This article was written for the Statesman Journal and published Sunday May 3rd. It is reproduced here with citations and additional images for reference purposes.
This coming summer the WHC will be diving into the history of dining out in Salem in a new exhibit. Research into this topic and the restaurant-related artifacts in our collections have uncovered some interesting artifacts and stories. Last month, volunteer Sue Masse helped uncover the story of Frank Tanaka and the Tokio Sukiyaki House. More than just a story about a restaurant, this story shines a light on an ugly period in our community history.
Frank/Francis Teruhiko Tanaka was a part of the Salem restaurant scene for 27 years. Born in Japan in 1887,[1] he came to the United States by himself as a teenager.[2] In 1910, there are two Frank Tanakas of about the right age working as cooks in Oregon – one in a sheep camp in Baker County and one working as the private cook for the Keller family in Portland.[3] It is quite possible one, both or neither of these Frank Tanakas is the one that by 1915 had relocated to Salem and begun working as a cook for at Hotel Marion, a position he would hold for 17 years.[4] During this time he married and had five children.[5]
In 1934, Frank Tanaka struck out on his own. His first venture, Ben’s Café, was located at 156.5 Commercial St S. In 1935, the restaurant moved to 222 ½ N. Commercial Street, above Fitt’s Seafood Market and the name was changed to Tokio Sukiyaki House, named for Sukiyaki – a Japanese soup or stew-like dish served in a specialized pot. Advertisements for the restaurant herald it as specializing in “banquets and lunches for social occasions.” The menu included noodles, chop suey and chow mein.
Business was good until international affairs led to increased hostility and discrimination against people of Japanese descent in Salem. Even before the events at Pearl Harbor the Tanaka family wrote letters to the editor in local Salem publications and took out advertisements to show their dedication to the U.S. In a quarter page advertisement in the Oregon Magazine Frank Tanaka declared “I Am an American Too…I have five children all born here in Salem. I have been a resident of Salem for over 27 years and a member of the Salem Chamber of Commerce for many years. I love my wife, I love my children, I love my home and I love my United States.”[6] In an editorial the month before, Frank’s son Henry Tanaka talked about the difficulties faced by foreign-born Japanese, like his parents, and their children. “Today, under the doctrines of Democracy, these Japanese-Americans are being educated like other American children. They are thankful not only to a great nation, but particularly to their sympathetic parents who are giving all their support to rear their children as loyal and patriotic Americans. Although they themselves were deprived of an equal status in their communities and were long-suffering and tolerant under the sting of prejudices of the thoughtless. Yes, these thousands of ‘aliens’ are doing their part in building youth of courage, youth of fortitude, youth who are not taking their freedom for granted, but who are being taught that their freedom must be carried on by each generation. Our parents are proving themselves to be loyal Americans by sacrificing their worn bodies and prejudice-beaten lives to direct their children into true, courageous, and patriotic American citizens.”[7]
Despite this patriotism, many in the Salem community turned their back on the family.
Business dried up at the restaurant. When the attack on Pearl Harbor happened, vandals destroyed the restaurant’s neon sign. In a 1981 Statesman Journal article, Henry Tanaka remembered walking down the street in Salem and seeing some of Salem’s Chinese residents wearing buttons that said “I’m Chinese” presumably to escape the harassment experienced by Japanese-Americans. By 1942 the restaurant had to close.[8] Soon after the Tanaka family was forced to leave Salem for an internment camp under a presidential order to “evacuate” people of Japanese descent, regardless of their citizenship status, from the West Coast. The family arrived at the Tule Lake Camp September 23, 1943. They would stay there a year before being allowed to relocated to Cleveland, Ohio, where Frank would live until his death in 1980.[9]
Frank was eventually able to petition for citizenship. His son Henry went on to play an active role in the National Japanese American Citizen League, serving a term as its national president.
Notes on the Tokio Sukiyaki House
The Tokio Sukiyaki House Operated 1935-1942[10]
The following chart was pulled from Salem area City Directory records in the collections of the Willamette Heritage Center – most of which were from the R.L. Polk Company based in Portland.
Year | Page | Entry |
1913 | No listing | |
1915 | 218 | Tanaka Chary cook Hotel Marion rms 589 Trade |
1915 | 218 | Tanaka Frank T (Yoshiko) chef Hotel Marion res 589 Trade |
1917 | 184 | Tanaka Frank T (Josie) cook Hotel Marion res 589 Trade |
1921 | 205 | Tanaka Frank chef Hotel Marion h 589 Trade |
1921 | 205 | Tanaka Harry cook Hotel Marion r 589 Trade |
1924 | No listing | |
1926-27 | 334 | Tanaka Frank (Maki) chef Hotel Marion h 1155 S 13th |
1926-27 | 334 | Tanaka Joe pantrymn Hotel Marion r 1155 S 13th |
1928-29 | 377 | Tanaka, Frank T (Macki) chef Marion Hotel h 1155 S 13th [no restaurant listing] |
1928-29 | 377 | Tanaka, Joe r 1155 S 13th |
1930-31 | 353 | Tanaka, Frank T (Macki) chef Marion Hotel h 1255 Cross [no restaurant listing] |
1932 | 318 | Tanaka, Frank T (Mackie) chef Marion Hotel h 1255 Cross [no restaurant listing] |
1934 | 348 | Tanaka, Frank (Maki) (Ben’s Cafe) r 148 S Commercial |
1934 | 675 | [Restaurants] Ben’s Cafe 156½ S Commercial |
1934 | 60 | Ben’s Cafe (Frank Tanaka) 156½ S Commercial |
1935 | 367 | Tanaka, Frank (Makiko) (Tokio Sukiyaki House) h 148 S Commercial |
1935 | 374 | Tokio Sukiyaki House (Frank Tanaka) restr 222½ N. Commercial St. |
1935 | 719 | [Restaurants] Tokio Sukiyaki House 222½ N. Commercial St. |
1936-37 | 401 | Tanaka, Frank (Makiko) (Tokio Sukiyaki House) h 148 S Commercial |
1936-37 | 799 | [Restaurants] Tokio Sukiyaki House 222½ N. Commercial St. |
1938-39 | 434 | Tanaka, Frank T. (Makiko) (Tokio Sukiyaki Cafe) h 222½ N Commercial |
1938-39 | 894 | [Restaurants] Tokio Sukiyaki House 222½ N. Commercial St. |
1940-41 | 467 | Tanaka, Frank T. (Makiko) (Tokio Sukiyaki Cafe) h 222½ N Commercial |
1940-41 | 650 | Tokio Sukiyaki Cafe (Frank T. Tanaka) 222½ N Commercial |
1940-41 | 857 | [Restaurants] Tokio Sukiyaki House 222½ N. Commercial St. |
1942 | No listing | |
1945 | No listing |
[1] There are multiple birthdates given for Tanaka on various documents. The year and month are always September 1887, but the day varies. According to his Internment Records when he was imprisoned at Tule Lake (accessed via www.japaneserelocation.org/ and ancestry.com) and his WWI Draft Card (accessed via Ancestry.com) he was born September 26, 1887. His WWII draft card and Naturalization Petition (No. 119412 US District Court at Cleveland, Ohio dated 11/11/1954) and Social Security Death Index list Sept. 22 1887.
[2] We believe we have found a passenger list showing his arrival to the U.S. Teruhiko appears on the lists for the ship Siberia which left Yokohama port on November 20, 1904 and arrived in Hawaii nine days later. His age on the ships records was 17, which corresponds with all other documentation of his birth date. It does conflict, however, with the ad he placed in the Oregon Magazine in December, 1941, which states that he came to the U.S. in 1903 when he was 14 years old.
[3] 1910 US Federal Census.
[4] Advertisement, Oregon Magazine, volume XLII, No. VI. Edited December 1, 1941; R. L. Polk & Co., Salem and Marion County, Oregon, Directories 1915 – 1934; WWI Draft Registration Card;
[5] It appears that Frank Tanaka would have a total of 6 children by two wives:
Paul Hajime Tanaka (brn 10/5/1917) per Tule Lake Camp records, appears to predate the marriage of Frank Tanaka and Makiko which the 1930 US Census suggests took place in 1920. This would explain why Paul does not appear with the family in the 1930 US Census.
Helen T. Tanaka
Henry Thomas Tanaka (1922-2006) – per personal papers biography at the Western Reserve Historical Society
Walter M. Tanaka (11/2/1926 – 02/12/1927) – per Salem Pioneer Cemetery burial records
Hazel Kazuko Tanaka
Harriet Ieko/Aiko Tanaka
[6] “I am an American Too.” Oregon Magazine. Volume XLII, Number VI. Edited December 1, 1941, pg 10. WHC 2008.038.0187B.
[7] Tanaka, Henry. “American-Born Japanese.” Oregon Magazine. Volume XLII, Number IV. Edited Nov 15, 1941, pg 10. WHC 2008.038.0185B.
[8] Manzano, Phil. “Salem’s Japanese: How a Small Community Vanished.” Statesman Journal. February 15, 1981, pg 14A.
[9] Grave stone – Lake View Cemetery Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio; Social Security Death Index; Naturalization petition Frank Teruhiko Tanaka No. 119412. US District Court at Cleveland, Ohio.
[10] City directories list it from 1935-1941. Interveiw with Frank’s son Henry quoted in “Japanese Voices from the Northwest” says restaurant closed in Feb 1942.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]
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