By Ray Locker.More than 14,000 people of Japanese descenttwo-thirds of them US citizenswere exiled from August 1942 to November 1945 to the Heart Mountain Incarceration Site on the high desert prairie of Wyomings Big Horn Basin. The site was the temporary
By Ray Locker.
More than 14,000 people of Japanese descenttwo-thirds of them US citizenswere exiled from August 1942 to November 1945 to the Heart Mountain Incarceration Site on the high desert prairie of Wyomings Big Horn Basin. The site was the temporary home for Japanese Americans forced from their homes in California, Oregon, and Washington. Believed to be saboteurs or spies or both, the prisoners were viewed with fear, hatred, and sometimes acceptance by their neighbors in nearby Cody and Powell. During their time at Heart Mountain, the incarcerated people lived like the residents of any American city. Under the eye of the federal War Relocation Authority, they taught school, worked at the fire and police departments, ran stores and barbershops, and spent much of their time wondering what had happened to their former lives. Today, the site is part of the Heart Mountain Interpretive Center and Mineta-Simpson Institute.
Paper: 128 pp.
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