Essondale Patient File for Tacuneo Mori
Description
Title Proper | 93-5683 BOX 1331 FILE 19963 |
Date(s) of material from this resource digitized | 1942 |
General material designation |
From this file, LOI has digitized one textual record or image.
|
Scope and content |
Tacuneo Mori was admitted to Essondale on 19 February 1942. His mental health diagnosis was paranoid schizophrenia. He died
at the age of 74 on 15 August 1961 of cerebral vascular accident due to epileptic
seizure. He had been transferred to Home for the Aged in Terrace from Essondale on 3 October 1950. Mori was born in Mamoto and arrived in Canada around the age of
12. He worked for McNair company near Gordon Pasha Lakes as a logger. The police report
indicates his belongings included letters from M. Ebisuzaki Co. General Merchants
regarding delinquent accounts, a registration card issued 26 May 1941 by the RCMP, and a naturalization certificate from 1924. File contains brief correspondence with
British Columbia Security Commission regarding financial responsibility and other correspondence with RCMP.
|
Name of creator |
British Columbia. Mental Health Services
created this archive which were transferred to the BC Archives from 1987 to 2000.
|
Immediate source of acquisition |
The digital copies of the records were acquired by the Landscapes of Injustice Research
Collective between 2014 and 2018.
This record was digitized selectively.
|
Structure
Repository | British Columbia Archives |
Fonds | Riverview Mental Hospital |
Series | 93-5683 BOX 1331 |
Metadata
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Title
Essondale Patient File for Tacuneo Mori
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Source: British Columbia Archives
Terminology
Readers of these historical materials will encounter derogatory references to Japanese
Canadians and euphemisms used to obscure the intent and impacts of the internment
and dispossession. While these are important realities of the history, the Landscapes
of Injustice Research Collective urges users to carefully consider their own terminological
choices in writing and speaking about this topic today as we confront past injustice.
See our statement on terminology, and related sources here.