Japanese-American Internment Camp Newspapers | |||||||||||||||||
The History:At the beginning of December in 1941 the United States was not involved in the war that was being waged in Europe and Asia. Public opinion favored isolationism, people felt that the United States should not get involved in conflicts between other countries. On December 7, 1941 the Navy of Imperial Japan conducted a pre-emptive strike against Hawaii's Pearl Harbor. 2,402 servicemen and servicewomen were killed, another 1282 were wounded, and almost two hundred American ships and aircraft were lost.Citizens of the United States were stunned, outraged, and frightened. There had been interracial problems before the attack on Pearl Harbor. After the attack, public sentiment against people of Japanese ancestry increased exponentially and sometimes there were outbreaks of violence. In California over 2/3 of the people who were identified as Japanese were actually citizens of the United States. They had been born here, they were raised here, they attended school here, they developed businesses here, they voted here, they were Americans. Japanese-Americans struggled to remind their countrymen of that fact. |
San Francisco, Calif., Mar. 1942. A large sign reading "I am an American" placed in the window of a store, at 13th and Franklin streets, on December 8, the day after Pearl Harbor. The store was closed following orders to persons of Japanese descent to evacuate from certain West Coast areas. The owner, a University of California graduate, was housed with hundreds of evacuees in War Relocation Authority centers for the duration of the war. / Photo attributed to Dorothea Lange. | ||||||||||||||||
| There were rumors that people of Japanese heritage were signaling Japanese U-boats off the West Coast of the country. Japan's forces had been spectacularly successful in Asia. There was fear that Imperial Japan was preparing to mount a full scale attack on the United States.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued a series of Presidential Proclamations and Executive Orders focused on people of Japanese descent. The first of these tracked people, commanding that they report all changes in residence, employment, and name to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Subsequent orders gave military commanders the authority to designate areas of the United States as "exclusion zones" and to have all people who were 1/16 or more Japanese removed from those areas and sent to internment camps for the duration of the war.
Notices were posted commanding people of Japanese ancestry to report for transport to Civilian Assembly Centers. Most people in California were transported by train. At the train stations people were tagged, and then they boarded the train to be taken to the camps.
The trains took people to Assembly Centers
Eventually most of the people who had been interned were sent to Relocation Camps.
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The Collection:The people interned at the Assembly Centers and the Relocation Camps published their own newspapers. The library has an exhaustive set of these on microfilm, under the title Records of the War Relocation Authority, 1942-1946. One-third of the purchase was funded through a grant obtained by professor Cherstin Lyon, the other two-thirds was funded by Pfau Library. Pfau Library has an extensive collection of the actual camp newspapers. These were purchased at the direction of the Library Director then, Art Nelson and they are held in Special Collections. |
![]() Roy Takeno, editor, and group reading paper in front of office, Manzanar Relocation Center, California / photograph by Ansel Adams. |
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The Finding Aid:Special Collections personnel have created a finding aid to support researchers who wish to use the collection. |
![]() Bainbridge Island. Japanese American children waving from train windows (waving U.S. Flag and signaling "V" for Victory for America) on departure from Seattle for a detention camp. / Photograph by the Seattle Star. |
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