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Ancestry.com - Search Military Records
Ancestry.com has searchable indexes; database results and some digitized images are available with a fee-based subscription.
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Japanese Americans Relocated During World War II
Original source: Japanese-American Internee Data File, 1942-1946 [Archival Database]; Records About Japanese Americans Relocated During World War II, 1988-1989; Records of the War Relocation Authority, Record Group 210; National Archives at College Park, College Park, MD.
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Camp Harmony: Japanese American Internment and the Puyallup Assembly Center
A book by Louis Fiset.
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CSU Japanese American History Digitization Project
A Collaborative Digital History Project of the California State University Libraries.
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Densho Digital Archive - Camp Newspaper Collections
Photos, documents, and newspapers that cover a span of history from immigration in the early 1900s through redress in the 1980s with a particular focus on the World War II mass incarceration.
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Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project
Organization which maintains digital archive of video oral histories of Japanese-Americans incarcerated or interned during World War II. Includes over 500 hours of interviews.
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The Encyclopedia covers key concepts, people, events, and organizations that played a role in the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. The reviewed articles are written by a wide range of contributors, and are enhanced with photos, documents and video drawn from Densho's digital archives and other sources.
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George and Frank C. Hirahara Photograph Collection, 1943-1945
Digital images from Heart Mountain Internment Camp. Located in Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections in the Terrell Library at Washington State University.
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German American Internee Coalition
Formed in 2005 by and for German American and Latin American citizens and legal residents who were interned by the United States during World War II.
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German American Internee Coalition
Focused on the history of internment of German Americans and Latin Americans during World War II, this site has name lists of over 7,000 civilians forcibly removed from Latin America by the US, interned in the U.S., and/or sent to Germany. Manifests of some of the ships used to transport these prisoners to the U.S. or Germany are included.
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Heart Mountain Interpretive Center, Heart Mountain Foundation, Wyoming
The Heart Mountain, Wyoming Foundation, HMWF, has worked to preserve the site of the Heart Mountain internment camp located near towns of Powell and Cody, Wyoming.
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Internment of German Americans (Wikipedia)
The internment of German Americans refers to the detention of German nationals and German-American citizens in the United States during the periods of World War I and of World War II.
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Internment of Italian Americans (Wikipedia)
The internment of Italian Americans refers to the government's internment of Italian nationals in the United States during World War II.
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Internment of Japanese Americans (Wikipedia)
The internment of Japanese Americans in the United States was the forced relocation and incarceration during World War II of between 110,000 and 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry who lived on the Pacific coast in camps in the interior of the country.
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Memorial listing of the names of over 125,000+ persons of Japanese descent who were incarcerated in the United States during World War II by the U.S. Army, Department of Justice, and War Relocation Authority (WRA).
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Japanese American Internment | National Archives
To commemorate the 75th Anniversary of FDR
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Japanese Canadian internment (Wikipedia)
Japanese Canadian Internment refers to the detainment of Japanese Canadians following the Japanese invasion of Hong Kong and Malaya and attack on Pearl Harbor, and the subsequent Canadian declaration of war on Japan during World War II.
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Japanese-American Internee File, 1942 - 1946
From the National Archives. Personal descriptive data about Japanese-Americans evacuated from the states of Washington, Oregon, and California to ten relocation centers operated by the War Relocation Authority during World War II. Each record represents an individual internee and includes the internee's name, relocation project and assembly center to which assigned, previous address, birthplace of parents, occupation of father, education, foreign residence & more.
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The Japantown Atlas maps nearly two dozen communities in California where Japanese Americans lived and worked prior to World War II. Drawing from historic maps, business directories, and photos, we show a variety of Japantowns as they existed in 1940. Our project both memorializes the Issei (first generation Japanese immigrants) in their first 20-50 years in America - the businesses, churches and schools they established - and documents the hometowns that 120,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry were forced to leave behind during their incarceration in "Assembly Centers" and "Internment Camps" during World War II (1942-1946).
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World War II » Internment
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