Internment Camp Research Paper

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In 1942 the Japanese Americans were relocated to Internment Camps along the west coast. There were camps located in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Utah, and Wyoming, one of these camps was in Amache, Colorado. These camps were created shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. In response to the bombing Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942. The Japanese were then relocated shortly after. The camps they were living in did not have great living conditions. Later the internees were given the option to fight in the war with the Americans to have freedom. They were also given 1 day a month when they did not have to stay in the camp but they had to find their own transportation. These are the reasons why I think …show more content…

They lived in blocks that had 12 barracks in them. The barracks were 120”x20” and had a roof made of tar paper. These blocks had walls and roofs that did not do much. The blocks were heated with coal burning stoves. The floors were made of bricks. The barracks had no insulation to keep the heat in. They had farms that produced huge amounts of food, but the internees ate small meals in large mess halls. They allowed 48 cents to be spent on each meal per internee. The greatest complaint that was received was about the mess halls. They said that the mess halls took away the idea of a family meal and they had no control of their children. The camps they lived in were often made of a small hospital, a post office, elementary school, a high school, and stores. The camps were surrounded by fences and men in guard towers. The internees were allowed little freedom outside the camps. They were given 1 day a month where they could leave the camp and go to shops, if they could provide their own transportation. In April 1943 the evacuation of the Japanese-Americans stopped temporarily. By the first of June they had started the relocation process once again. Amache received 539 internees from Jerome, Arizona once the relocation process began again. After August 1944 the final phase of relocation

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