Japanese American internment in pictures
On February 19, 1942, U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, giving the U.S. military the authority to exclude any persons from designated areas. Although the word Japanese did not appear in the order, it was clear that Japanese Americans were the focus of the initiative. On March 18, 1942, the federal War Relocation Authority (WRA) was established to “take all people of Japanese descent into custody, surround them with troops, prevent them from buying land, and return them to their former homes at the close of the war.”
In the 1943 edition of the Britannica Book of the Year, Earl G. Harrison, commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, described the affected population:
When the United States entered the war in Dec. 1941, there were more than 100,000 persons of Japanese ancestry living in the far western states. Approximately two-thirds of them, born in the United States, were American citizens. The aliens, Issei, are an older group who came to the United States as labourers and farm workers. Their average age is around 60. The citizens, Nisei, are largely a young group, most of them educated or being educated in American schools. Their average age is around 22.
Between 1942 and 1945 approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans were detained in 10 camps for varying periods of time in California, Arizona, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Arkansas.
- Japanese American internmentA moving van being loaded with the possessions of a Japanese family on Bush Street in San Francisco's Japantown, April 7, 1942. At right are the offices of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), the oldest Asian American civil rights organization in the United States. Shortly after this photo was taken, the Wartime Civil Control Administration (WCCA) took over the JACL building and repurposed it as a Civil Control Station for the collection and processing of “people of Japanese descent” prior to their transport to detention camps.
- Japanese American internmentShop window at the Asahi Dye Works in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles. Owens Valley refers to the location of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, which opened in March 1942. At bottom left is a patriotic sticker depicting U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt centered in a “V-is-for-Victory” symbol and the slogan “We Will Win; Forward Together with United Strength.”
- Japanese American internmentStorefront of the Asahi Dye Works in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles. The shop was closed after Japanese Americans on the West Coast were forcibly relocated to internment camps. Mounted in the window next to an attestation of the owner's status as an American citizen are patriotic placards encouraging customers to purchase war bonds and support the Red Cross.
- Japanese American internmentHandbill posted in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles advertising construction jobs in Owens Valley, California, on the site of what would become the Manzanar War Relocation Center.
- Japanese American internmentJapanese Americans waiting in a gymnasium in Salinas, California, prior to their transport to internment camps. Salinas was home to one of the 15 temporary detention centers operated by the Wartime Civil Control Administration.
- Japanese American internmentSign posted on the front door of the Union Hand Laundry in Hollywood. The business was established by Harry Nakashima in 1924; it closed as a result of the internment of its proprietors and did not reopen.
- Japanese American internmentA police officer examining the belongings of a Japanese American family at a temporary detention facility at the Santa Anita racetrack in Arcadia, California, April 1942.
- Japanese American internmentShiro Nakamura, California's first state-licensed Japanese American pharmacist, opened the Nippon Pharmacy at 315 E. 1st Street in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1910. Nakamura was one of the nearly 18,000 people interned at the Poston detention complex in southwestern Arizona. Pictured here is a passerby looking past an advertisement for war bonds into the closed shop.
- Japanese American internmentThe nearly 300 Japanese Americans living on Bainbridge Island in Puget Sound were given just six days to liquidate their property, often for pennies on the dollar. On March 30, 1942, a ferry carried most of this group (some 50 people had already left) to Seattle, where they boarded trains to what would become the Manzanar War Relocation Center. The white strings visible on the clothing of the children are attached to their identification tags.
- Japanese American internmentThe Miyatake family in their quarters at the Manzanar War Relocation Center, 1943. Toyo Miyatake (left) had opened a photo studio in the Little Tokyo neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1923 and had achieved international recognition for his work as a photographer. Although photographic equipment was forbidden to internees, Miyatake was able to fashion a makeshift camera by using smuggled parts and film. He used his outlawed camera to document daily life at Manzanar, and in 1943 he met Ansel Adams, who took this photo. After the war, Miyatake reopened his studio and resumed his career. Miyatake and Adams staged the joint exhibition Two Views of Manzanar at the Frederick S. Wight Art Gallery at the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1978–79. In 2011 the stretch of San Pedro Street between 2nd and 3rd Street in Little Tokyo was renamed Toyo Miyatake Way.