Quiet Americans. New York: William Morrow, 1969

Quiet Americans. New York: William Morrow, 1969

• V-J i'. • • • • • • •.. • An Annotated I' I1ibliograplty • for • LMANZANAR • NATIONAL '. HISTORIC • SITE ;.•• I Ie I An Annotated Bibliography I fOT MANZANAR NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE I II Prepared by: Arthur A. Hansen, Debra Gold Hansen I Sue Kunitomi Embrey, Jane C. Wehrey II Garnette Long, Kathleen Frazee II Ie I I Prepared for: National Park ServIce, Denver Service Center Manzanar National Historic Sile, #537000.094 I Subcoflsullaflt agreement with II Jones & Jones, A Professional Service Corporation I II Oral History Program I California State University, Fullerton ;Ie February 1995 B&WScans I G,-Z-2.CJ<J> • ••• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • ••• • II I. I I II TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction I Manzanar War Relocation Center I I Japanese American~ in Callfomia and Beyond 25 War Relocation Authority 49 II, United Slates Army 59 Owens Valley 64 Los Angeles Department of Water and Power 83 , I • ••• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • ••• • I Introduction TillS introduction to the ManZlillilr ,Vmionol [j1.'loric Sire Bibliography consists of four I pans, The opening section provides a historical overview of the Manzanar War Relocation Center. Although tillS sIte-centered bibhography encompasses the three lncamalions of Manzanar as historical settlement space-Paiute communities, through 1850; Euro-American I agricultural colony, 1910-1935; and Japane:.e American relocation center, 1942·1945-1tS pnmary emphasis (consistent with the legislation eSL1blishing Man7..anar as a national hl~torical site) is the World War II period. The second section will present a hrief re"iew of the literature I treating the relocation center at Mallzanar. Th~ third section wlil describe the background and goals of this bibhugraphical proJ eet. The founll and tinal ~~ction oi the i ntrod uction ",ill discus, I the bibliography's salient featur~s. Historical Overview I Man7.anar was the first of ten War Relocallon Authority (WRA)-admini:.tered detention c~nters created for "national !>eclirity" by the United Slates government in 1942, following Japan's bombing ofPe.a.rl Harbor on December 7, 1941, and thc Unl(ed Srat~,', entrance into I. World War II. Incarcerated in these camps were more than 120,000 U.S. re,ident Japanese Americans, appro,.imately one-thIrd of whum were law·abldlllg Japanese aliens (Issei) denied U.S. citizenship and two-thIrds U.S. citizens (preponderantly second-generation NiseI, but also I some third-generation Sanse1 and even a few fourth-generation Yonsel). Located outside West Coast military zones in eastern California's lnyo COllnty, 212 miles nortl1 of Lo:. Angeles and nearly equidistant between the Owens Valley towns of Lone Pine and Independence on U.S. I Highway 395, the Manzanar site had been utilized by Paiute-Shoshone Indians for centuries before 1900 and then, roughly spanmng 1910-1935, was a hny Euro-American fwit-growing settlement named Manzanar (Spanish for "'apple orchard"). I The camp was eSl<lblisned initially by the U,S. Army as an assembly center and manag~d by the wanime CIvil Control Administration (WCCA) as the O",ens Valley Reception Center I from March 21 through May 31. 1942. On June 1, 1942, Manzanar was reconstituted as a WRA center, the only on~ of fifteen assembly centers to be so transformed, and renamed the Manzanar War Relocation Center. A:. a wec" unll, Manzanar had one project director I (Clayton Triggs) and two acting dlr~ctors (So[on Kimball and Harvey CoverJey). In its relocation center phase, extending to its shutdown on Novemb~r 21,1945, Manzanar's two director~ were Roy Nash (untli November 24, 1942) and Ralph P. Merritt. The ovcrv.. helming I majority of the camp's pcak population of 10,121 [nearly equally divided between male and female with one-quarter of them school-age children) were drawn from prewar Japanese American communities in Los Angd~s County, particularly the City of Los Angdes. Situated in the rain shadow of the imposing Sierra Nevada range at the base of 14,375- I. foot Mount Williamson on some 6,000 acres of land leased from the Los Angeles Depanment I I I • ot Water and Pow~r, Ma~lanar aperie~e~u a har,h <:limate of extreme temperatures, high winds. and ;~vere dust storms. The ~amp prop~r consisted of a rectangle of about 550 acres dominated by th,rty-<;'x block:. of 504 tar-paper re<;identull barracks for the interned population. •• most of whom hved withi~ 20 by 25 foot famdy apartme~lS. This area encompassed communal mess halls, laundry ra~ililles. and latrines for each internee blo~k, as well as conSIderably • upgraded living facilitles for tbe appointed personnel. Additionally, it contained a modem 150- b~d hospital, ScllOOls, cllurclle.l. recreational and ~ultural facihties, ~oopnativ~ stores, and most other amenities found In a "nurmal" American cny of comparable size. Also in this central area • were "ar-related industnes (e.g .• a ~amOl,nage net factory), an experimenllli plantation for prodll~mg natural rubber from [h~ guayulc plant, and the Childr~n's Village orphanage. Immediately outside this main camp were 1,500 acre~ of agricultural land, whIch made • Man.canar ,elf-~uftki~nt In crops, meat, and poultry, augmented the other WRA camps' food supplies, and generated revenlle for the Mamamr center in open-market saks. The ~amp's core was surrounded by barbed wire and overlooked by eight sentry towers and manned by armcd • military police, a ba1!alion of whom were quartcred a half-mile ~Olnh of the Manlanar center and, in 1942, was equipp~d with twenty·one nile>, eightY-nine ~hO!guns ..Ii" machine guns. and twenty-one ~ubmachme guns. • Although relatlve peace and harmony gcnerally pr~va,led within the centcr, intern~e resistance to unpopular administrative pOilCles-mamfested a'> work slov,.dov,.ns and ~trikes as well as through cultural politics and non·compliance with regulatIOns-was not uncummon. The • most dramatic incident of re'l'>t.ance occurred on Decemb~r 6, 1942. Sparked by the Jailing of the M~,~ Hall Workers' Union's popular head (Harry Ueno) for beatmg an unpopular internee (Fred Tayama) prominent m the Japanese American Cnifen~ Leagu~ (JACL), whose leader~ • were widely as>umed by internees to be collaborators and informers, the "Manzanar Riot'" climaxcd In the death of two inmates and the wounding uf nine other~ by MP-fired bullets. Its •• aftermath involved the roundup and ultimate impri~onment (Without formal charges or hearings) of Ueno and other suspected "pro-Japanese"' advocates and camp "troublemakers"' in cltiren i~olation centers in Moab, Ut.ah, and Leupp, Arizona. and the "protective custody" consignm~nt to an abandoned Civil Conservation Corps camp in nearby Death Valley National Monument of • JACL and allied "pro·American"' ~poke~persons and their families. A more pervasi"e and protracted show of resislan~e was set in motIon two months later, in February 1943, when the Army and the WRA imposed a mandatory registration on the adult population of Manzanar and • the other centers for the J Olllt pUl1'0~e of estab lishlllg eligibil ity for leave clearance and securing volunteers for a speCIal Japane;e American combat team. At Manzanar, only forty-two penons • (2 percent of the eligible citizen males) volunteered for miliLary <;ervice, wilde approximately 50 percent of all male ciuzens and 45 p~rc~nt of all female citizcns eIther answered "'no'" to the so-called loyalty questions on the registration questionnaire or r<dused to answer thc questions. • The latter situation led to \,322 Manzanarians and theIr families (a grand total of 2, 165) bemg transferred in late 19 .. 3 III the WRA's newly-established Tule Lake Segregation Center in nonhern California. • With the departure of its "disloyals" to Tule Lake (along with expatnates and repatriates to Japan) and an increasing number of Its "Ioyal$" entering tile military (following the reinstltut;on of sde~tlve service for Japanese American~ in 1944) and rcseuling throughout the • U.S. as war workers and college student" Manzanar became a community largely of elderly and ••• • I youthful reSldeot~. Notwithstanding limIted ,elf-government and an improved physical I. appeMaJlCe and social ambience, Manzanar retained constant reminders that It was a concentration camp: its residents were not free to leave, its new~paper (M"n~al1ar Free Press) I was censured, and its confines patrolled by soldiers with loaded weapons. After its closure, the Manzanar site reverted [0 !ts prewar "natural" state, save for four survi\'ing internee-built struCture5 (t"'o 1942 pagoda-like ~tone security posts at the camp's I eastern entrance; a 1943 memorial obelisk, "Soul Consoling Tower," ju>t outside the western bounJary; and a 1944 auditorium on the Ilonhcast penmeter) plus scattered remnants of the constructed and botanical environment B~ginning in 1969, annual pllgnmages to the site have I been held under the sponsorship of the Maolanar Committee, a Lo~ Angeles-based eommumty activist group. Manzanar was declared a state hislOncal landmark in 1972 and a national hIstorical landmark in 1985. On March 3, 1992, President George Bush SIgned into law the I Congress-established Manzanar National Historic Sitc providing government purchase of the site and National Park Service adnunistration, under thc Department of the Interior, for preservallon I and hi;torica.l interpretation. Literature Review I Notwithsta.nding that in the mind of the general public Manzanar has become a metaphor for the World War Il incarccratlOn experience of people of Japane:.e ancestry, to date no scholarly work on this former War Relocauon Authority center has been published. Nor has I there been even a doctoral diss.ertation focused on this camp. In 1947 a Univers'lty of California, Berkeley, graduate student, Richard Brewer Rice, complcted a ma:.ter's thesis entitled '"The Manzanar War Relocation Center, '" bUlthe author for the most part restricted his attention I.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    99 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us