Sak Yamamoto Explained

Sak Yamamoto
Office:Mayor of Carson
Term Start1:1973
Term End1:1974
Predecessor1:John A. Marbut
Successor1:Gilbert D. Smith
Term Start2:1977
Term End2:1979
Predecessor2:John A. Marbut
Successor2:Kay A. Calas
Office4:City Council of Carson
Term Start4:1968
Term End4:1970
Term Start5:1972
Term End5:1979
Successor5:Sylvia L. Muise
Birth Name:Sakae Yamamoto
Birth Date:January 17, 1914
Birth Place:Washington
Death Date:June 28, 1997 (age 83)
Spouse:Greta Yamamoto
Children:4

Sakae "Sak" Yamamoto (January 17, 1914 – June 28, 1997) is an American politician who served as the first Asian-American mayor of Carson, California.

Biography

Yamamoto was born on January 17, 1914, in Washington.[1] During World War II, as a Japanese-American, he was interned along with his wife at the Tulare Race Tracks in Tulare, California.[1] After the war, he moved to Addison, Illinois where he was elected to the DuPage County Board of Education.[1] In 1954, he and his family move to Carson, California. He became politically active after he was forced to sell his house for a new school.[1] In 1960, he served on the board of the Dominguez-Carson Fact Finding Committee which determined to incorporate the area as a city.[1] After six prior attempts, on February 6, 1968, a successful vote was made to incorporate and Yamamoto was elected to a two-year term on the City Council[1] along with John A. Marbut, who was named first mayor, John L. Junk, mayor pro tem, Gilbert D. Smith, and H. Rick Clark.[2] He lost his seat in the 1970 election but was re-elected to the City Council in 1972 where he served until 1979.[1] During that period, he was selected as mayor in 1973, 1977, 1978.[1] In February 1979, he helped to secure a new Bridgestone distribution facility in the city.[3] In May 1979, a group denominated Carsonites Organized for Good Government filed a recall petition against Yamamoto and fellow councilman John Marbut for poor leadership, putting the interests of business ahead of the people,[4] and for awarding a new five-year garbage contract to other than the low bidder while also prematurely ending debate. The recall petition was successful.[5] [6] Their political ally, then-mayor Kay Callas, was not recalled although she voted for the contract, she did not support ending debate.[5] Yamamoto was replaced by Sylvia L. Muise and Marbut was replaced by Thomas G. Mills, both were leaders of the recall effort.[2] He filed for re-election to the City Council in 1982[7] but did not win finishing fourth.[8]

Personal life

He was married to Greta Yamamoto; they had four children: Glen, Karen, Brenda, and Janice.[1] He died on June 28, 1997, and was buried at Green Hills Memorial Park.[1]

He had a cameo appearance as mayor in the 1974 film Gone in 60 Seconds.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: Gougis. Michael. Former Carson Mayor Yamamoto Dies At 83 . San Pedro News-Pilot. July 2, 1997. Newspapers.com .
  2. Web site: Past Elected Officials . Carson City government website. December 2, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210430143857/https://ci.carson.ca.us/government/pastmayors.aspx. April 30, 2021.
  3. News: Bridgestone opens huge new facility in Carson . The Daily Breeze. February 25, 1979 . .
  4. News: Group Files Petitions to Recall Two Councilman . The Los Angeles Times. May 10, 1979 . .
  5. News: Allan . Robert J. . Councilmanic Recall Drive Qualifies for Special Vote. . May 31, 1979 . 1, 6 . Newspapers.com.
  6. News: Doug . Smith. Carson Councilman Says He'll Postpone Resignation Until 2 Council Seats Are Filled . The Los Angeles Times. October 21, 1979 . Newspapers.com.
  7. News: James. Bronson. 8 candidates vie for two Carson Council seats . The Daily Breeze. March 21, 1982. 5A, 5B . Newspapers.com.
  8. News: Doug . Smith . Muise, Mills Win In Carson Voting . The Los Angeles Times. April 15, 1982 . Newspapers.com. 1, 10.
  9. News: Sam. Gnarre . Sak Yamamoto, former Carson mayor and unlikely film star . South Bay Daily Breeze. September 20, 2014 .