John Fujio Aiso oral history interview

Copy the text below to embed this resource

Date
1979-03-29
Main contributors
Aiso, John Fujio, 1909-1987; Mayo, Marlene J.
Summary
Oral history interview with John Fujio Aiso conducted by Marlene Mayo on March 29, 1979. John Fujio Aiso (December 14, 1909 - December 29, 1987) was born in Burbank, California.  He excelled academically and received a scholarship to attend Brown University, from which he graduated in 1931 as the university's first Asian American graduate.  He then attended Harvard Law School, receiving his degree in 1934.  He entered private practice and spent time in Japan on behalf of his firm.  He was drafted in 1941.  Originally stationed at Fort MacArthur, he was transferred to the Military Intelligence Service Language School (later known as the Defense Language Institute), where he became Director of Academic Training from 1941-1946. In 1946, Aiso was granted a direct commission as Major to work as an executive assistant to General C. A. Willoughby in the Civil Information Section. In 1947, he received the Legion of Merit before he retired from the military to practice law in California. He served as Superior Court Commissioner until he was promoted to Los Angeles Municipal Court Judge in 1952, becoming the first Japanese American to hold a judicial position in the contiguous United States. In 1957, he was elevated to Los Angeles Superior Court Judge and in 1968, Governpr Ronald Reagan advanced Aiso to the 2nd District Court of Appeals. Aiso died at age 78 from injuries sustained during an arbitrary mugging in Los Angeles.
Publisher
University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
Genre
Oral histories
Subject
Japan--History--Allied occupation, 1945-1952
Locations
Japan; California; Los Angeles
Collection
Postwar Japan
Unit
Special Collections and University Archives
Language
English
Rights Statement
In Copyright
Terms of Use
Collection may be protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. To obtain permission to publish or reproduce, please contact the University of Maryland Libraries at http://www.lib.umd.edu/special/contact/home.
Physical Description
Recording: 01:09:00 (audio cassette; mp3); Transcript: 29 pages (PDF)
Notes
This oral history interview is part of the Marlene J. Mayo oral histories. A guide to the full collection of Marlene J. Mayo oral histories is available in our archival collections: http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/42478.
Accession 2009-209-GWP
An interview transcript is available.
Other Identifier
Filename: prange-087501

Access Restrictions

This item is accessible by: the public.