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1992 - Dick and Miriam Moork, Brenda Aoki and Mark Izu, Chizu Iiyama, etc., 1992

 File — Box: 3, Folder: 2

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The collection has been divided into eight series, see listing below, easily identified by the way Nikki filed her papers. In addition to her writings, her correspondence files and subject files are rich with details of her interests. For instance, her correspondence files show her great influence on Asian-American authors and artists. She helped edit their work, arranged for them to speak in San Francisco, and supported them with warm letters. The files show her work to pass the Civil Liberties Act of 1985, her service as a spokesperson for the redress movement, and the schedule of her lectures to school children from elementary to graduate classes usually speaking about the internment. She also addressed the topics of marrying a powerful white man and the perception of white superiority. She spoke and wrote with fact, feeling, and humor.

NSB was active in the San Francisco Center for Japanese American Studies and served as program chair and edited their newsletter during the 1980s. This period is well documented in the collection.

Her daughter has kept most of the family photographs and has requested that the following items be returned to her. In most cases, photocopies have been made for this collection at the Labor Archives (note that some photocopying was done two-sided, so check backs) and the originals are with Kathy Bridges Wiggins: Material relating to internment of the Sawada family Material referring to the marriage ceremony of NSB and HRB Passports and other official documents from NSB and HRB NSB and HRB correspondence with each other Correspondence with relatives in Japan (NSB) and Australia (HRB) Drafts of NSB/NSBF’s writings Correspondence with HRB biographers Correspondence with Nora Lupton, a close friend of Nikki’s

Photographs that were not returned are in the LARC photo collection. Those returned have been scanned when possible and are in the LARC computer. Some snapshots relating to correspondence or subject files are in the collection and are noted in this guide.

See also an audio recording of Nikki’s guest appearance at an SFSU history class in 1997 when she spoke of her life as a child of Japanese immigrant parents and described the three years her family spent interned in Arizona. Oral histories relating to NSB’s life are available: Betty de Losada and David F. Selvin.

The Collection has been divided into the following eight series. File folder titles, the order of the folders, and order within folders have been retained as she collected and filed the material.

Series 1 BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS - including resumes and interviews Box 1 Folders 1 - 14

Series 2 CORRESPONDENCE, 1947-2002 - chronological with some individual folders Box 1 Folders 15 - 42 Box 2 Folders 1 - 22 Box 3 Folders 1 -11

Series 3 SAN FRANCISCO CENTER FOR JAPANESE AMERICAN STUDIES, 1969-1986 NSB served as editor of the newsletter and program chairman, 1979-1986 Box 3 Folders 12 - 32 Series 4 SUBJECT FILES, A - Z Box 3 Folders 33 - 47 Box 4 Folders 1 - 55 Box 5 Folders 1 - 25 Series 5 WRITINGS BY OTHER AUTHORS, MAINLY ASIAN-AMERICAN Box 5 Folders 26 - 46 Series 6 WRITINGS BY NS/NSB/NSBF Box 6 Folders 1 - 48 Series 7 INSTITUTE FOR SCIENTIFIC ANALYSIS, 1975 NSB served as Director for the Center for Employment Studies Box 6 Folders 49 - 68 Box 7 Folders 1 - 22 (archival box) Series 8 WOMEN’S HEALTH ISSUES Box 8 Folders 1 - 5 (archival box)

Dates

  • 1992

Extent

From the Collection: 8.5 Cubic Feet ( (6 cartons) (2 boxes))

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

General

Letters to/from Dick & Miriam Moork, Brenda Aoki & Mark Izu, Chizu Iiyama, Jim Ryder (Local 6) & Joanne Jung [?], Gary Parque, Mia Takashima, Valerie Matsumoto, Arlene and Richard Daniels, Ann B. Horvitz, Patricia Bird, Rita Takahashi, John MacEvoy, Robin Fross, James D. Foster, Foster Bam, Yuka Otsuki, Sachi Matsumoto, Lon Hatamiya, Milton Murayama, David Selvin, and SFSU Labor Archives

3/26/92 “Tribute to Vincent Hallinan from Nikki Bridges” on his 95th birthday

3/11/92 listing of San Francisco and Berkeley events NSB’s friends might enjoy

2/26/92 NSB to “Doug” describing her writing group with Molly Giles, SFSU

2/29/92 NSB to Don Hewitt of “60 Minutes” concerning Japanese American liberators of German concentration camps: “One cannot know whether the Army’s rationale for the gag order was 1) it preferred that only Caucasian soldiers be liberators, or 2) it didn’t want to made public the irony of a German concentration camp’s being liberated by Japanese American soldiers who themselves had volunteered or been drafted from American concentration camps...”

3/3/92 Jerry Brady to NSB with copy of his poem “In the Memory of Harry Bridges”

1/26/92 Concert program for the Chevron Museum Concert Series, California Palace of the Legion of Honor with Helen Kwalwasser, violin

1/10/92 NSB spoke to Center for Learning in Retirement on “The Psychological Impact of Incarceration”

5/2/92 NSB speech at the National Education Association, Board of Directors, Asian and Pacific Islander Observance, 13 pages

4/27/92 Oakland Tribune article by William Wong, “Remembering the internment” with report on NSB’s remarks at conference on the 50th anniversary of the internment

7/20/92 NSB letter to Prof. Dr. Arne A. Kollwitz summarizing thirty-six years of her life to an old friend

7/28/92 Seattle Post Intelligencer article by Scott Sunde, “A Lesson from Harry Bridges” with report of NSB’s remarks to crowd celebrating HRB’s 91st birthday

10/19/92 San Francisco Chronicle, Herb Caen: “Nikki Bridges, Harry’s widow, responding to my remark that Bush has only one thing going for him–his looks: Come on! Put him in overalls, stick a pitchfork in his hand and surprise–‘American Gothic!’”

7/28/92 NSB’s remarks at the Celebration of the Establishment of the Harry Bridges Chair in Labor Studies, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Washington. This is full of good Harry stories.

Correspondence on Dick Carbray’s book, Prophets of Human Solidarity

11/6/92 San Francisco Chronicle, “Pair asserts Bridges was a Communist” by Stephen Schwartz. Correspondence with Dick Moork refuting Schwartz.

10/9/92 Program for “Poston, Camp 1‘50-Year Reunion’”

10/22/92 NSB to Takako Day thanking her for her “book with stories about my friends, Reiko True, Jeanne Allen, and the late Yoshiko Uchida, Mayumi Oda, Harriet Ishimoto and myself.” This book in Japanese includes an article based on an interview with NSB

6/6/92 NSB’s response to Pat Wynne’s letter which explained the meaning of her song, “Do It on His Time,” which NSB objected to: “...it is ultimately self-defeating to hand employers a club to use against us...all the trade unionists we have known and admired have prided themselves on delivering a fair day’s work for a fair day’s pay. They had nothing but contempt for goof-offs and pilferers. My late husband Harry was one.”

Repository Details

Part of the Labor Archives and Research Center Repository

Contact:
San Francisco State University
J. Paul Leonard Library, Room 460
1630 Holloway Ave
San Francisco 94132-1722 USA
(415) 405-5571