After war was declared German-Americans and Italian-Americans, about 5, 000, were rounded up. With in a year most of the 5, 000 were released. The hatred became focused on the Japanese-Americans. Being of their race and people automatically thought they were with the enemy, that attacked Pearl Harbor. Of the 127, 000 Japanese-Americans living in America, about two thirds were born American citizens, but this did not stop the suspicions and hostility directed towards them. Almost all of the Japanese-Americans lived in California, Oregon, and Washington.
War jitters were running high there, after Pearl Harbor. The anti-oriental racism finally boiled over. Columnist Henry Mclemore of the Hearst newspaper, Examiner, expressed the ugly mood. Here em up, pack em off, wrote Mclemore. Let em be pinched, hurt, hungry and dead up against it. Sometimes hatred came in violence and property damage.
There were some Japanese-American defenders. Woody Guthrie and Cisco kid were involved in the most dramatic stands. The pressure for action against the Japanese-Americans mounted. President Roosevelt, on February 19, 1942, signed Executive Order 9066.
Though told for everyone, the order was direct toward Japanese-Americans. In the spring and summer of 1942, 112, 000 Japanese-Americans were Moved to temporary camps. In the end they were moved farther inland to ten permanent camps. They were located in barren and isolated areas of six western states and Arkansas.
Most of those forced to leave their home were in the camps for the minim of three years. Not one Japanese-Americans were put to trial on Charge of espionage or sabotage. The truth is that too few Americans had calm to raise questions of that kind. In the camps Japanese-Americans were treated pretty well. In the Manzanzar Relocation Center, in the California Desert, a mother and her children wade through the stream near the camp. In Tule Lake Relocation Center, costumed Japanese-Americans entertained fellow internees and a Farmer does his old farming job in the camp.
The Term Paper on Japanese American Concentration Camps
... 1997. 2) http://www.ionaprep.org/projects/intrnmnt/history. htm 3) Nishimoto, Richard S.. Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Tucson: The University of Arizona ... by the United States government. Conditions in the camps and the experiences of the Japanese American inmates vary greatly. The War Relocation Authority ...
Some women got paid up $19 a month to weave camouflage netting for the army.