Summary
Envelope addressed to Setsutaro Hasegawa from the Japanese Consulate in Melbourne. The letter contained in the envelope is also in the collection (HT 22203). Setsutaro migrated to Australia from Japan in 1897 at the age of 26, just four years before the introduction of the Immigration Restriction Act which severely limited migration to Australia from countries in Asia. He established a laundry business in Geelong and by 1911 he had married an Australian-born woman and had three children.
In 1941 Setsutaro was arrested as an enemy alien and sent to Tatura internment camp in northern Victoria. Released early in 1943 due to his age and poor health, unlike most Japanese interns he was not deported to Japan after the War. Setsutaro remained in Geelong for the rest of his life and died in 1952.
Physical Description
The envelope has Japanese characters in black ink on the front, a round consulate stamp and a hand written date. The reverse of the envelop has the Consulate's address.
Significance
The Hasegawa collection enables the exploration of a number of important historical themes relating to migration, working life, and wartime internment in Victoria. Late nineteenth century and early to mid twentieth century Japanese migration and settlement experiences are little represented in the museum's collections and this collection of clothing, documents, personal items and photographs helps to redress.
More Information
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Collecting Areas
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Acquisition Information
Donation from Andrew Hasegawa, Andrew Hasegawa, 08 Feb 2008
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Sender
Japanese Consulate, Melbourne, Greater Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 6 Jul 1903
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Addressed To
Mr Setsutaro Hasegawa, Melbourne, Greater Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 06 Jul 1903
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Inscriptions
Front of Envelope: Japanese characters and 6/7/03 Reverse of Envelope: 'H.I.J.Ms Consulate, 467 Collins Street Melbourne'.
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Classification
Migration, Settlement - cultural & social life, Correspondence
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Category
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Discipline
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Type of item
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Overall Dimensions
95 mm (Width), 219 mm (Height)
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References
5 family photographs (need originals from donor to scan)
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Keywords
Immigration, Immigration Policies, Japanese Communities, Japanese Culture, Japanese Immigration, White Australia Policy