The Issei Generation in U.S. Law: An Ultimate Guide

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation.

Imagine dedicating your entire life to planting and cultivating a magnificent orchard. You pour your sweat, savings, and soul into the land. You follow every rule, pay every tax, and raise your children to be proud citizens of the nation where your orchard grows. But because of where you were born, the law forbids you from ever truly owning the land you've made fruitful. You can work it, but you can never hold the deed. Worse, you are denied a voice in the government that makes these rules. Then, one day, that same government declares you a potential enemy, uproots you from your home, and forces your family into a camp surrounded by barbed wire, all without a trial or a shred of evidence against you. This isn't a hypothetical story. This was the lived reality for the Issei, the first generation of Japanese immigrants to the United States. They were pioneers, entrepreneurs, and parents who helped build America, yet were systematically denied its most fundamental promises by the very laws of the land. Understanding the term “Issei” is to understand a crucial, and often painful, chapter in the story of American civil rights, immigration, and the true meaning of citizenship.

  • Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:
  • The Issei were the first generation of immigrants from Japan who arrived in the United States, primarily between the 1880s and 1924, but were barred by law from becoming U.S. citizens. naturalization
  • The legal status of the Issei as “aliens ineligible for citizenship” was the foundation for laws that denied them the right to own land, vote, and hold many professional licenses, profoundly impacting their economic and social mobility. alien_land_laws
  • During World War II, the Issei, despite having lived in the U.S. for decades, were subjected to forced removal and incarceration in internment camps alongside their American-born children, a drastic measure based on race and national origin rather than individual guilt. executive_order_9066

The Story of the Issei: A Historical Journey

The story of the Issei (一世, literally “first generation”) begins with hope. Following the Meiji Restoration in Japan in 1868, which opened the country to the world, waves of ambitious young men and women sought opportunities abroad. Many were drawn to the promise of America, particularly Hawaii's sugar plantations and the agricultural boom on the West Coast. They arrived in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, planning to work hard, save money, and perhaps one day return to Japan. However, they stepped into a nation grappling with its own identity and deeply ingrained racial anxieties. As they proved to be incredibly successful farmers and small business owners, their economic success fueled resentment and fear. This social hostility was quickly codified into discriminatory laws. The Issei dream of prosperity clashed with a legal wall built to exclude them. They were not just immigrants; they were legally defined as permanent “aliens,” a status that would shape every aspect of their lives, the lives of their children, and the course of American legal history.

The legal barriers faced by the Issei were not accidental; they were explicit and intentional. Several key pieces of federal legislation formed the cage that limited their rights.

  • The naturalization_act_of_1790: This was the first U.S. law to define who could become a citizen. It shockingly limited naturalization to “any alien, being a free white person.” While later amended after the civil_war to include those of “African nativity” or “African descent,” the “free white person” clause remained a massive barrier for all immigrants from Asia. The courts would later have to decide if Japanese immigrants fit this racial prerequisite, a question that would be answered with a resounding “no.”
  • The immigration_act_of_1924 (The Johnson-Reed Act): This was the nail in the coffin for Japanese immigration. The law established a national origins quota system that was severely restrictive for Southern and Eastern Europeans and completely barred the immigration of “aliens ineligible for citizenship.” Because U.S. courts had already ruled that Japanese people were racially ineligible for citizenship, this Act effectively halted all new immigration from Japan. It sent a clear message: Japanese people were not welcome.
  • alien_land_laws: While federal law barred citizenship, states took it a step further to cripple the Issei economically. Beginning with California in 1913, numerous Western states passed Alien Land Laws. These statutes specifically targeted Japanese immigrants by prohibiting “aliens ineligible for citizenship” from owning agricultural land or leasing it for long periods. The Issei cleverly adapted, often by purchasing land in the names of their American-born children (the Nisei, or second generation), who were citizens by birthright under the fourteenth_amendment. This, however, created complex legal and familial challenges and demonstrated the lengths to which they had to go to simply participate in the economy.

The federal government set the tone, but states were the primary battlegrounds where economic discrimination against the Issei took place. The Alien Land Laws were the most potent weapon.

Comparison of Alien Land Laws in Key Western States
Jurisdiction Key Provisions of Alien Land Laws What This Meant for You as an Issei
Federal Law Barred Issei from becoming naturalized citizens. You could live and work in the U.S., but you could never vote, hold federal office, or enjoy the full protections of citizenship. Your legal status was permanently “alien.”
California (CA) Prohibited “aliens ineligible for citizenship” from owning land (fee simple) and limited leases to a maximum of three years. Later amendments cracked down on Issei parents acting as guardians for their Nisei children's property. If you were an Issei farmer in California's Central Valley, you could not buy the land you worked. You had to rely on short-term leases or place the family's entire future in the name of your young, American-born child.
Washington (WA) Enacted a similar law in 1921, explicitly banning land ownership by those who had not declared their intent to become citizens—a right denied to the Issei. Your hard-earned success in the fishing or farming industries of Washington could never translate into permanent land ownership, limiting your ability to build generational wealth.
Oregon (OR) Passed its Alien Land Law in 1923, closely mirroring California's statute and directly targeting its successful Japanese farming communities. You were legally barred from the American dream of home and land ownership, pushed to the economic margins despite your contributions to the state's agricultural economy.
Arizona (AZ) Also enacted legislation in 1921 that restricted land ownership rights for non-citizens, directly impacting the small but growing Japanese agricultural community there. Any attempt to secure your family's future through land purchase was a direct violation of state law, putting you at constant risk of legal challenges and forfeiture.

To be an Issei in America before World War II was to exist in a state of legal limbo. You were a permanent resident but not a citizen, a taxpayer but not a voter. This status was comprised of several key legal disabilities.

Element: Ineligibility for Citizenship

This was the cornerstone of all other restrictions. Based on the racial prerequisite in the naturalization_act_of_1790, the Issei were deemed racially “non-white” and therefore fundamentally ineligible to become Americans in the eyes of the law. This was not about failing a civics test or a language exam; it was a permanent bar based on race. It meant they could never have a say in the laws that governed them.

  • Real-World Example: An Issei man named Takeo Ozawa, who had lived in the U.S. for 20 years, graduated from an American high school, and raised his children as English-speaking Americans, applied for citizenship. He argued his skin was as white as a Caucasian's and that his beliefs and loyalties were thoroughly American. The supreme_court_of_the_united_states would ultimately decide his fate.

Element: Restrictions on Land Ownership

The alien_land_laws were a direct consequence of the Issei's ineligibility for citizenship. The logic was simple: if you cannot be a citizen, you should not be able to own a piece of the country. This was a devastating economic blow. Agriculture was a primary path to self-sufficiency for Issei families. These laws were designed to keep them as a class of migrant laborers rather than independent landowners.

  • Real-World Example: The Tanaka family, Issei farmers, spent years cultivating a successful strawberry farm on leased land. When their lease expired, the landowner refused to renew, citing the Alien Land Law. To save their livelihood, they had to purchase the land in the name of their 5-year-old daughter, Mari, a U.S. citizen. Mr. Tanaka was legally only her guardian, and his control over the farm he built was legally precarious.

Element: Limited Political Voice

Without the right to vote, the Issei community was politically powerless. They could not elect representatives who would look out for their interests or vote against discriminatory ballot initiatives. When politicians stoked anti-Japanese sentiment to win elections, the Issei had no recourse at the ballot box. Their only voice was through community organizing, legal challenges, and hoping their American-born children, the Nisei, would one day be old enough to vote.

Element: Vulnerability to Deportation

As non-citizens, the Issei were legally subject to deportation under various provisions of U.S. immigration law. While many lived peacefully for decades, this underlying vulnerability became terrifyingly real after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Immediately following the attack, the fbi rounded up and interned thousands of Issei community leaders—priests, teachers, and business owners—with no due process, labeling them “enemy aliens.”

The Issei navigated a legal system where the key players were often arrayed against them.

  • State Legislatures: These bodies, particularly on the West Coast, were hotbeds of anti-Japanese sentiment and the source of the most damaging laws, like the Alien Land Laws.
  • The bureau_of_immigration (and later the INS): This federal agency was the gatekeeper, enforcing immigration quotas and naturalization laws. For the Issei, it was the face of a government that refused to accept them.
  • The supreme_court_of_the_united_states: The nation's highest court was the final arbiter. In a series of landmark cases, the Court had the opportunity to interpret the Constitution's promises of equality for the Issei. As we will see, it often chose to reinforce the racial hierarchy of the time.
  • The war_relocation_authority (WRA): Created during WWII, this civilian agency was tasked with the administration of the ten internment camps where 120,000 people of Japanese descent, including all Issei, were incarcerated. It was the bureaucratic engine of the mass imprisonment.

The legal journey of the Issei took its most dramatic and tragic turn with the outbreak of World War II. For an Issei family, the experience unfolded in a series of devastating, legally-sanctioned steps.

Step 1: Pearl Harbor and Immediate Aftermath (December 1941)

Within hours of the attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. government, using pre-existing lists, began arresting thousands of Issei community leaders. As “enemy aliens” from a nation with which America was at war, they were denied the basic legal protections afforded to citizens. They were arrested without warrants and held without trial.

Step 2: The Issuance of Executive Order 9066 (February 1942)

President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed executive_order_9066. This order did not mention Japanese Americans by name but granted the Secretary of War the authority to designate “military areas” and to exclude “any or all persons” from them. This vague language was the legal tool used to justify the mass removal of everyone of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast.

Step 3: Eviction and "Processing" (Spring 1942)

Families, both Issei and their American-citizen Nisei children, were given as little as one week's notice to dispose of their homes, farms, and businesses. They could only take what they could carry. They were ordered to report to “Assembly Centers,” which were often hastily converted racetracks or fairgrounds, where they lived in horse stalls while awaiting transfer to permanent camps.

Step 4: Incarceration in Internment Camps (1942-1945)

From the Assembly Centers, the Issei and their families were transported under armed guard to one of ten desolate internment camps, run by the war_relocation_authority. Surrounded by barbed wire and guard towers, they lost their freedom for the duration of the war. This was done without any charge, trial, or finding of guilt. It was imprisonment based solely on race.

Step 5: The Loyalty Questionnaire (1943)

Inside the camps, the government issued a “loyalty questionnaire” to assess the “loyalty” of the internees. This created a terrible dilemma for the Issei.

  • Question 27 asked if they were willing to serve in the U.S. armed forces.
  • Question 28 asked them to swear unqualified allegiance to the United States and forswear any allegiance to the Emperor of Japan.

For the Issei, who were legally barred from becoming U.S. citizens, forswearing their Japanese citizenship would render them stateless—citizens of no country. Answering “no-no” to these questions branded them as “disloyal” and often led to segregation in higher-security camps like Tule Lake.

  • Alien Registration Card: As non-citizens, all Issei were required by law to carry this card at all times. It was a constant reminder of their “alien” status.
  • Civilian Exclusion Orders: These were the posters that appeared on telephone poles up and down the West Coast in 1942. They were the official eviction notices, instructing all persons of Japanese ancestry on where and when to report for their forced removal.
  • Property Loss Claims: After the war, the government passed the Japanese-American Evacuation Claims Act of 1948. Issei families who had lost everything could file claims, but the process was bureaucratic and hostile, and they were typically compensated mere pennies on the dollar for their documented losses, with no payment for lost income or suffering.

The fight for Issei rights played out in the courtroom, culminating in several Supreme Court decisions that had profound and lasting impacts on American law.

  • The Backstory: Takeo Ozawa was a model resident. He had lived in the U.S. for two decades, attended the University of California, spoke English at home, and raised his children as Christians. He was, by all measures, a culturally assimilated American.
  • The Legal Question: Was a person of the Japanese race, who was otherwise fully qualified and assimilated, a “free white person” within the meaning of the naturalization_act_of_1790?
  • The Court's Holding: The Supreme Court unanimously ruled NO. The Court rejected the argument that skin color mattered. It declared that the term “white person” was synonymous with “a person of the Caucasian race.” Since modern science at the time did not classify Japanese people as Caucasian, they were racially ineligible for citizenship, regardless of their personal character or cultural assimilation.
  • Impact on an Ordinary Person Today: This case established that access to American citizenship was based on a court's interpretation of race, not an individual's merits. It legally cemented the racial hierarchy in immigration law for decades and is a stark reminder of how science and law can be used to justify racial discrimination.
  • The Backstory: Fred Korematsu was a Nisei (an American citizen), not an Issei. However, his case is inseparable from the Issei experience as it tested the legality of the entire internment program that affected both generations. He refused to comply with the exclusion orders and was arrested.
  • The Legal Question: Did executive_order_9066 and the subsequent military orders violate the fourteenth_amendment's guarantee of equal protection and the Fifth Amendment's guarantee of due_process?
  • The Court's Holding: In a deeply controversial 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court upheld Korematsu's conviction. The majority opinion deferred to military judgment, stating that the forced exclusion was a “military necessity” during a time of war and was not based on racial animus. Justice Hugo Black wrote that “hardships are a part of war.”
  • Impact on an Ordinary Person Today: For decades, *Korematsu* stood as a dangerous precedent that in times of national crisis, the government could strip a group of citizens of their rights based on their race. Although his conviction was overturned in the 1980s and the Supreme Court formally repudiated the decision in 2018, it remains a cautionary tale about the fragility of civil liberties.

The Issei generation did not live to see their names fully cleared, but their children and grandchildren fought for decades to achieve justice. The redress movement of the 1970s and 1980s, led by the Nisei and Sansei (third generation), meticulously documented the injustice of the internment. This culminated in the passage of the civil_liberties_act_of_1988. This landmark law:

  • Issued a formal apology from the U.S. government to the Japanese American community.
  • Provided a payment of $20,000 to each surviving internee.
  • Established a public education fund to ensure this chapter of American history would not be forgotten.

For the elderly Issei still alive at the time, it was a profound, if late, acknowledgment of the wrong they had suffered.

On the Horizon: How the Issei Story Echoes Today

The legal struggles of the Issei are not just a historical footnote; they are a living lesson. The legal arguments used to justify their exclusion and internment—national security, deference to military or executive power, and suspicion of a group based on their national origin—have reappeared throughout American history. Debates over modern immigration_law, the treatment of immigrants from specific countries, and government surveillance programs all carry echoes of the Issei experience. The 2018 Supreme Court case *Trump v. Hawaii*, which upheld a travel ban from several Muslim-majority countries, explicitly mentioned *Korematsu*. While the majority opinion formally stated that “*Korematsu* was gravely wrong the day it was decided,” the dissenting justices argued that the court was simply repeating the same mistake of blindly deferring to a government's claim of national security to justify discrimination. The legacy of the Issei, therefore, is a powerful and permanent reminder: civil rights are never guaranteed. They require constant vigilance, and the fight to ensure that the law treats people based on their individual actions, not their race or country of origin, is a fight that every generation must wage anew.

  • Alien: Any person who is not a citizen or national of the United States. alien_(law)
  • Alien Land Laws: State laws that prohibited non-citizens, particularly Asian immigrants, from owning land. alien_land_laws
  • Citizenship: The status of a person recognized under law as a legal member of a sovereign state. citizenship
  • Civil Liberties Act of 1988: The law that provided a presidential apology and reparations to surviving Japanese American internees. civil_liberties_act_of_1988
  • Executive Order 9066: The presidential order signed by FDR that authorized the Secretary of War to create military zones from which any and all persons could be excluded. executive_order_9066
  • Internment: The imprisonment or confinement of people, commonly in large groups, without trial. internment
  • Issei: (一世) A Japanese term for the first generation of immigrants from Japan.
  • Kibei: (帰米) Japanese Americans who were born in the U.S. (Nisei) but were educated in Japan before returning to America.
  • Naturalization: The legal process by which a non-citizen of a country may acquire citizenship or nationality of that country. naturalization
  • Nisei: (二世) A Japanese term for the second generation; the American-born children of Issei immigrants.
  • Racial Prerequisite: The legal requirement, established in early U.S. naturalization law, that an applicant for citizenship belong to a particular race. racial_prerequisite_cases
  • Sansei: (三世) A Japanese term for the third generation; the children of the Nisei.
  • War Relocation Authority (WRA): The U.S. government agency created to operate the internment camps during WWII. war_relocation_authority