Fact Brief: Is San Jose's Japantown one of only three left in the U.S.? - San Jose Spotlight
Briefly

Fact Brief: Is San Jose's Japantown one of only three left in the U.S.? - San Jose Spotlight
"San Jose is home to one of three surviving Japantowns in the country. The other remaining Japanese communities are also in California cities: San Francisco and Los Angeles. Japanese immigrants came to San Jose in the late 1890s in search of farm work, originally settling in Chinatown before establishing their own cultural community in the region."
"The neighborhood's development halted during World War II, when the U.S. forcibly removed more than 120,000 Japanese Americans from their homes and placed them into internment camps in response to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. After being released from internment, many Japanese Americans discovered their properties had been sold or vandalized, which wiped out entire Japanese neighborhoods."
"However, San Jose's Japantown reemerged and grew after the war, attracting Japanese Americans looking to rebuild their lives in the region. In 2025, San Jose's Japantown received statewide recognition as a cultural district."
San Jose contains one of the nation's three surviving Japantowns, the others being in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Japanese immigrants arrived in San Jose in the late 1890s seeking farm work and initially settled in Chinatown before forming a distinct cultural community. Neighborhood development stopped during World War II when the U.S. government forcibly removed more than 120,000 Japanese Americans and placed them in internment camps after Pearl Harbor. Many internees returned to find properties sold or vandalized, erasing many Japanese neighborhoods. San Jose's Japantown reemerged and expanded after the war. In 2025 the neighborhood received statewide recognition as a cultural district.
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