Jimmy Doi

Combat Veteran and Veteran of Japanese Internment

“We were way up. All we had to worry about were the shells coming. They couldn’t come over the mountains, so when they hit one side, the rocks would come flying onto our side. That’s the only thing we had to worry about... Staying up in the mountains in the snow, our socks were always wet, and one day I looked and I saw black spots on my left toe, and so I went [to a hospital]. That’s pretty good; I stayed and at least we got a hot meal. While we were up there we were eating nothing but K-rations..."~Jimmy Doi, Legacy Series Oral History Interview, 2016

Jimmy Doi was born in California in 1925. He and his four older siblings were Nisei, first generation Americans born to parents who emigrated from Japan and ran a tomato farm in Oxnard, California. When Doi’s parents decided to return to Japan in 1939, he chose to stay in the United States because he spoke only English and did not want to leave his high school. Despite being a popular student and athlete, Doi was shunned by his fellow students after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941.

After President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, forcing the deportation of Japanese Americans to internment camps, Doi had to report to an assembly center in Tulare, California. From there he was transported to Gila River War Relocation Center in Arizona along with thousands of other Japanese Americans. He made $8 a month as a dishwasher in the camp kitchen and played baseball to pass the time. In 1944 Doi was drafted and became part of the U.S. Army’s 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a regiment made up of Japanese American soldiers. He served in France and Italy, where he oversaw the surrender of German soldiers who were holding out in a mountain fortification. The 442nd became the most decorated unit for its size and length of service in U.S. military history. Totalling about 18,000 men, the unit earned over 4000 Purple Hearts, 4000 Bronze Stars, 560 Silver Stars, 21 Medals of Honor, and seven Presidential Unit Citations. 

After his discharge Doi reenlisted in order to visit his parents who were living near Hiroshima, Japan, and had survived the first atomic bomb. In 1949 Doi joined his brother, who had moved to Georgia to work in the poultry industry. Doi took a job as a chicken sexer, determining the sex of hatchlings at ten hatcheries across the state. He and his wife, Alice, who was an internee at the Rohwer War Relocation Center in Arkansas, live in Decatur, Georgia.

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