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Tanino-Szathmary Family Papers

 Collection
Identifier: 2003.007

Scope and Contents

The Tanino-Szathmary papers contain hand drawn pattern books belonging to Sadako Tanino Szathmary that were probably used in Rohwer Internment Camp during World War II. The second series contains clippings relating to the career of Louis Szathmary and a program of his memorial service in 2003. The third series contains cookbooks by or about Louis Szathmary, and two catalogs of Hungarian books collected by Szathmary and exhibited at the University of Chicago.

Dates

  • 1942-2003

Biographical / Historical

Sadako Tanino Szathmary was born in San Pedro, California in 1921. Sadako’s father, Kumakichi, tried his hand at various professions during his life while her mother, Yoshie, worked as a maid, managed a noodle shop and ran a small restaurant out of the family home. She had a sister, Michiko "Mitche" (1918-1999), and a brother named Coolidge (1923-1995).

When World War II began, the Tanino family was sent to live in a horse stall at the Santa Anita Assembly Center while they awaited their permanent placement at Rohwer Internment Camp in Arkansas. While at Rohwer, Sadako’s father was “blacklisted” because of his bilingual abilities and was promptly separated from his family and sent to the Fort Lincoln Internment Camp, a Department of Justice camp, located in Bismarck, North Dakota. He remained incarcerated for a ten year period.

In 1944, Sadako moved to Chicago and had a difficult time obtaining a job. She eventually found work as a secretary and put herself through beauty school at night. In 1949, she entered into a partnership with Kaye Odishu and opened her own high-end beauty salon called “Kaye-Sada Coiffure Designers” at 49 East Walton in Chicago. In 1960, Sadako relinquished her stake in the salon when she married local chef Louis Szathmary. Originally from Hungary, Szathmary owned “The Bakery,” a popular Chicago restaurant. He wrote several cookbooks, and collected books relating to his native country. Louis Szathmary died in 1996 and Sadako lived in Oak Park, Illinois until her death in 2016.

Source: Szathmary, Sadako

Extent

1 boxes

Language of Materials

English

General

Stacks 2, 8F

Title
Tanino-Szathmary Family Papers
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the JASC Legacy Center Repository

Contact:
4427 N Clark St.
Chicago IL 60640 United States
1 (773) 275-0097