RMAB62R6–Japanese-Americans, carrying Taru Mikoshi, portable shrine, heavy load, Cherry Blossom Festival, Post Street, Japantown, San Francisco, California
RMCWBWHK–Small child looks apprehensively at the U.S. soldier supervising the transport of Los Angeles Japanese-Americans to Owens
RMKWB04B–Two girls and a woman wearing coats and identification tags, members of the Mochida family awaiting evacuation bus during the removal of civilians of Japanese descent in 1942, Hayward, California, USA, May 8, 1942. Image courtesy National Archives. ()
RMT950XM–Entitled: 'Members of the Japanese Independent congregational church attending Easter services prior to evacuation' Oakland, California. The internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII was the forced relocation and incarceration in camps of 110,000-120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (62% of the internees were US citizens) ordered by President Roosevelt shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor.
RMF7P1GB–japanese-Americans intered during world war two: Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Shimizu photograph by Ansel Adams 1902-1984, photographer [1943]
RM2A5YWM3–japanese-Americans intered during world war two: Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Shimizu photograph by Ansel Adams 1902-1984, photographer [1943]
RM2C3Y243–Japanese Americans gather in Police Inspection Room to receive Packages that are being inspected at Detention Facility, Stockton, California, USA, U.S. Army Signal Corps, 1942
RFJ7AC51–Japanese Americans using postal service, 1942.
RMD2A4PF–Santa Anita Reception Center Los Angeles California Evacuation Japanese Japanese-Americans West Coast Areas Under U.S Army War
RMAR5H01–A lecturer addresses Japanese Americans on traditional Japanese culture in Irvine, CA. Note powerpoint projection.
RMBTKK9H–Multiple generations of Japanese Americans at meal time in the Manzanar Internment Camp barracks dining area.
RM2WRBGH5–Education and school children - Japanese pupil in public school, New York, Photograph shows boys sitting at desks., 1913., Japanese Americans, Education, New York (State), New York, 1910-1920, Photographic prints, 1910-1920., Photographic prints, 1910-1920, 1 photographic print
RMC2JJ83–Evacuation of Japanese Citizens from San Francisco
RM2E0458C–WW2 Propaganda Photo Japanese Evacution from USA San Francisco (Calif.) 1941 evacuation - Two Japanese boys, one with strip 'Remember Pearl Harbor' on his hat, wave good-bye [while] awaiting the bus United States. Army. Signal Corps.[1942] - Evacuations--California--San Francisco--1940-1950 - Boys--California--San Francisco--1940-1950 - World War, 1939-1945--Japanese Americans--California--San Francisco Arrivals & departures--California--San Francisco--1940-1950 Photographic prints--1940-1950.
RMD21AWE–Japanese Americans in Northern and Central California, Commemoration of the 1975 visit of the Japanese Emperor to the San Franci
RM2AC6AR7–internment of Japanese-Americans in photograph, 1942-1944
RM2J0K681–Aerial view of the Granada Relocation Center, an internment camp for Americans of Japanese descent during World War II, October 15, 1945 in Amache, Colorado. The site of Camp Amache was declared a National Historic Site by President Joe Biden on March 18, 2022.
RMJK8R3T–USA, California, Eastern Sierra Nevada Area, Independence, Manzanar National Historic Site, site of World War Two-era internment camp for Japanese-Americans, barracks
RM2JTFJCX–Asian Americans walking along St. Marks Pl in Manhattan's 'Little Tokyo' East Village neighborhood, New York City.
RMAB62T0–Japanese-Americans, carrying Taru Mikoshi, portable shrine, heavy load, Cherry Blossom Festival, Post Street, Japantown, San Francisco, California
RMKWD8MX–110 Hawaiian men enlisting in a combat regiment of 1,500 Americans of Japanese ancestry, March 1943. 14,000 men eventually served in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, and received 9,486 Purple Hearts and 21 Metals of Honor. They fought in Italy, southern (BSLOC 2016 7 27)
RMC5R4GM–Site of World War II Topaz Internment Camp for Japanese-Americans
RMT9510N–Entitled: 'Entrance to Manzanar, Manzanar Relocation Center.' The internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII was the forced relocation and incarceration in camps of 110,000-120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (62% of the internees were US citizens) ordered by President Roosevelt shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. Japanese-Americans were incarcerated based on local population concentrations and regional politics.
RMKHW4R0–Photograph of the evacuation of Japanese-Americans from the West Coast areas under the U.S. Army War Emergency Order. Japanese people await for registration at the Santa Anita reception centre. Dated 20th Century
RMTXGBTP–San Francisco, Calif., April 1942. Children at the Weill public school for the so-called international settlement and including many Japanese-Americans, saluting the flag. They include evacuees of Japanese descent who will be housed in War relocation authority centres for the duration
RM2C6KMAJ–Group of Evacuees of Japanese Ancestry wave good-bye from rear of Train, Los Angeles, California, USA, U.S. Army Signal Corps, 1942
RMEPN34P–A historical marker is mounted in front of a former sentry post at Manzanar, a World War II relocation camp where more than 10,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated between 1942-45 at the foot of the Sierra Nevada mountains in remote Owens Valley in Inyo County, California, USA. Surrounded by barbed wire and guard towers, Manzanar was the first of 10 wartime internment camps established in the United States for Americans of Japanese ancestry. The abandoned camp is now a National Historic Site and welcomes visitors.
RMF95BGM–Japanese American internment camps
RMAR5H00–A lecturer addresses Japanese Americans on traditional Japanese culture in Irvine, CA. Note powerpoint projection.
RMBTKK92–Japanese-Americans at the Santa Anita Assembly Center where family groups identify their baggage prior to departure to the relocation camps that would be their homes for the duration of World War II. 1942.
RMKC709F–Reception by the Japanese of the Americans at Yokohama, Sensai Eiko, 1870s
RMDD9WK4–Poston, Arizona. Although Poston, Arizona is soon to be closed to Japanese Americans, it has alread . . . - - 539893
RF2HW3HP4–Art inspired by Reception by the Japanese of the Americans at Yokohama, early Meiji period (1868–1912), 1870s, Japan, Diptych of polychrome woodblock prints; ink and color on paper, 14 3/4 x 20 5/8 in. (37.5 x 52.4 cm), Prints, Sensai Eiko, Classic works modernized by Artotop with a splash of modernity. Shapes, color and value, eye-catching visual impact on art. Emotions through freedom of artworks in a contemporary way. A timeless message pursuing a wildly creative new direction. Artists turning to the digital medium and creating the Artotop NFT
RM2RG00HG–Go for Broke Monument designed by architect Roger M Yanagita, commemorates Japanese American soldiers who served the US Army in World War II. Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, California
RM2AC6ARJ–internment of Japanese-Americans in photograph, 1942-1944
RM2J0K68W–Aerial view of the Granada Relocation Center, an internment camp for Americans of Japanese descent during World War II, November 30, 1943 in Amache, Colorado. The site of Camp Amache was declared a National Historic Site by President Joe Biden on March 18, 2022.
RMJK8RMP–USA, California, Eastern Sierra Nevada Area, Independence, Manzanar National Historic Site, site of World War Two-era internment camp for Japanese-Americans, barracks
RM2JTFJCW–Asian Americans walking along St. Marks Pl in Manhattan's 'Little Tokyo' East Village neighborhood, New York City.
RMAB62M1–people, spectators, watching parade, Cherry Blossom Festival, Japantown, San Francisco, California, United States
RMKWD26X–Japanese Americans internees waving farewell from behind a wire fence at Pomona, CA, 1942. Men, women, and children were at an assembly center from which they would travel to their assigned internment camps for the duration of World War 2 (BSLOC 2017 20 185)
RMC5R4FE–Site of World War II Topaz Internment Camp for Japanese-Americans
RMT9510C–Entitled: 'School children, Manzanar Relocation Center, California.' The internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII was the forced relocation and incarceration in camps of 110,000-120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (62% of the internees were US citizens) ordered by President Roosevelt shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. Japanese-Americans were incarcerated based on local population concentrations and regional politics.
RMF7NPPW–San Francisco, Calif., April 1942. Children at the Weill public school for the so-called international settlement and including many Japanese-Americans, saluting the flag. They include evacuees of Japanese descent who will be housed in War relocation authority centres for the duration
RM2A5YPPF–Japanese-American camp, war emergency evacuation, Tule Lake Relocation Centre, Newell, California. 1943
RM2C85E1K–Roy Takeno (Editor) and group reading Newspapers in front of Office, Yuichi Hirata, Nabuo Samamura, Manzanar Relocation Center, California, USA, Ansel Adams, Manzanar War Relocation Center photographs, 1943
RMHF53BG–Japanese internment or relocation camps during World War Two held thousands of Japanese - Americans for the duration of the war.
RMER76DD–Americans - Japanese translations of barbaric languages
RMAR5H03–Elderly Japanese Americans attend a lecture in traditional Japanese culture: Irvine, CA. Note powerpoint projector.
RMBTKKA0–Guard tower and lights at Fresno, California, Assembly Center, where deported Japanese-Americans were first taken before routing to the relocation camps that would be their homes for the duration of World War II. 1942.
RMJ0NG8N–A Japanese man evacuated from his home sorts seedlings from the Salinas Experiment Station for transplanting at the Manzanar Relocation Center in Manzanar, California, 1942.
RMDDE997–Poston, Arizona. Arrival of Japanese Americans by bus at this War Relocation Authority center from . . . 536311
RM2B02KMN–Manzanar is most widely known as the site of one of ten camps where over 110,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II. Located at the foot of the Sierra Nevada in California's Owens Valley between the towns of Lone Pine to the south and Independence to the north, it is approximately 230 miles (370 km) northeast of Los Angeles. Long before the first incarcerees arrived in March 1942, Manzanar was home to Native Americans, who mostly lived in villages near several creeks in the area. Ranchers and miners formally established the town of Manzanar in 1910, but abandoned the tow
RM2J6WP8K–Members of the Japanese Folk Dance institute at the Sakura Matsuri celebration of cherry blossoms & the US Japanese friendship. In Queens, New York.
RM2AC6ARB–internment of Japanese-Americans in photograph, 1942-1944
RM2J0K687–Aerial view of the Granada Relocation Center, an internment camp for Americans of Japanese descent during World War II, December 12, 1942 in Amache, Colorado. The site of Camp Amache was declared a National Historic Site by President Joe Biden on March 18, 2022.
RMJK8R41–USA, California, Eastern Sierra Nevada Area, Independence, Manzanar National Historic Site, site of World War Two-era internment camp for Japanese-Americans, camp cemetery
RM2PJGRC8–Japanese American Memorial to Patriotism During World War II, Washington, DC. The memorial reflects on the legacy of the concentration camps (see info
RMAB62YB–Japanese woman, parade, Cherry Blossom Festival, Japantown, San Francisco, California, United States
RMCWBWMM–Japanese-Americans agricultural workers packing broccoli near Guadalupe, California. March 1937 photograph by Dorothea Lange.
RMC5R4EM–Site of World War II Topaz Internment Camp for Japanese-Americans
RMT9510H–Entitled: 'Monument in cemetery, Manzanar Relocation Center, California. The internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII was the forced relocation and incarceration in camps of 110,000-120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (62% of the internees were US citizens) ordered by President Roosevelt shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. Japanese-Americans were incarcerated based on local population concentrations and regional politics.
RMF7PB6F–Photographic print - San Francisco, California, April 1942. Children at the Weill public school for the so-called international settlement and including many Japanese-Americans, saluting the flag. They include evacuees of Japanese descent who will be housed in War relocation authority centres for the duration.
RM2A5YP37–American Japanese mother and daughter, agricultural workers near Guadalupe, California by Dorothea Lange 1895-1965, dated 1937
RM2C0XJF7–Evacuees of Japanese Descent being inoculated as they registered for Evacuation and Assignment to War Relocation Authority Centers for the duration of the War, San Francisco, California, USA, Dorothea Lange for U.S. War Relocation Authority, April 1942
RMHF53C1–Japanese internment or relocation camps during World War Two held thousands of Japanese - Americans for the duration of the war.
RMP2F9W9–Manzanar War Relocation Center where Japanese Americans were imprisoned during World War II.
RME3W67Y–Japanese characters spell out 'Soul Consoling Power' on a monument at the Manzanar prison camp outside Lone Pine, CA, where Japanese Americans were unjustly imprisoned during World War II.
RMBTKK97–Young Japanese-Americans dancing at the Fresno, California, Assembly Center in 1942. Assembly centers were the initial organizing points, from which internees were taken to the relocation camps that would be their homes for the duration of World War II.
RM2RTYD5E–Owens Valley, California 1943 View from a guard tower of the Manzanar Relocation Center, one of the smaller Internment camps for Japanese-Americans. Photograph shows the western side of the grounds with the Sierra Nevada Mountains. At its peak, Manzanar held around 10,000 inmates, with the first inmates arriving in 1942, and the last leaving in 1945. Today, it is preserved as a National Historic Site. Photograph by Ansel Adams.
RMDDEN76–Poston, Arizona. Arrival of Japanese Americans, evacuated from west coast defense areas at this War . . . 536282
RM2B02M7E–Manzanar is most widely known as the site of one of ten camps where over 110,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II. Located at the foot of the Sierra Nevada in California's Owens Valley between the towns of Lone Pine to the south and Independence to the north, it is approximately 230 miles (370 km) northeast of Los Angeles. Long before the first incarcerees arrived in March 1942, Manzanar was home to Native Americans, who mostly lived in villages near several creeks in the area. Ranchers and miners formally established the town of Manzanar in 1910, but abandoned the tow
RMC0J7X7–Japanese-Americans children carry a shrine in a procession for their Omikoshi (Harvest) Festival in New York
RM2AC6AX2–internment of Japanese-Americans in photograph, 1942-1944
RM2J0K683–Aerial view of the Granada Relocation Center, an internment camp for Americans of Japanese descent during World War II, December 12, 1942 in Amache, Colorado. The site of Camp Amache was declared a National Historic Site by President Joe Biden on March 18, 2022.
RMJK73XH–USA, California, Eastern Sierra Nevada Area, Independence, Manzanar National Historic Site, site of World War Two-era internment camp for Japanese-Americans, camp cemetery
RM2PJGRBM–Japanese American Memorial to Patriotism During World War II, Washington, DC. The memorial reflects on the legacy of the concentration camps (see info
RMAB62YC–Japanese woman, adult woman, parade, Cherry Blossom Festival, Japantown, San Francisco, California, United States
RMCWBWHF–Tule Lake Relocation Center, at Newell, in northern California was the detention center for Japanese-Americans suspected of
RMC5R4GA–Site of World War II Topaz Internment Camp for Japanese-Americans
RMT950XK–Entitled: 'Shop window of Asahi Dye Works with sign reading: 'Closing, we won't take it to Owens Valley for U', Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. The internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII was the forced relocation and incarceration in camps of 110,000-120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (62% of the internees were US citizens) ordered by President Roosevelt shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor.
RM2F2F3EC–President Ronald Reagan signs the Reparations Bill for Japanese-Americans.
RM2A5YPYC–Colour photograph of two young Japanese-American girls, at a park near Union Station, Washington D.C. in 1943 during the Second World War
RMG8J1DK–Japanese-American Child During Evacuation of Japanese-Americans from West Coast Areas under U.S. Army War Emergency Order, Los Angeles, California, USA, Russell Lee, April 1942
RFHF53BX–Japanese internment or relocation camps during World War Two held thousands of Japanese - Americans for the duration of the war.
RMC1YXEY–During world war II, 110,000 Japanese Americans were interned in Manzanar and similar camps until the end of the war. Owens Valley, USA.
RME3W641–Mt. Williamson in the Sierra Nevada range is seen behind a sign marking the location of a barrack at the Manzanar prison camp outside Lone Pine, CA, where Japanese Americans were unjustly imprisoned during World War II.
RMBTKK9K–Under armed guard, parentless children and a pastor sit in the back of truck for their evacuation from Bainbridge Island, during the World War II internment of Japanese Americans. The orphans were interned at Manzanar's 'Children's Village,' the only orphanage in internment camps, to which 100 children from Alaska to San Diego were sent for the duration of the war. 1942.
RM2RTYCDY–Owens Valley, California 1943 Editor Roy Takeno reading a copy of the Manzanar Free Press in front of the newspaper office at the Manzanar War Relocation Center in Owens Valley, California. The Manzanar Free Press was first launched in April of 1942 by ex-journalists in what eventually became a relocation center for Japanese-Americans. The first issue, printed on July 22, 1942, stated: “We want to repeat again that the Free Press belongs to the people of Manzanar, that, instead of being merely the mouthpiece of the administration, it strives to express the opinions of the evacuees in the s
RMDDE99H–Poston, Arizona. A truck load of personal belongings is here being unloaded by Japanese Americans u . . . 536286
RM2B02M5K–Manzanar is most widely known as the site of one of ten camps where over 110,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II. Located at the foot of the Sierra Nevada in California's Owens Valley between the towns of Lone Pine to the south and Independence to the north, it is approximately 230 miles (370 km) northeast of Los Angeles. Long before the first incarcerees arrived in March 1942, Manzanar was home to Native Americans, who mostly lived in villages near several creeks in the area. Ranchers and miners formally established the town of Manzanar in 1910, but abandoned the tow
RMC1YDT8–Japanese-Americans with friends and supporters carry a shrine in a procession for their Omikoshi (Harvest) Festival
RM2AC6AR8–internment of Japanese-Americans in photograph, 1942-1944
RM2J0K693–Aerial view of the Granada Relocation Center, an internment camp for Americans of Japanese descent during World War II, December 9, 1942 in Amache, Colorado. The site of Camp Amache was declared a National Historic Site by President Joe Biden on March 18, 2022.
RMJK73XE–USA, California, Eastern Sierra Nevada Area, Independence, Manzanar National Historic Site, site of World War Two-era internment camp for Japanese-Americans, camp cemetery
RM2PJGRBW–Japanese American Memorial to Patriotism During World War II, Washington, DC. The memorial reflects on the legacy of the concentration camps (see info
RMAB62RC–Japanese-Americans, carrying Taru Mikoshi, portable shrine, heavy load, Cherry Blossom Festival, Post Street, Japantown, San Francisco, California
RMCWBYE1–Guard tower and lights at Fresno, California, Assembly Center, where deported Japanese-Americans were first taken before
RMC5R4F6–Site of World War II Topaz Internment Camp for Japanese-Americans
RMT950XC–Entitled: 'Newspaper headline. Oakland, California, February 1942.' The internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII was the forced relocation and incarceration in camps of 110,000-120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (62% of the internees were US citizens) ordered by President Roosevelt shortly after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. Japanese-Americans were incarcerated based on local population concentrations and regional politics.
RFM4D5R7–The rubble of the historical monument topaz internment camp where japanese americans were imprisoned during the war,
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