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Entrance to the Manzanar War
Relocation Center today
NPS Photograph, Manzanar National Historic Site |
Manzanar War Relocation Center was one of 10 camps at which Japanese-American
citizens and resident Japanese aliens were interned during World
War II. Located at the foot of the imposing Sierra Nevadas in
eastern California's Owens Valley, Manzanar has been identified
as the best preserved of these camps. In 1942, almost 120,000
Japanese Americans were forced from their homes in California,
western Oregon and Washington, and southern Arizona in the single
largest forced relocation in U.S. history. Many would spend the
next three years in one of the relocation centers across the country
run by the newly-formed War Relocation Authority (WRA). Most of
those relocated were American citizens by birth. Many were long-term
U.S. residents, but not citizens, because of discriminatory naturalization
laws. Since all Japanese Americans on the west coast were affected,
including the elderly, women, and children, Federal officials
attempted to conduct the massive incarceration in a humane manner.
However, by the time the last internees were released in 1946,
these Japanese Americans had lost homes and businesses estimated
to be worth, in 1999 values, 4 to 5 billion dollars. Deleterious
effects on Japanese-American individuals, their families, and
their communities, were immeasurable.
Manzanar street scene, rows of camp houses, 1943
Photograph by Ansel Adams, courtesy of Library of Congress
(LC-DIG-ppprs-00284)
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The Manzanar Relocation Center was located at the former farm and orchard community
of Manzanar. Begun in March of 1942, major construction on the center
was completed within six weeks. On March 21 the first 82 Japanese
Americans made the 220-mile trip by bus from Los Angeles. By mid-April,
up to 1,000 Japanese Americans were arriving at Manzanar daily and
by July Manzanar's population was nearly 10,000. Over 90 percent
of the evacuees were from the Los Angeles area; others were from
Stockton, California, and Bainbridge Island, Washington.
After initial construction, all additional buildings at Manzanar
were completed using paid evacuee labor. The central developed
portion of the relocation center covered an area of approximately
540 acres, and initially included eight watchtowers, a five-strand
barbed wire fence, and military police compound. Paved or oiled
roads divided the center into 67 blocks, including 36 residential
blocks, two staff housing blocks, an administrative block, two
warehouse blocks, a garage block, and a hospital block. Also built
by evacuees were a dehydration plant, Judo and Kendo buildings,
a lath house, three orphanage buildings, and two outdoor theaters.
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People leaving one of the barracks
buildings that was adapted for a Buddhist place of worship,
winter 1943
Photograph by Ansel Adams, courtesy of Library of Congress
(LC-DIG-ppprs-00359) |
Each of the residential blocks contained 14 20-foot-by-100-foot
barracks, a mess hall, a recreation hall, two communal bathhouses,
a laundry room, an ironing room, and a heating oil storage tank.
All of the buildings were constructed of wood frame, board, and
tarpaper. Although the barracks buildings and block layout were
standardized, the evacuees personalized their surroundings by adding
sidewalks, entries, rock-lined pathways, gardens, and small ponds.
Some evacuees hand-dug basements under their barracks. Many of the
residential blocks also had a large community pond, garden complexes,
sports courts, and some had playground equipment. The barracks and
recreation buildings were also used for churches, a general store,
a sporting goods store, a canteen, gift shops, a beauty parlor,
a barber shop, a dressmaking shop, a shoe repair shop, a watch repair
shop, a flower shop, a mail order counter, a laundry, and, after
April 1943, a photography studio. Recreation areas included a nine-hole
golf course and several community parks including Rose Park with
domestic rose buds grafted to native root stock. Eventually, it
included more than 100 species of flowers, two small lakes, a waterfall,
a bridge, a Japanese tea house, a Dutch oven, and pine trees.
Manzanar was the site of one of the most serious civil disturbances
to occur at the relocation centers, the "Manzanar Riot" or "Manzanar
Revolt." The revolt erupted in December 1942 following months of
tension and gang activity between Japanese American Citizens League
(JACL) supporters of the administration and a large group of Issei
and Kibei.
Mrs. Yaeko Nakamura holding hands with her two daughters,
Joyce Yuki Nakamura and Louise Tami Nakamura, walking under
a Japanese style pavilion in a park in Manzanar, 1943
Photograph by Ansel Adams, courtesy of Library of Congress
(LC-DIG-ppprs-00352)
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On November 21, 1945, Manzanar was the sixth relocation center to
close. Salvage of the relocation center's buildings and materials
was administered by the War Assets Administration. By December,
except for a few buildings in the administration and staff housing
area, Manzanar was completely dismantled. The remaining buildings
were used for a Veterans Housing Project at the end of the 1940s
before the buildings were removed. Inyo County purchased the relocation
center auditorium after the center closed and leased it to the Independence
Veterans of Foreign Wars who used it as a meeting hall and community
theater until 1951. It was then used by the Inyo County Road Department
until purchased by the National Park Service in 1996.
During World War II the relocation was justified as a "military
necessity." However, some 40 years later, the United States government
conceded that the relocation was based on racial bias rather than
on any true threat to national security. President Ronald Reagan
signed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 that provided redress for
Japanese Americans. The following year President George Bush issued
a formal apology from the U.S. government. Manzanar was designated
a National Historic Site in 1992. For more information, visit
the Manzanar National Historic
Site webpage.
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