Grants

FY 2019 Grant Awards

Grant: Reissa Foundation Grant
Grant Award: $20,000
A legacy of the RGK Foundation, Reissa is committed to addressing social issues and improving the lives of vulnerable populations in California and Texas. It is an unsolicited grant. TCDSC plans to be announced.

Grant: National Park Service Grant
Japanese American Confinement Site Grant for Legacy I Project to record oral histories of descendants of those confined in camp.

FY 2017 Grant Awards

Project Title: Tuna Canyon Detention Station Legacy Project
Grant Award: $54,000
The Tuna Canyon Detention Station Coalition will conduct at least 25 interviews with descendants of Tuna Canyon detainees and produce a video to enhance viewers’ experiences of “Only the Oaks Remain: The Tuna Canyon Detention Station Traveling Exhibit.” The video, including full interview transcripts, will be made available to students, researchers, and the general public on the Coalition’s website. There are no detainees still living, but their descendants’ recollections and reactions to archival materials, including their family’s letters and government case files, will provide invaluable oral histories of Tuna Canyon.

Grant:National Park Service Grant
Japanese American Confinement Site Grant for Legacy II Project to record oral histories of descendants of those confined in camp.

Grant: Reissa Foundation Grant
Grant Award: $20,000
A legacy of the RGK Foundation, Reissa is committed to addressing social issues and improving the lives of vulnerable populations in California and Texas. New retractable exhibit was designed for smaller space and lighter traveling requirements. It allows the exhibit to be in two separated venues at the same period of time.

FY 2015 Grant Awards

Recipient: San Fernando Valley Japanese American Community Center (Pacoima, CA)
Project Title: Only the Oaks Remain: The Tuna Canyon Detention Station Traveling Exhibit
Grant Award: $102,190
The San Fernando Valley Japanese American Community Center will create a museum-quality traveling exhibit to tell the story of the former Tuna Canyon Detention Station in Tujunga, California. The exhibit will include the names of the more than 2,000 people of Japanese, Italian, German, and Japanese-Peruvian descent detained at Tuna Canyon, along with brief biographies of several detainees. The traveling exhibit also will include video interviews with detainees’ children, and a diorama and model of the Tuna Canyon Detention Station, which was torn down in 1960.

Congratulations! We are pleased to announce that your grant proposal, Only the Oaks Remain: The Tuna Canyon Detention Station Traveling Exhibit, submitted for the Fiscal Year 2015 Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program has been selected for funding.

The National Park Service received a total of 36 applications, requesting over $5.7 million Federal share, for the Fiscal Year 2015 grant cycle. The proposals reflected a wide range of project types, including oral history, interpretation and education, documentation, planning, preservation, and capital projects. The grants were evaluated and awarded in a competitive process, and matched $2 in federal money for every $1 in non-federal funds and “in-kind” contributions by the grant recipients.

Grant: Aratani C.A.R.E. Grant
Grant Award: $5,000
Partnering with UCLA to engage three college age interns in the process of building the “Only the Oaks Remain” exhibit. Their contributions include transcribing interviews, creating QR codes, and designing iPads for the exhibit. The iPads focused on the virtual tour and descendant interviews.  The interns also visited the Terminal Island Monument with Minoru Tonai leading the discussion.

Kyoko Oda, Kara Tanaka, Keith Matsushita, Ariel Imamoto, Lloyd Hitt, and Kanji Sahara

Grant: National Park Service Grant
Japanese American Confinement Site Grant for “Only the Oaks Remain” exhibit.

“Only the Oaks Remain: The Tuna Canyon Detention Station Traveling Exhibit” will be a museum-quality traveling exhibition which tells the largely untold story of the Japanese, German, Italian, and Japanese Peruvian detainees at the Tuna Canyon Detention Station in Tujunga, a community that is part of the City Los Angeles. With funds from the National Park Service’s Japanese American Confinement Sites grant program, we will design and construct an exhibit which can be set up, taken down, and stored in packing cases to be shipped to museums along the Pacific Coast and elsewhere. In doing so, we will finally tell the complete story of Tuna Canyon and those people who were among the very first to be confined at the outbreak of World War II.

We are fortunate to have over fifty photographs taken by Tuna Canyon Officer-in-Charge, Merrill Scott, who took them in the belief that they would provide a pictorial record of an important chapter in American history. These photos will show what Tuna Canyon looked like and reveal what life was like inside the camp. Documents, including reports, letters, and memos by government officials will also play an important part in telling the Tuna Canyon story. As part of the grant, we will send a researcher to the National Archives in Washington D.C. to search for relevant documents.

Newspapers will also play a vital roll in the exhibit because they show what the public was told. A search of the Los Angeles Times, Herald Examiner, and other newspapers will be made to locate articles on Tuna Canyon. A list of the names of the more than 2,000 detainees will be displayed on six large standing scrolls. Video interviews with the children of those confined at Tuna Canyon will be shown. A diorama and model of the camp will be constructed based on historic photographs and will show “Visitation Day” with some 20 detainees on the inside of the fence and 200 friends and family members on the outside.

Brief biographies of several Tuna Canyon detainees – a Terminal Island fisherman, a Buddhist priest, a martial arts instructor, a German immigrant and a Japanese Peruvian – will be exhibited to show the type of “enemy alien” the U.S. government felt was a threat. An exact duplicate of the plaque that will be installed at the Tuna Canyon site will be displayed. Through drawings, plans, and pictures we will also describe the memorial that we one day hope to build at Tuna Canyon. And finally, we will include a printed pamphlet that will help the visitor navigate the exhibit. Tying all this together will be a narrative displayed on interpretive panels which will tell the story of Tuna Canyon, a story which up until recently has been largely untold, but now will never be forgotten.

TCDS was also awarded the Aratani C.A.R.E. grant, which will be used to train university interns in leadership, verbal communication, and multimedia production to increase younger advocates for the
memorial.