Housing Watch Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tule Lake National Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tule_Lake_National_Monument

    The Tule Lake National Monument in Modoc and Siskiyou counties in California, consists primarily of the site of the Tule Lake War Relocation Center, one of ten concentration camps constructed in 1942 by the United States government to incarcerate Japanese Americans forcibly removed from their homes on the West Coast. They totaled nearly 120,000 ...

  3. Camp Tulelake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Tulelake

    March 1943 - 25 April 1946. Camp Tulelake was a federal work facility and War Relocation Authority isolation center located in Siskiyou County, five miles (8 km) west of Tulelake, California. It was established by the United States government in 1935 during the Great Depression for vocational training and work relief for young men, in a program ...

  4. Tule Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tule_Lake

    The Tule Lake War Relocation Center, a Japanese American internment camp, is located east of the lake, in Modoc County. During World War II , the United States federal government under Executive Order 9066 , forced the evacuation of Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans, including citizens born in the United States, to numerous camps built ...

  5. Topaz War Relocation Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topaz_War_Relocation_Center

    The Topaz War Relocation Center, also known as the Central Utah Relocation Center (Topaz) and briefly as the Abraham Relocation Center, was an American concentration camp in which Americans of Japanese descent and immigrants who had come to the United States from Japan, called Nikkei were incarcerated. President Franklin Roosevelt signed ...

  6. 75 years later, Japanese man recalls bitter internment in U.S.

    www.aol.com/75-years-later-japanese-man...

    When Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941, the first thing Hidekazu Tamura, a Japanese American living in California, thought was, “I’ll be killed at the hands of my fellow Americans.” At 99 ...

  7. Amache National Historic Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amache_National_Historic_Site

    March 18, 2022. The Amache National Historic Site, formally the Granada War Relocation Center but known to the internees as Camp Amache (pronounced a-ma-chee), was a concentration camp for Japanese Americans in Prowers County, Colorado. Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Japanese Americans on the West Coast were ...

  8. Camp Harmony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Harmony

    Camp Harmony. Coordinates: 47°10′58″N 122°17′43″W. Camp Harmony is the unofficial euphemistic name of the Puyallup Assembly Center, a temporary facility within the system of internment camps set up for Japanese Americans during World War II. Approximately 7,390 Americans of Japanese descent from Western Washington and Alaska were sent ...

  9. Heart Mountain Relocation Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_Mountain_Relocation...

    The Heart Mountain War Relocation Center, named after nearby Heart Mountain and located midway between the northwest Wyoming towns of Cody and Powell, was one of ten concentration camps used for the internment of Japanese Americans evicted during World War II from their local communities (including their homes, businesses, and college residencies) in the West Coast Exclusion Zone by the ...