Remembering Santa Fe

Remembering Santa Fe
Author:
Publisher: Gibbs Smith
Total Pages: 126
Release:
Genre: Santa Fe (N.M.)
ISBN: 9781423620006

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This volume presents 48 hand-carved woodcuts depicting daily activities suchs weaving, baking, building, singing, and worship as observed in Santa Fe,ew Mexico during the period 1928 to 1943. Each etching is accompanied byeminiscences of the artist. Willard Clark (1910-1992) was a printmaker a

Remembering Santa Fe

Remembering Santa Fe
Author: Robert P. Olmsted
Publisher:
Total Pages: 128
Release: 1999-11-01
Genre: Railroads
ISBN: 9780934228183

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Remembering Santa Fe

Remembering Santa Fe
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2004
Genre: Santa Fe (N.M.)
ISBN:

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Santa Fe Memories

Santa Fe Memories
Author: Richard Mahler
Publisher: Indy Tech Publishing
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2002-06
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 9780897302418

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Recipes from Santa Fe residents and restaurants, with brief histories of Santa Fe and the restaurants.

Remembering

Remembering
Author:
Publisher: Sunstone Press
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2006
Genre: Cemeteries
ISBN: 0865344868

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Within this volume's pages, readers will find descriptions and directions to some of New Mexico's unique, sometimes controversial, cemeteries, monuments, and memorials as well as a beginner's guide to geneology. (Environmental Studies)

Remembering Santa Fe

Remembering Santa Fe
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 46
Release: 2004
Genre: Santa Fe (N.M.)
ISBN: 9781586851026

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The author Willard F. Clark was a printmaker and artist who greatly shaped the way the rst of the world views old-time Santa Fe, New Mexico. Born in 1910 in Boston, he grew up in Argentina and studied art during the summers in New York City at Grand Central Station Art School and the Hawthorn Art Academy. In 1928, on his way to California, he stopped in Santa Fe, New Mexico and fell in love with the majestic landscape of the American Southwest. There he started a small print shop and taught himself the craft of printing, cutting his own wood-blocks, setting type, and binding small books. Willard Clark developed a graphic style that came to represent early-twentieth-century Santa Fe to many around the world.

Memories of Santa Fe, 1959-1961

Memories of Santa Fe, 1959-1961
Author: Jean Mitchell Burroughs
Publisher:
Total Pages: 30
Release: 1996
Genre: Governors' spouses
ISBN:

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Remembering Our Grandfathers’ Exile

Remembering Our Grandfathers’ Exile
Author: Gail Y. Okawa
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2020-08-31
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0824883195

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When author Gail Okawa was in high school in Honolulu, a neighbor mentioned that her maternal grandfather had been imprisoned in a World War II concentration camp on the US mainland. Questioning her parents, she learned only that “he came back a changed man.” Years later, as an adult salvaging that grandfather’s memorabilia, she found a mysterious photo of a group of Japanese men standing in front of an adobe building, compelling her eventually to embark on a project to learn what happened to him. Remembering Our Grandfathers’ Exile is a composite chronicling of the Hawai‘i Japanese immigrant experience in mainland exile and internment during World War II, from pre-war climate to arrest to exile to return. Told through the eyes of a granddaughter and researcher born during the war, it is also a research narrative that reveals parallels between pre-WWII conditions and current twenty-first century anti-immigrant attitudes and heightened racism. The book introduces Okawa’s grandfather, Reverend Tamasaku Watanabe, a Protestant minister, and other Issei prisoners—all legal immigrants excluded by law from citizenship—in a collective biographical narrative that depicts their suffering, challenges, and survival as highly literate men faced with captivity in the little-known prison camps run by the U.S. Justice and War Departments. Okawa interweaves documents, personal and official, and internees’ firsthand accounts, letters, and poetry to create a narrative that not only conveys their experience but, equally important, exemplifies their literacy as ironic and deliberate acts of resistance to oppressive conditions. Her research revealed that the Hawai‘i Issei/immigrants who had sons in military service were eventually distinguished from the main group; the narrative relates visits of some of those sons to their imprisoned fathers in New Mexico and elsewhere, as well as the deaths of sons killed in action in Europe and the Pacific. Documents demonstrate the high degree of literacy and advocacy among the internees, as well as the inherent injustice of the government’s policies. Okawa’s project later expanded to include New Mexico residents having memories of the Santa Fe Internment Camp—witnesses who provide rare views of the wartime reality.