Grant Din

Grant Din has conducted genealogical research for over thirty years and currently serves on the board of the California Genealogical Society. He served on the staff of the Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation for eight years and currently volunteers there to manage the Immigrant Voices website with over 220 stories of West Coast immigrants from throughout the world. Grant's interest in genealogy started at a wedding reception in his youth, where a relative showed him a page from a family tree showing he is in the 36th generation of the Gong family (he's also a 24th generation Owyang). He holds a Certificate in Genealogical Research from Boston University, an M.A. in public policy analysis from Claremont Graduate University, and a B.A. in sociology with emphasis on urban studies from Yale University, and has traveled throughout the U.S., China, and Japan for his research. Recently, Grant was a part of the research team for The Six, an upcoming film about the Chinese who survived the Titanic. He has over thirty years of experience in the Bay Area non-profit sector and lives with his family in Oakland, CA.

Grant's Upcoming Live Webinars (1)

Wed, June 24 2026: 18:00 UTC
WWII internment of Japanese immigrant “enemy aliens” in the San Francisco Bay Area
Wed, June 24 2026: 18:00 UTC
Before World War II, the FBI had dossiers on many German, Italian, and Japanese immigrants. Immediately after Pearl Harbor, thousands of them were arrested and sent to "temporary detention centers" and internment camps throughout the country. Learn about these men and women, focusing on the Japanese immigrants held at Sharp Park and Angel Island in the Bay Area. Newly digitized documents available online create new opportunities to learn about their stories.
Before World War II, the FBI had dossiers on many German, Italian, and Japanese immigrants. Immediately after Pearl Harbor, thousands of them were arrested and sent to "temporary detention centers" and internment camps throughout the country. Learn about these men and women, focusing on the Japanese immigrants held at Sharp Park and Angel Island in the Bay Area. Newly digitized documents available online create new opportunities to learn about their stories.
Wed, June 24 2026: 18:00 UTC

Grant's Webinars (5)