A name nearly lost to time — Monterey resident discovered a new species, but he wasn’t credited

In 1939, 19-year-old Roy Hattori was diving for abalone off the coast of Point Conception when he saw something different. He cut the odd-looking shell off the rocky bottom of the sea and brought it all the way back to his hometown of Monterey. There, he brought it to the attention of a shell specialist. Just as he had suspected, it was a brand new species. Hattori was excited to feel like a part of history – but when the time came, the new species was named without his discovery being considered.

Hattori’s discovery is the research subject of Tim Thomas, local historian and tour guide at the Monterey Bay Wharf. Thomas received the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary 2023 Ed Ricketts Memorial Award, alongside Linda Yamane, for his lifetime of work in history and education in Monterey Bay. He gave a lecture on his research about Hattori’s story on Wednesday. This story is not only his research, but deeply personal to Thomas. He knew Hattori and understood how the erasure of Hattori’s part in the discovery impacted him.

“The only time I would ever see him get angry is when he talked about World War II, or when he talked about the white abalone,” Thomas said.

When Hattori brought the unusual abalone back to Monterey, he reached out to his friend and shell specialist, Andrew Sorensen. Sorensen couldn’t identify it, and with a letter crediting the young Japanese-American diver ,Hattori, as the one to discover it, he sent the shell to Dr. Paul Bartsch, a malacologist at the Smithsonian Institution.

Roy Hattori was 19 in 1939 when he discovered white abalone off the coast of Point Conception. (Rey Rupple Collection, Monterey Library) 

Bartsch would go on to publish a paper naming the new abalone species in 1940, naming it Haliotis sorenseni, after Andrew Sorensen.  Letters sent back and forth to the Smithsonian from Sorensen showed how he felt guilty that it was named after him, but the damage was done.

Two years later, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, ordering the incarceration of Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals, and Hattori lost everything.

Forced to sell his fishing equipment and relocate to an incarceration camp in Arkansas before being drafted into the military, it would take years before Hattori could return to Monterey. By that time he had a new family to take care of too – a wife and a baby.

But what he found wasn’t the same as when he left.

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