1 of 9

Slide Notes

DownloadGo Live

Japanese Interment Camps

Published on Nov 18, 2015

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

JAPANESE INTERMENT CAMPS

FELICIA CIRCELLI, ALEXIS ANKROM, CAMEELAH GAYLE, JAYSON TAYLOR
Photo by haribote

Background:
Dec 7th 1941- Japanese attack Pearl Harbor, US citizens fear another attack
February 19th 1944- President Roosevelt signed executive order 9066, 127000 people of Japanese descent living in the US were removed from their homes and placed in internment camps
December 1944- public proclamation number 21 became effective in January of 1945 allowed them to return to their homes
There were ten internment camps: Tule lakes, Minidoka, Heart Mountain, Topaz, Manzarar, Poston, Gila River, Amache, Rohwer, amd Jerome

Photo by Varin Tsai

Why Were the Camps Established?
Roosevelt's executive order was fueled by anti-Japanese sentiment among farmers who competed against Japanese labor, politicians who sided with anti-Japanese constituencies, and the general public, whose frenzy was heightened by the Japanese attack of Pearl Harbor. More than two-thirds of the Japanese who were interned in the spring of 1942 were citizens of the United States.

Photo by drubuntu

EFFECTS OF THE WAR
Germany was split into four zones
All the Japanese that were displaced on the west coast and moved into the camps lost their jobs, their businesses and their homes. It was economically devastating.
It also may have led to many of these people to move to other parts of the country.
Japan was in ruins from constant bombs

Conditions in the U.S. Camps
The U.S. internment camps were overcrowded and provided poor living conditions. According to a 1943 report published by the War Relocation Authority (the administering agency), Japanese Americans were housed in "tarpaper-covered barracks of simple frame construction without plumbing or cooking facilities of any kind." Coal was hard to come by, and internees slept under as many blankets as they were allowed. Food was rationed out at an expense of 48 cents per internee, and served by fellow internees in a mess hall of 250-300 people.

They had few luxuries like being about to write letters to friends and family members.

Untitled Slide

Outcome of the war
• there was a conference held in Potsdam Germany that set up peace treaties
• country's that fought with hittler had to pay reparations to the allies
• Germany and it's capitol divided into four parts
• Cold War

Photo by SarahDeer

The significance of the Japanese internment camp was to contain the Japanese-Americans from attacking the USA after a surprise Pearl Harbor bomb attack by the Japanese. The US government could no longer trust the Japanese living its land and therefore they were dispersed and forced to leave their homes and businesses to a desert area.