Redirected from Manzanar National Historic Site
Almost all the buildings were sold in the 1940s, and the United States Park Service[?] is now trying to purchase these buildings back so that a demonstration block can be built. This particular camp held 10,046 internees at its height. Many Japanese-Americans and Japanese citizens were relocated and interned as a precautionary provision of Executive Order 9066. Many lost everything they owned.
During the waning years of the war, the military presence of the camp was lessened and many internees were allowed to wander around the countryside and even fish and hunt in the Sierras. The camp was closed in November of 1945. Many internees did not want to leave because most had nothing to leave to. 135 people died here during its operation as a War Relocation Center but only 15 were buried there (the rest were buried in hometown cemeteries). On December 6, 1942, there was a riot and sentries shot two American born Nisei Japanese.
In February of 1943, provisions of the Registration Act[?] required camp officials to sort loyal from disloyal Japanese. After the turmoil that this caused, the residents began to improve the camp significantly.
larger image |
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|