Brian Moore
Moderator
A chest of drawers, a humidor, a clock, a parasol and a pair of Raggedy Ann dolls. Remnants of incarceration.
During WWII the American government incarcerated thousands of Japanese Americans in numerous concentration camps throughout the western half of the United States. They were deemed to be a threat to national security. Entire families were uprooted from their homes and businesses and sent to camps such as this one, Manzanar, just east of the Sierra Mountains in California. (I worked with a gentleman who as a small boy had been sent to a camp along with his family. I can't remember which camp but I don't think it was Manzanar because I didn't see his family name on the roll of detainees. He told me his father was forced to give up his grocery business for 10% of what it was worth. I'm sure many of my other co-workers--I worked for Honda in Southern California and I had the pleasure of working with many Japanese Americans--could have shared similar stories from their family history.)

During WWII the American government incarcerated thousands of Japanese Americans in numerous concentration camps throughout the western half of the United States. They were deemed to be a threat to national security. Entire families were uprooted from their homes and businesses and sent to camps such as this one, Manzanar, just east of the Sierra Mountains in California. (I worked with a gentleman who as a small boy had been sent to a camp along with his family. I can't remember which camp but I don't think it was Manzanar because I didn't see his family name on the roll of detainees. He told me his father was forced to give up his grocery business for 10% of what it was worth. I'm sure many of my other co-workers--I worked for Honda in Southern California and I had the pleasure of working with many Japanese Americans--could have shared similar stories from their family history.)
