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On December 7, 1941, Japan launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, sinking battleships, destroying aircraft, and ...
After the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, 1941, more than 122,000 Japanese Americans were forcibly sent to internment camps. The move came amid fears about national security, but also economic ...
How Pearl Harbor led to the internment of 27,000 Japanese Americans in the North State. Tanimoto returns home. The Tule Lake Segregation Center once housed 27,000 Japanese Americans, ...
In the early 1940s, approximately 27,000 Japanese Americans were forced into a North State internment camp, now a national park. Here's what happened.
Some military officials, including Maj. Gen. Sherman Miles, had pointed out Pearl Harbor's vulnerability to attack. But "we underestimated Japanese military power," he wrote for The Atlantic in 1948 .
How Pearl Harbor led to the internment of 27,000 Japanese Americans in the North State. Tanimoto returns home.
In particular, upward of 120,000 Japanese Americans, most Nisei — second-generation Americans born here — were forced into internment camps for the duration of the war.
This Electronic Field Trip commemorates the 75th anniversary of Pearl Harbor. Commemorating the 75th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, PBS member station WYES-TV/New Orleans and The National WWII ...
Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the US instated relocation camps for all Americans of Japanese descent. Photographer Dorothea Lange was hired by the government to document the camps, but her ...
Pearl Harbor Remembrance Ceremony honors the legacy of the Soldiers, Marines, Coast Guardsmen, Sailors and civilians who defended America in World War II, from the opening battle of December 7 ...
Pearl Harbor Remembrance Ceremony honors the legacy of the Soldiers, Marines, Coast Guardsmen, Sailors and civilians who defended America in World War II, from the opening battle of December 7 ...