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| "The first morning in Manzanar when
I woke up and saw what Manzanar looked like, I just cried. And
then I saw the high Sierra mountain, just like my native country's
mountain, and I just cried, that's all" - Haruko
Niwa, interned at Manzanar from 1942 until 1945. |

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"Manzanar was a very happy and pleasant
place to live during those years, with its peach, pear, and
apple orchards, alfalfa fields, tree-lined country lanes, meadows
and corn fields." - Martha Mills who lived at Manzanar
from 1916 to 1920. |
| "Peace had hardly become a settled
fact before he brought his family to the country, locating on
the beautiful stream on which the Piute chief George had made
his headquarters, and called George's Creek for him. There he
built a home noted throughout the valley for its comfort and
its open handed welcome to the friend or transient."
- Inyo County Register, describing the home of John Shepherd,
who settled in 1864 at what later became Manzanar. |
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"It was a hard winter with so much snow that the
sagebrush was buried and you could not even see the tops of
it. We ate seeds my mother had gathered. There had been no pine
nuts that fall but we had some left at tupi mada from the year
before and made several trips to bring them down."
-Sam Newland, a Paiute describing his childhood in the
Owens Valley. |
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