I suspect that the only thing more exciting than
hitting a home run to clinch the pennant for the Giants is to watch your son
hit a home run to clinch the pennant for the Giants.
Alan Ishikawa, the father of Travis Ishikawa who
hit a historic home run in the ninth inning to secure a spot in the 2014 World
Series for the SF Giants, must be one proud papa.
We know a little bit about the Alan and the Ishikawa
family from a 2009 blog post by the SF Giants:
Ishikawa
is half Japanese on his father’s side. His great-grandparents came over from
Japan to work on the railroads and settled in Chicago. During World War II, his
grandparents were imprisoned in an internment camp in Colorado. They now are in
their 90s and living in Southern California – where decades ago they owned and
worked farmland before the freeways came through. Travis has never asked his
grandparents about the internment camp.
“They
never give you an opening to talk about it,” he says. “My father has never
talked about it. I think it’s a cultural thing. There are some things you just
don’t talk about.”
Travis
never even knew his father had played much baseball until he was going through
some old boxes in the attic. In one dusty box were newspaper clippings of Alan
Ishikawa throwing a no-hitter and a one-hitter in high school.
Alan
Ishikawa, a controller for a chain of Washington supermarkets, is 5 feet 8. His
son is 6-3. Obviously, Travis didn’t get his size from his dad. But his
paternal bloodlines seem to have passed down strength and resilience from the
railroads and farms, and more than a little bit of baseball talent.
Source:
http://sfgiants.mlblogs.com/2009/02/27/from-the-railroads-to-the-farms-to-the-baseball-fields/
In that “dusty box of newspaper clippings”
known as the world wide web, I was able to learn a little about Alan Ishikawa’s
baseball past. Knowing that the Ishikawa grandparents resided in SoCal/Los Angeles after the war, I searched for Alan Ishikawa on Ancestry.com and found him in the 1970 Compton High School yearbook. I think you might be able to identify Ishikawa in the team photo.
Even though he’s only 5’8”, he stands out from his teammates (... just a bit).
As the only Asian-American ballplayer on all African-American
team, I suspect that he has some interesting stories to share about that
experience. Based on the list of players below, it appears that three of Alan’s teammates went on to play pro baseball:
- Richard Davis: http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/d/davisdi02.shtml
- Calvin Moore: http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=moore-001cal
- Reginald Walton: http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/waltore01.shtml
Some noteworthy observations: Davis played several
years in Japan, and -- just in time for the 2014 World Series -- Walton was born in Kansas
City in 1952 and drafted by the San Francisco Giants in 1972.
Below are pages 169 and 170 of the Compton High School yearbook featuring all members of the 1970 varsity baseball team.
***
While I am happy for Travis Ishikawa for his
accomplishments and helping the Giants make it to the 2014 World Series,
I'm intrigued by the life perspective that his father Alan Ishikawa must have right now
… yesterday (figuratively speaking) his parents were incarcerated by the U.S. government in a camp in Colorado ... and today his son is a hero in the national
pastime. Only in America!
Stay tuned …Travis mentioned in the 2009 blog
that little is known about his grandparents’ WWII camp experience. Next
I’ll check Ancestry.com archives and see what I can find on the Ishikawas at
the Granada Incarceration Camp (aka Amache) in Colorado.