U.S., Japanese Americans Relocated During World War II, 1942-1946

Ancestry.com. U.S., Japanese Americans Relocated During World War II, 1942-1946 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2005.

Original data: 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.

About U.S., Japanese Americans Relocated During World War II, 1942-1946

Using this collection

Records in the collection may include the following details:

There were multiple types of incarceration sites and your family member was likely to have been detained in multiple locations. Detainees first went to "Assembly Centers"–temporary sites used while the long-term camps were built. These temporary sites included:

Depending on their perceived status, detainees may also have been sent to immigration detention stations, Department of Justice Internment Camps, U.S. Army Internment Camps, Citizen Isolation Centers, or U.S. Federal Prisons. Knowing where your family member was sent can tell you much about their experience. For example, after the controversial "loyalty questions" 27 and 28 of 1943, Tule Lake Camp became a "segregation center" where those who were considered "disloyal" were held. Many "dissidents" simply answered a poorly written questionnaire in a way that the government branded them disloyal.

While highly unusual, there were people of Japanese heritage who managed to avoid the incarceration camps. If you can't find a record, consider whether your family member may have volunteered for military service, attended one of the few colleges that didn't racially disqualify students, moved to areas outside the "exclusion zone," or lived in Hawaii. While people of Japanese descent in Hawaii during this time faced additional discrimination and restrictions, most Japanese Hawaiians were spared mass incarceration. Despite this, over a thousand Hawaii-born Japanese and Japanese immigrant leaders were incarcerated in the islands and on the US continent.

If your family member was born in 1942, you may find their records in this collection. After 1942, records were generally not created for those born in camps though they are listed in documents such as the Final Accountability Rosters, available in the Ancestry collection.

Please note, that the terms in this collection are from the original government documents, which often diminished the hardships faced by those in these records and may include offensive language.

Collection in context

Immediately after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Japanese immigrants, who like all Asian immigrants were barred from becoming naturalized, were classified as "enemy aliens" and thousands were immediately arrested by the Department of Justice and local law enforcement agencies and taken to inland internment camps. German and Italian immigrants who had not naturalized were also considered enemy aliens and subject to the same loss of freedoms.

On February 19, 1942, about two months later, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 that led to the incarceration of all people of Japanese descent on the West Coast. Most were U.S. citizens by birth. Altogether, more than 120,000 persons of Japanese descent, citizens and non-citizens, were incarcerated.

People of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast were forced out of their homes with only a week to gather what they could carry. They were taken to incarceration camps, where they were met with barbed wire fences, communal living spaces with little-to-no privacy, extreme temperatures, and food shortages. Many were even initially forced to sleep on dirt floors.

To combat the hardships of the camps, they established newspapers, markets, and schools. Some camps also had post offices, work facilities, and land to grow food and raise livestock. Detainees protested when there were food shortages and overcrowded living conditions. Most people of Japanese ancestry remained incarcerated in these camps throughout the war, and it took several months after the war ended for the last camps to be closed in March 1946. Some Japanese Americans were released to serve in the U.S. military, and others were allowed to attend college in the midwest and east coast.

Japanese Americans lost about $400 million in property during their four years of internment. In 1948, the U.S. government paid $38 million in reparations. In 1988, after a long campaign led by incarcerees and their descendants, the government began paying $20,000 to each surviving detainee. Japanese Latin Americans who were forcibly removed from their homes and sent to the United States were excluded from these reparations, although many stayed in the country after being released. A 1982 Congressional study found that the incarceration camp system was based on a false premise because there was never evidence of espionage or sabotage by Japanese Americans during the war. The Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Citizens, appointed by the U.S. Congress, said the broad historical causes of incarceration were "race prejudice, war hysteria and a failure of political leadership."

Bibliography

Ho, Connie. "Enlisting to Escape Internment: A Japanese American's Story." Discover Nikkei. Last Modified July 30, 2013. https://discovernikkei.org/en/journal/2013/7/30/enlisting-to-escape-internment/.

Hunter, Brittany. "The Government's Internment of Japanese Americans Was A Grave Violation of Human Rights." Pacific Legal Foundation. Last Modified May 13, 2021. https://pacificlegal.org/the-governments-internment-of-japanese-americans-was-a-grave-violation-of-civil-rights/.

National Archives. "Japanese-Americans Incarceration During World War II." Last Modified January 24, 2022. https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/japanese-relocation#background.

National Archives. "Series Description - Record Group 210." Accessed October 4, 2023. https://aad.archives.gov/aad/series-description.jsp?s=623.

National World War II Museum. "Japanese American Incarceration." Last Modified February 18, 2022. https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/japanese-american-incarceration.

National World War II Museum. "The Return of Japanese Americans to the West Coast in 1945." Last Modified March 26, 2021. https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/return-japanese-americans-west-coast-1945.

National Park Service. "Tule Lake." Last Modified August 14, 2022. https://www.nps.gov/places/tule-lake.htm#.

National Park Service. "A Brief History of Japanese American Relocation During World War II." Last Modified March 20, 2023. https://www.nps.gov/articles/historyinternment.htm.

Related data collections

This collection contains the final accountability rosters from the 10 camps used to incarcerate people of Japanese ancestry during World War II. Original records were created by the War Relocation Authority (WRA) and include the years between 1941 and 1946.

This collection contains images of documents from Japanese American incarceration camps between 1942 and 1946. Types of records and documents contained in this collection include newspapers, reports, and minutes.

This collection is an index of the names of more than 125,000 people of Japanese ancestry who were incarcerated during World War II in camps operated by branches of the federal government. The index is provided courtesy of the Irei Monument Project, a memorial to all persons of Japanese ancestry incarcerated during World War II in confinement sites run by the Department of Justice, the U.S. Army, the Wartime Civil Control Administration, and the War Relocation Authority.

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