar Railway Express Clerk Unloading Fish Cargo from PMT Truck Destined to Co-op Fish Market"



My great grandfather worked as a railway express clerk, unloading fish from the trucks that arrived and taking them to the fish market. But in his spare time, he was practicing his new hobby, photography. Pictures were not exactly allowed inside the camp, the privilege only being granted to a special few, but my great grandfather decided to ignore that rule and throughout his years living there, he would create dozens of scrapbooks filled with pictures from his daily life, showing the good and bad of daily life.

One of Yon's Scrapbooks


Yon with his father
The thing my great grandfather cherished most was his family. All of his scrapbooks are full of pictures of his neighbors, sisters, brothers, and children. Everyone around him was his family. After speaking to my grandfather, I learned that Yon was a very charismatic man who "liked to joke around." My grandfather explained that one time, he had a date and was planning on wearing a nice suit. To embarrass him, my great grandfather put a hammer in the pocket of the suit to stretch it out, forcing my grandfather to wear something else. However, to make up for it he let my grandfather borrow his car. 




Yon with my father, Paul Miyasaki
Unfortunately, I never got to meet my great grandfather. He passed away on June 23rd, 1995 and is buried at Rose Hills Memorial park. Despite not knowing him, he taught me a lot about the importance of family, not only through your direct relatives, but with those in your community.






Monday, March 9, 2020

Who is Buried at C of C!?

Elizabeth Jackson's monument in Cougar Mall

Today my Beyond the Grave class was told that we would be going down the center of campus to look at something interesting. Used to walking around graveyards, this shocked me as I was pretty sure there were no graveyards on campus. I was right, there are no graveyards, but there is a monument dedicated to none other than Elizabeth Hutchinson Jackson.

If this name seems familiar, it's because Elizabeth Jackson was the mother of Andrew Jackson; the 7th President of the United States. Andrew Jackson's death could be seen as a crazy coincidence. While living near the border of the Carolinas, Elizabeth's husband, Andrew Jackson, fell ill and died. Astonishingly, Elizabeth gave birth shortly after the death of her husband to the Andrew Jackson we all know today.

Jackson had two brothers named Hugh and Robert. Together, Elizabeth and her sons moved to the upstate of South Carolina to live with family members. It was her that Elizabeth would become a housekeeper and nurse to her sister and her sister's husband. This house would be Andrew Jackson's home for the first thirteen years of his life, and throughout those years, he would live in a guest in his own home. His mother's love was evident, however, as she kept the family spirit alive through telling wildly adventurous tales of her family's fight for freedom against the British in Ireland. Later, she would find that these stories inspired Jackson and the rest of her sons more than she ever could have imagined.

Several years later, the Revolutionary War began. In 1780, British forces invaded Charleston and captured the port city on March 12th. Not stopping there, the soldiers began to pillage Charleston while massacring the American patriots, leaving more than a hundred dead. The Jackson found themselves tending wounds of their neighbors in a local church. Outraged by what the British had done and calling upon their ancestors legacy, Jackson and his brother's joined a patriot regiment. Unfortunately, one of Jackson's brother would die shortly after.

The fighting continued and Jackson ended up trapped by British forces in a family house with his brother Robert. The two were struck hard by swords and faced severe lacerations that led to them developing smallpox. Still infected with smallpox, they were held in a prison in Camden, SC. Robert would pass due to smallpox, but Jackson survived. After seeing he would live, Elizabeth went to Charleston to tend to wounded soldiers. While working with soldiers coming off of ships, Elizabeth contracted cholera and died. Andrew Jackson never knew where his mother was buried as she was buried by a friend who simply said she buried Elizabeth on a hill.

In 1942, a marker dedicated to Elizabeth Jackson was placed in Charleston near King Street Extension and Hariot Street. However, the monument received no care and eventually started to lean from the amount of people leaning on it while waiting for their bus to arrive. In 1967, it was moved to the College of Charleston where it can now be seen on Cougar Mall.

So, to answer the question, 'Who is Buried on C of C's Campus,' Elizabeth Jackson is not, but we still don't know exactly where she is buried.

The Oldest Charlestonian

KKBE (courtesy of kkbe.org ) Many things in Charleston are, for lack of better word, old. This includes the Jewish synagogue, Kahal Kad...