23
Japanese-American Internment Camps

Japanese American2

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Japanese American2

Japanese-American Internment Camps

Page 2: Japanese American2

•After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the US questioned The loyalty of Japanese- Americans. •President agreed to send them to “relocation” camps.

Page 3: Japanese American2

• The War Relocation Authority was created to administer the assembly centers, relocation centers, and internment camps, and relocation of Japanese-Americans began in April 1942.

Page 4: Japanese American2

• Japanese-Americans were forced to sell their homes and businesses at a great loss.

Page 5: Japanese American2

Where were the camps?

Page 6: Japanese American2

The Building of the camps……..

Page 7: Japanese American2

A Typical layout of a camp….

Page 8: Japanese American2
Page 9: Japanese American2

• The internees were arranged into the "block", consisting of about 12 to 14 barracks, a mess hall, baths, showers, toilets, a laundry and a recreation hall. Each barrack was about 20 by 16 to 20 by 25 feet. Each room housed at least one family, even if a family was very large. Even at the end of 1942, in 928 cases, two families shared a 20 by 25 foot room.4 The barracks often were built poorly and constructed of green wood which warped. The barracks were built of planks nailed to studs and covered with tar paper

Page 10: Japanese American2

• The camps in the West were very dusty.

Page 11: Japanese American2

Arrival at the camps……

Page 12: Japanese American2

Perimeter Warning Sign…..

Page 13: Japanese American2

• In fact, no really appetizing meals could be produced regularly under a requirement that feeding the evacuees could not cost more than rations for the Army, which were set at 30 cents per person per day. Actual costs per evacuee were approximately 45 cents per person per day; sometimes they fell as low as 31 cents.12

Page 14: Japanese American2

Dry Goods Canteen

Page 15: Japanese American2

• This replica of a Tule Lake Internment Camp watchtower. Twenty eight of these towers surrounded the 11x4 square mile camp

Page 16: Japanese American2

Barbed Wire Fences…..

Page 17: Japanese American2
Page 18: Japanese American2

A Kindergarten class….

Page 19: Japanese American2

A High School……..

Page 20: Japanese American2

Waiting in line for a meal….

Page 21: Japanese American2

Meal time

Page 22: Japanese American2

Working…..

Page 23: Japanese American2