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    "url_title": "Japanese Tea Garden (San Francisco)",
    "title_sort": "japaneseteagardensanfrancisco",
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    "modified": "2016-12-14T01:08:05",
    "title": "Japanese Tea Garden (San Francisco)",
    "body": "<div class=\"mw-parser-output\">\n <div class=\"floatright\">\n </div>\n <div class=\"floatright\">\n </div>\n <p>\n  Garden located in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park that was cared for by a Japanese American family before the upheavals of the World War II era.\n </p>\n <p>\n  The Japanese Tea Garden originated as part of the \"Japanese Village\" exhibition from the 1894 California Midwinter Exposition. At the end of the fair, a local Japanese landscape architect, Makoto Hagiwara, became the caretaker of the property, and in 1908, he built a house there and moved with his wife and daughter to the garden. Over the decades, Hagiwara expanded and improved the garden, adding objects from the family collection to the twenty-four room house. After he died in 1925, his daughter, her husband, and their three children continued to take care of the garden.\n </p>\n <p>\n  After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Hagiwara family was forcibly removed along with all other West Coast Japanese Americans, and the garden was renamed the \"Oriental Tea Garden.\" After the war, the Hagiawara family were not allowed to return to the garden, and the family was forced to sell the items that once populated the house.\n  <i>\n   San Francisco Chronicle\n  </i>\n  and \"Examiner\" columnist Herb Caen publicized the treatment of the Hagiwaras in the late 1940s, and the San Francisco Recreation and Park Commission voted to restore the original name in 1952. In 1983, the City of San Francisco honored the Hagiwara family and presented $5,000 checks to two surviving family members as part of the city's reparations program for Japanese American city workers fired during World War II.\n  <sup class=\"reference\" id=\"cite_ref-1\">\n   <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_note-1\">\n    [1]\n   </a>\n  </sup>\n </p>\n <p>\n  The garden has been restored and continues to operate as a tourist attraction that features a refurbished tea house. Another\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Japanese_Tea_Garden_(San_Antonio)/\" title=\"Japanese Tea Garden (San Antonio)\">\n   Japanese Tea Garden\n  </a>\n  in San Antonio, Texas shares a strikingly similar history.\n </p>\n <div id=\"authorByline\">\n  <b>\n   Authored by\n   <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Brian_Niiya/\" title=\"Brian Niiya\">\n    Brian Niiya\n   </a>\n   , Densho\n  </b>\n </div>\n <div id=\"citationAuthor\" style=\"display:none;\">\n  Niiya, Brian\n </div>\n <div class=\"section\" id=\"For_More_Information\">\n  <h2>\n   <span class=\"mw-headline\" id=\"For_More_Information\">\n    For More Information\n   </span>\n  </h2>\n  <div class=\"section_content\">\n   <p>\n    Brown, Kendall H. \"Rashomon: The Multiple Histories of the Japanese Tea Garden at Golden Gate Park.\"\n    <i>\n     Studies in the History of Gardens and Designed Landscapes\n    </i>\n    18.2 (1998): 93–119.\n   </p>\n   <p>\n    <i>\n     <a class=\"external text offsite\" href=\"https://blogs.chapman.edu/huell-howser-archives/1996/01/08/japanese-garden-californias-gold-712/\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n      California's Gold with Huell Howser: Japanese Garden\n     </a>\n    </i>\n    . Written and produced by Huell Howser. 27 minutes. Huell Howser Productions, 1996. [Streaming episode of the California public television series that focuses on the garden.]\n   </p>\n   <p>\n    Japanese Tea Garden official website,\n    <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://www.japaneseteagardensf.com/\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n     http://www.japaneseteagardensf.com/\n    </a>\n    .\n   </p>\n   <p>\n    Morey, Robert J. \"Japanese Tea Garden.\"\n    <i>\n     California Horticultural Journal\n    </i>\n    31.2 (1970): 52–59, 73.\n   </p>\n  </div>\n </div>\n <div class=\"section\" id=\"Footnotes\">\n  <h2>\n   <span class=\"mw-headline\" id=\"Footnotes\">\n    Footnotes\n   </span>\n  </h2>\n  <div class=\"section_content\">\n   <div class=\"reflist\" style=\"list-style-type: decimal;\">\n    <div class=\"mw-references-wrap\">\n     <ol class=\"references\">\n      <li id=\"cite_note-1\">\n       <span class=\"mw-cite-backlink\">\n        <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_ref-1\">\n         ↑\n        </a>\n       </span>\n       <span class=\"reference-text\">\n        <i>\n         Pacific Citizen\n        </i>\n        , Oct. 28, 1983, 3.\n       </span>\n      </li>\n     </ol>\n    </div>\n   </div>\n   <!-- \nNewPP limit report\nCached time: 20230521153514\nCache expiry: 86400\nDynamic content: false\nComplications: []\nCPU time usage: 0.013 seconds\nReal time usage: 0.018 seconds\nPreprocessor visited node count: 70/1000000\nPost‐expand include size: 514/2097152 bytes\nTemplate argument size: 58/2097152 bytes\nHighest expansion depth: 5/40\nExpensive parser function count: 0/100\nUnstrip recursion depth: 0/20\nUnstrip post‐expand size: 323/5000000 bytes\nExtLoops count: 0\n-->\n   <!--\nTransclusion expansion time report (%,ms,calls,template)\n100.00%   11.684      1 -total\n 18.42%    2.152      1 Template:Reflist\n 11.30%    1.320      1 Template:AuthorByline\n 11.20%    1.309      1 Template:Published\n-->\n   <!-- Saved in parser cache with key encycmw:pcache:idhash:2503-0!canonical and timestamp 20230521153514 and revision id 24188\n -->\n  </div>\n </div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"toplink\">\n <a href=\"#top\">\n  <i class=\"icon-chevron-up\">\n  </i>\n  Top\n </a>\n</div>",
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