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- Executive Order 9066: Resulting in Japanese-American Incarceration . . .
Issued by President Franklin Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, this order authorized the forced removal of all persons deemed a threat to national security from the West Coast to "relocation centers" further inland – resulting in the incarceration of Japanese Americans
- Japanese American Relocation | Holocaust Encyclopedia
The camps were sometimes called “concentration camps” during the war, though after the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps, the phrase tended to be associated with Nazism rather than with incarceration of Japanese Americans
- Japanese Internment Camps: WWII, Life Conditions | HISTORY
Japanese internment camps were established during World War II by President Franklin D Roosevelt through his Executive Order 9066 From 1942 to 1945, it was the policy of the U S government
- A controversial executive order leads to internment camps
On December 7, 1941, Japanese military forces attacked the United States base in Hawaii without warning More than 2,000 Americans died in the attack, and a united Congress answered President Roosevelt’s request for war
- Japanese American internment | Definition, Camps, Locations, Conditions . . .
Japanese American internment was the forced relocation by the U S government of thousands of Japanese Americans to detention camps during World War II, beginning in 1942
- Executive Order 9066 - Wikipedia
Roosevelt hoped to establish concentration camps for Japanese Americans in Hawaii even after he signed Executive Order 9066 On February 26, 1942, he informed Secretary of the Navy Knox that he had "long felt most of the Japanese should be removed from Oahu to one of the other islands "
- Behind the Wire | Japanese - Library of Congress
No Japanese American was ever convicted of any act of sabotage during World War II When they reached the camps themselves, they saw spare, prison-like compounds situated on sun-baked deserts or bare Ozark hillsides, dotted with watchtowers and surrounded by barbed wire
- Facts and Case Summary — Korematsu v. U. S.
The order set in motion the mass transportation and relocation of more than 120,000 Japanese people to sites the government called detention camps that were set up and occupied in about 14 weeks Most of the people who were relocated lived on the West Coast and two-thirds were American citizens
- A Brief History of Japanese American Relocation During World War II
No person of Japanese ancestry living in the United States was ever convicted of any serious act of espionage or sabotage during the war Yet these innocent people were removed from their homes and placed in relocation centers, many for the duration of the war
- US House of Representatives: History, Art Archives
On February 19, 1942, amid unfounded rumors and fears of espionage or sabotage, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which authorized military officials in the western states to forcibly remove Japanese immigrants and their families to temporary holding facilities
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