Japanese immigration to Hawai‘i in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries transformed the islands’ economy,society, and culture. Among the migrants who sought economic opportunity beyond Japan’s shores, a substantial number originated from Hiroshima Prefecture, leaving a region marked by rural poverty and industrial transition. While the broader history of Japanese immigration to Hawai‘i has received considerable scholarly attention, the specific economic contributions of Hiroshima-born immigrants remain comparatively understudied. This article examines the entrepreneurial activities of Hiroshima immigrants through two prominent case studies—Servco Pacific Inc. and Y. Hata & Co.—to analyze how these migrants forged durable transpacific commercial networks. Drawing on archival records, oral histories, and business documentation, it argues that Hiroshima immigrants were not only plantation laborers but also pivotal agents of economic development, linking Hawai‘i and Japan in enduring patterns of trade, investment, and cultural exchange.
Shigeto Sato (Fri,) studied this question.
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