Poston internment camp internees

    • [DOC File]OF WARS, RELOCATION AND DOCUMENTATION: SURVEYING …

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      The camp life, which treated both men and women alike, actually had a diametrically opposite effect on both the sexes. As far as women were concerned, the internment was a liberating experience for them.


    • [DOCX File]Metropolitan State University of Denver

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      President Roosevelt established ten “concentration” or internment camps around the United States. The camps were located in: Poston and Gila River (Arizona), Jerome and Rohwer (Arkansas), Manzanar and Tule Lake (California), Granada/Amache (Colorado), Minidoka (Idaho), Topaz (Central Utah) and Heart Mountain (Wyoming).


    • [DOCX File]Research Report : Letter to FDR - Brigham Young University

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      They were then evacuated to and confined in isolated, fenced, and guarded relocation centers, known as internment camps. The 10 relocation sites were in remote areas in 6 western states and Arkansas: Heart Mountain in Wyoming, Tule Lake and Manzanar in California, Topaz in Utah, Poston and Gila River in Arizona, Granada in Colorado, Minidoka in ...


    • [DOC File]BLaST Intermediate Unit 17

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      In December 1944 Public Proclamation number 21, which became effective in January 1945, allowed internees to return to their homes. The effects of internment affected all those involved. Some saw the camps as concentration camps and a violation of the writ of Habeas Corpus, others though, saw internment as a necessary result of Pearl Harbor.


    • [DOC File]Francis-Gene Acosta Political Science 149 December 3, 2010

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      Q. Can you explain what a day was like in the internment camp? First thing when we went to camp in Poston, we walked into our barrack. The barrack floor had holes in it between the large planks. There was a pile of hay there. That was for our mattress. We had to stuff our mattress to put out our beds to go to sleep. The first meal was cabbage.


    • [DOC File]Japanese Internment Camps in the USA

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      In December 1944 Public Proclamation number 21, which became effective in January 1945, allowed internees to return to their homes. The effects of internment affected all those involved. Some saw the camps as concentration camps and a violation of the Act of Habeas Corpus, others though, saw internment as a necessary result of Pearl Harbor.


    • [DOCX File]HOOVER INSTITUTION ARCHIVES

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      Summary: Relates to the internment of Japanese and German aliens and Japanese Americans in the Crystal City Internment Camp, Texas, during World War II, and to the reunion of Japanese American inmates of the camp. Dodge, Alice Sinclair, 1876-1965, collector. Title: Collection, 1942-1946. Physical Description: 1 ms. box, 2 scrapbooks, memorabilia.


    • [DOC File]To establish the Manzanar National Historic Site in the ...

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      (3) Camp Shelby, Mississippi, the training ground for the 442nd Infantry Regimental Combat Team. (4) Camp Savage and Fort Snelling, Minnesota, locations for the Military Intelligence Service Language School where Japanese Americans received Japanese language instruction, enabling the Japanese Americans to translate Japanese war plans into English.


    • [DOCX File]Adventures of the American Mind Northern Virginia

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      Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, U.S. Senate (1988). (2) the internment of individuals of Japanese ancestry was carried out without any documented acts of espionage or sabotage, or other acts of disloyalty by any citizens or permanent resident aliens of …


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