Lanora Tom
Lanora is the daughter of George Francis Herbert Lewis, a C.A.C.A. member who believed in civil rights. Lanora moved from Fresno to Los Angeles after WWII. Lanora married WWII Army Air Corps veteran William Yuck San Tom, who later was elected the C.A.C.A.L.A. Lodge president (1982-83). Lanora discusses her years with C.A.C.A. when her children were young, and when women were not allowed to become members but could join the Women’s Auxiliary. She gives her perspective of C.A.C.A. and its importance to the community.
Early life
I was born in Fresno, and my father, George Francis Herbert Lewis, was a C.A.C.A. member in Fresno and for a short while, in LA. The Fresno Lodge has been closed. My father believed in civil rights. One time at the restaurant a person wouldn’t pay and he started bothering the Chinese workers. My father wanted to help them out so he fought with them so the guy left. Both my parents were born in the U.S. My father was a farmer, but he was very handy and had all kinds of odd jobs. He managed a pool hall at some point and then he was a chef. He spoke English and several Chinese dialects. He would be able to write letters for others – even for an admirer of the actress, Anna May Wong, at one point. Ray Lewis, my father’s brother, opened up Rice Bowl in Central Plaza (Madam Wong’s business was there later). My father came down to work as assistant manager of the restaurant. He decided to branch out and worked for the May Company. My father’s mother was busy in Bakersfield too – selling whatever she could. At some point she bought some stocks which was unusual at that time. Before moving down to LA, she was in wholesale egg business in the Bakersfield area her second son John. (After the war my father moved to Lincoln Heights on North Broadway. Later all of the family except my older brother Leonard Lewis moved to LA.)
I came down to Los Angeles after World War II and did secretarial work. I met Fong Cum-Check aka William Yuck Sang Tom at a social dance at USC. Bill had come as a paper son when he was about fourteen. He had volunteered for the United States Air Force in 1942 during World War II. Then he went to Berkeley and then optometry school in Chicago. IN 1954 he opened his optometry practice in LA Chinatown. We were married in 1956, and we would have two children: Wesley and Jacqueline. Wesley joined the practice in Chinatown with his father. Jacqueline was a home executive and after her children were grown, she continued her real estate ventures. (He retired from optometry in 2002).
Experiences with CACA