A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah...

28
A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012

Transcript of A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah...

Page 1: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

A Walk Through Topaz

All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State

Historical Society © 2012

Page 2: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

“The internment of Americans of Japanese ancestry during WWII was one of the worst violations of civil rights against citizens in the history of the United States. The government and the US Army, falsely citing ‘military necessity,’ locked up over 110,000 men, women and children in ten remote camps... These Americans were never convicted or even charged with any crime, yet were incarcerated for up to four years in prison camps surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards...”

-Topazmuseum.org

Page 3: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Before We Start…Why did the Japanese-American Internment

happen?

-World War II-Pearl Harbor/Niihau Incident-Executive Order 9066

Page 4: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Evacuation

Page 5: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 6: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 7: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 8: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Registering

Page 9: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 10: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Arriving at Camp

Page 11: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 12: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 13: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 14: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Work at Topaz

Page 15: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 16: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 18: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 19: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 20: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Loyalty

The number of stars represent the number of soldiers fighting for the U.S. military, whose families were at Topaz.

Page 21: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 22: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Community Events

Page 23: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 24: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 25: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.
Page 26: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

The End of Topaz• Topaz Closed 2 months

after the end of WWII. Families were able to go back to their homes in California.

• Unfortunately, many of their homes were vandalized or had fallen into disrepair while they were gone.

Page 27: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Apologies• In 1988, U.S. President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act of

1988, which provided redress of $20,000 for each surviving detainee, totaling $1.2 billion dollars.

• On September 27, 1992, the Civil Liberties Act Amendments of 1992, appropriating an additional $400 million to ensure all remaining internees received their $20,000 redress payments, was signed into law by President George H. W. Bush.

• "In remembering, it is important to come to grips with the past. No nation can fully understand itself or find its place in the world if it does not look with clear eyes at all the glories and disgraces of its past. We in the United States acknowledge such an injustice in our history. The internment of Americans of Japanese ancestry was a great injustice, and it will never be repeated.”– President George H.W. Bush, December 7, 1991

Page 28: A Walk Through Topaz All digital photos used in this presentation have been provided via the Utah State Historical Society © 2012.

Serving as a Reminder

• Under the 2001 budget of the United States, it was also decreed that the ten sites on which the detainee camps were set up are to be preserved as historical landmarks: “places like Manzanar, Tule Lake, Heart Mountain, Topaz, Amache, Jerome, and Rohwer will forever stand as reminders that this nation failed in its most sacred duty to protect its citizens against prejudice, greed, and political expediency”