|
Citizenship Denied: An Integrated Unit on the Japanese American Internment |
In 1942, 110,000 Japanese Americans living on the West Coast of the United States were relocated to ten internment camps. It took another forty years for the US government to recognize the violations of this population's constitutional rights. From studying the experiences of those interned, students will recognize and discuss a multitude of other issues such as civil rights, citizenship, and the legacy of racism. Using a variety of resources, students will investigate and interpret diverse points of view among those interned. The lessons ore organized around the central question of' "Whet are our rights and responsibilities as American citizens?" Our goal is to empower students to recognize social injustices and advocate for the constitutional rights of everyone.
Return to the top of this page.
Timeline of the Japanese American Internment
This is a brief timeline to help organize the scope of this unit. This is not a comprehensive introduction to the experiences of those interned. We highly recommend that teachers use a variety of resources to familiarize themselves with the historical context of the internment. We have provided a bibliography to direct you to such resources.
| 1912 | Japanese Americans owned 12,726 acres of farmland in California. | l |
| 1913 | California Alien land Law prohibited "aliens ineligible to citizenship" lie. all Asian immigrants) From owning land or property, but permitted three year leases. | l |
| 1920 | California Alien land law prohibited leasing land to 'aliens ineligible to citizenship." By 1925, it was also prohibited in Washington, Arizona, Oregon. Idaho Nebraska, Texas, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico, Minnesota, and Missouri. During World War II, Utah, Wyoming, and Arkansas also joined. | l |
| 1922 | In Ozawa v. U.S., the Supreme Court reaffirmed that Asian immigrants were not eligible for naturalization. | 2 |
| Feb. 28, 1933 | The day after the Reichstag fire, Hitler persuaded President Hindenburg to sign Article 38, an "emergency" decree authorizing Hitler to suspend civil rights, arrest, imprison and execute suspicious persons (communists, socialists, and labor union leaders), and outlaw non-Nazi press. | 4 |
| March 20, 1933 | Dachau, the First Nazi concentration camp, opened. | 3 |
| April 7, 1433 | Jews barred from German civil service. | 3 |
| July 14, 1933 | Hitler obtained the right to revoke German citizenship for persons considered a threat or "undesirable" to the government. | 4 |
| June, 1935 | Congress passed an act making aliens otherwise ineligible to citizenship eligible if (al they had served in the U.S. armed Forces between April 6, 1917, and November ii, 1918, and been honorably discharged, and they were permanent residents of the United States. A, small number of Issei obtained citizenship under this act before the deadline on January 1, 1937. | 10 |
| Sept. 15 1935 | Nuremberg Laws ended German citizenship for Jews. | 3 |
| September 21, 1935 | Jewish doctors forced to resign from private hospitals by Nuremberg Laws. | 4 |
| Nov. 16, 1937 | Jews could obtain passports for travel outside of Germany only in special cases. | 3 |
| July 22, 1938 | Effective January 1. 1939 in Germany, all Jews forced to carry special identification cards. | 4 |
| Nov. 15 1938 | German schools expelled all Jews. | 3 |
| Nov. 28, 1939 | German Jews restricted by curfew. | 4 |
| Feb. 1939 | The Wagner-Rogers bill (by Massachusetts Republican Congress member Edith Nourse pagers and New York Democrat Senator Robert F. Wagner) died in Congress. Roosevelt refused to take a position on it. It would have admitted 20,000 additional Jewish refugee children under the age of 14 into the United States from Germany and Austria. | |
| 1939 | Lists of dangerous enemy aliens and citizens began to be compiled in various government departments, such as the FBI, special intelligence agencies of the Justice Department, the Office of Naval Intelligence, and the army's Military Intelligence Division. | 8 |
| Nov. 26 1940 | Jews in Warsaw began to be forced into a ghetto enclosed by an 8-foot high wall. The German government denied that anti-Semitism áwas its motivation. | 4 |
| 1940 | The census found 126,947 Japanese Americans; 62.7% were citizens by birth. In addition, 157,905 were in the Territory of Hawaii, and 263 in the territory of Alaska. | 2 |
| June 13, 1941 | 5000 Jews sent From Paris to labor camps. | 4 |
| June 1941 | Vichy Government revoked civil rights of French Jews in North Africa. | 3 |
| Summer 1941 | The Hawaiian National Guard (mode up largely of Nisei) was federalized and later become the 100th Infantry Battalion and 442nd Regimental Combat Team. | 1 |
| Sept. 6, 1941 | Effective September 19, Jews prohibited from appeanng in public without the Jewish star and prohibited from leaving their residential areas without police permission. | 4 |
| Nov. 1941 | The Japanese Language School at the Presidio of San Francisco was formed. In the first class were 45 Nisei and Káibei and T5 others. It was moved to Camp Savage, Minnesota, renamed the Military Intelligence Service language School (MISLS) and later moved to Fort Snelling, Minnesota. | 1 |
| Dec. 7. 1941 | Japan bombed pearl Harbor. A blanket presidential warrant authorized U.S. Attorney General Francis Biddle to have the FBI arrest a predetermined number of "dangerous enemy aliens," including German, Italian, and Japanese nationals. 737 Japanese Americans arrested by the end of the day. | 2 |
| Dec. 8, 1941 | U.S. entered World War II. | |
| Dec. 11, 1941 | FBI detained 1370 Japanese Americans classified as "dangerous enemy aliens." | 2 |
| Dec. 22, 1941 | The Agriculture Committee of the L.A. Chamber of Commerce recommended that all Japanese nationals be put under "absolute Federal control." | 2 |
| Dec. 29, 1941 | All enemy aliens in California, Oregon Washington, Montana, Idaho, Utah, and Nevada were ordered to surrender contraband. | 2 |
| Jan. 5, 1942 | Japanese American selective service registrants classified as enemy aliens (IV-C). Many Japanese American soldiers discharged or assigned to menial labor such as "kitchen police." | 2 |
| Jan. 6, 1942 | "I do not believe that we could be any too strict in our consideration of the Japanese in the face of the treacherous way in which they do things," wrote Leland Ford, L.A. Congressman, in a telegram to Secretary of State Cordell Hull, asking that all Japanese Americans be removed from the West Coast. | 2 |
| Jan. 28, 1942 | The California State Personnel Board voted to bar all 'descendants of natives with whom the United States [is] at war' from all civil service positions. This was only enforced against Japanese Americans. | 2 |
| Jan. 29 1942 | Attorney General Francis Biddle began the establishment of prohibited zones forbidden to all enemy aliens. German, Italian, and Japanese aliens were ordered to leave San Francisco waterfront areas. | 2 |
| Jan. 30 1942 | 'Unless something is done it may bring about a repetition of Pearl Harbor,' said Earl Warren, California Attorney General, calling Japanese Californians the "Achilles heel of the entire civilian defense effort." | 2 |
| Feb. 4, 1942 | The U.S. Army established 12 "restricted areas in which enemy aliens were restricted by a 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew, allowed to travel only to and From work, and not more than 5 miles from their home. Major Bendetsen is promoted to Lieutenant Colonel. On Feb. 14, he was again promoted to Colonel. | 2 |
| Feb. 6. 1942 | A Portland American Legion post urged the removal of "enemy aliens, especially from critical Coast areas," including Japanese American citizens. | 2 |
| Feb. 13, 1942 | The West Coast congressional delegation requested that the President remove "all persons of Japanese lineage... aliens and citizens alike, from the strategic areas of California, Oregon and Washington." | 2 |
| Feb. 16, 1942 | California Joint immigration Committee urged that all Japanese Americans be removed From the Pacific Coast and any other vital areas. 2192 Japanese Americans under arrest by the FB1. | 2 |
| Feb. 19, 1942 | President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 authorizing the secretary of war to define military areas "from which any or all persons may be excluded as deemed necessary or desirable. "The only significant opposition would come from the Quakers Society of Friends) and the AQU (American Civil Liberties Union). | 1 |
| Feb. 20 1942 | Secretary of War Henry Stimson appointed Lieutenant General John DeWitt to carry out Executive Order 9066. | 2 |
| Feb. 26 1942 | Navy ordered Japanese American residents of Terminal Island, San Pedro, California, to leave within 48 hours to settle wherever they could. | 2 |
| Feb. 28, 1942 | House Committee on Un-American Activities released its 300 page Yellow Book containing almost every possible charge against Japanese Americans. | 2 |
| March 2, 1942 | General DeWitt issued public Proclamation No. 1, creating military areas in Washington, Oregon, California, and parts of Arizona and declaring the right to remove German, Italian, and Japanese aliens and anyone of "Japanese Ancestry" living in Military Areas No. 1 and 2 should it become necessary. | 2 |
| March 16. 1942 | DeWitt issued public Proclamation No. 2, creating Military Areas 3 to 6 in Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Utah, respectively. | 2 |
| March 18, 1942 | Roosevelt created the War Relocation Authority (WRA). Milton Eisenhower became responsible for a plan to remove designated persons from the restricted areas. | 2 |
| March 2, 1942 | DeWitt imposed penalties for those who refuse to obey orders to enter or leave designated military areas. Manzanar, the first American concentration camp, opened. | 2 |
| March 23, 1942 | DeWitt issued Civilian Exclusion Order No. 1, giving alien and non-alien persons of Japanese ancestry one week to leave Bainbridge Island near Seattle. | 2 |
| March 24, 1942 | Public-Proclamation No. 3 included Japanese American citizens among "enemy aliens" who must obey travel restrictions, curfew, and contraband regulations. | 2 |
| March 27, 1942 | Public Proclamation No. 4 prohibited Japanese aliens from voluntary evacuation of Military Area No. 1. | 2 |
| April 7, 1942 | Milton Eisenhower asked the governors and representatives of Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, Montana, Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, Washington, and Arizona to accept Japanese American evacuees. Colorado Governor Ralph Carr was the only one to offer cooperation. | 2 |
| May 13, 1942 | Ichiro Shimoda shot and killed for trying to escape from Fort Sill. | |
| June 7, 1942 | General DeWitt announced completion of the removal of 100,000 Japanese Americans from Military Area. | |
| June 12, 1942 | Fred T. Korematsu was charged with violation of Exclusion order No. 34 in U.S. District Court for Northern California. | 2 |
| June 17, 1942 | Dillon S. Myer replaced Milton Eisenhower as WRA Director. | 2 |
| June 29, 1942 | 1600 detainees sent from assembly and relocation centers to fill sugar beet labor shortage in Oregon, Utah, Idaho, and Montana. | 2 |
| July 1942 | Grave of the first Japanese American to die while imprisoned at Manzanar. | 7 |
| July 13, 1942 | Mitsuye Endo filed for Writ of Habeas Corpus. | 2 |
| July 27, 1942 | Two ill pnsoners shot to death in the early morning at Lordsburg, New Mexico. | 8 |
| Aug. 7, 1942 | Removal of all Japanese Americans (over 110,000) completed in Military Areas No. 1 and 2. | 2 |
| Aug. 18 1942 | The War Department assigned military area status to the four relocation centers outside the Western Defense Command. | 2 |
| Oct. 20, 1942 | Trial of Gordon K. Hirabayashi started in Seattle with Judge Lloyd L Black. | 2 |
| Oct. 24, 1942 | Over 8000 detainees were at work saving the crop harvest in various western states. | 2 |
| Nov. 18, 1942 | Poston demonstration against the arrest of two prisoners accused of beating an alleged "informer." A general strike followed, 5 days later. | 2 |
| Dec. 6, 1942 | At Manzanar, arrest of prisoners accused of informer-beating led to protest and violence. Military police fired into the crowd, killing two protesters and wounding at least 10 more. | 2 |
| 1942 | 27 U.S. Department of Justice Camps (most at Crystal City, Texas, but also Seagoville, Texas; Kooskia, Idaho; Santa Fe, NM; and Ft. Missoula, Montana) were used to incarcerate 2260 "dangerous persons" of Japanese ancestry deported from 12 Latin American countries. Approximately 1800 were Japanese Peruvians. The U.S. government wanted them for potential hostage exchanges with Japan. After the war, 1400 were not allowed to return to their former countries (ie. Peru). Over 900 Japanese Peruvians were "voluntarily" deported to Japan. 300 fought it in the courts and were allowed to settle in Seabrook, NJ. Military Intelligence Service (MIS) soldiers served in the Pacific Theater, translating captured communication, interrogated prisoners, broadcast propaganda, and would eventually work on the surrender, war crimes trials, and occupation forces. | 1 |
| Jan. 5 1943 | Hirabayashi's conviction for curfew violation reaffirmed by Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. | 2 |
| 1943 | Over 2500 volunteer for the military as restrictions on Nisei service ore removed. | 2 |
| Feb. 3, 1943 | WRA began processing the loyalty questionnaire. U.S. Army officially activated the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, composed of the 100th Battalion from Hawaii and Japanese American volunteers from the mainland concentration camps. | 2 |
| Feb. 20, 1943 | Seven months after it was filed, Mitsuye Endo's case was forwarded to the Supreme Court by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. | 2 |
| April 11, 1943 | Elderly man shot to death at Topaz. | |
| April 19, 1943 | Warsow Ghetto revolt began. SS troops crushed the uprising. | 4 |
| June 9, 1943 | California Governor Earl Warren signed prohibition of commercial fishing licenses from 3 being given to alien Japanese. | 2 |
| June 23, 1943 | Hirabayashi's conviction reaffirmed by Supreme Court. | 2 |
| July 31, 1943 | WRA designated Tule Lake as a "segregation comp." | 2 |
| Nov. 1, 1943 | Mass demonstrations held in Tule Lake after it was placed under Army control. | 2 |
| 1943 | The 100th Infantry Battalion fought in North Africa and Italy joining the 442nd Regimental Combat Team in June 1944. They Fought in Italy, France, and Germany, rescued the "Lost Battalion," and their 522nd Field Artillery Battalion liberated the survivors at the Dachau death camp. OF the 10,000 volunteers for the all-American combat unit, 1200 came from mainland U.S. concentration camps and the rest from Hawaii, where Executive Order 9066 did not apply. | 1 |
| Jan. 14, 144 | Tule Lake no longer under Army control. | 2 |
| Jan. 20, 1944 | Secretary of War Stimson announced that Japanese Americans were eligible for the draft. | 2 |
| May 24 1944 | Shoichi James Okamoto shot by camp soldier. | |
| July l8, 1944 | In Cheyenne, Wyoming, a Federal district court convicts 63 men from Heart Mountain of draft resistance and sentenced them to three rears in federal penitentiary. | 2 |
| Dec. 17, 1944 | Public Proclamation No. 21 issued by Major General Henry C. Pratt (effective January 2, 1935), allowing evacuees to return home and lifting contraband regulations. The next day, two years and give months after it was filed, the Endo case was ruled on in the Supreme Court; the WRA cannot detain loyal citizens. Executive Order 9066 and the evacuation was upheld in the Korematsu case. | 2 |
| Justice Frank Murphy disagreed: I dissent, therefore, from this legalization of racism. Racial discrimination in any form and in any degree has no justifiable part whatever in our demacratic way of life. It is unattractive in any setting but it is utterly revolting among free people who have embraced the principles set forth in the Constitution of the United States. | 11 | |
| Aug. 14, 1945 | Japan surrendered. World War II ended. | |
| 1948 | In Oyama v. California, the Supreme Court struck down the Alien Land Laws as violations of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Evacuation Claims Act authorized payment to Japanese Americans who suffered economic loss during imprisonment: with the necessary proof, 10 cents was returned for every S1.00 lost. | 1 |
| 1952 | The McCarran-Walter Immigration and Naturalization Act ended the racially based naturalization ban and the 1924 ban on Asian immigration. | 1 |
Return to the top of this page.
With help from the following resource:
Tiedt. Pamela L. & Iris M. Tiedt. Multicultural Teaching: A Handbook of Activities, Information, and Resources. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, © 1995.
Return to the top of this page.
Return to the top of this page.
Glossary of Terms/Issues To Clarify/Discuss
Return to the top of this page.
Partial Bibliography of The Japanese American Internment Camps
Return to the top of this page.
WESTERN DEFENSE COMMAND AND FOURTH ARMY
WARTIME CIVIL CONTROL ADMINISTRATION
Presidio of San Francisco, California
May 3, 1942
Living in the Following Area:
Pursuant to the provisions of Civilian Exclusion Order No. 33, this Headquarters, dated May 3, 1942, all persons of Japanese ancestry, both alien and non-alien, will be evacuated from the above area by 12 o'clock noon, P.W.T., Saturday, May 9, 1942.
No Japanese person living in the above area will be permitted to change residence after 12 o'clock noon, P.W.T., Sunday, May 3, 1942, without obtaining special permission from the representative of the Commanding General, Southern California Sector, at the Civil Control Station located at:
Japanese Union Church
120 North San Pedro Street
Los Angeles,
California
Such permits will only be granted for the purpose of uniting members of a family, or in cases of grave emergency.
The Civil Control Station is equipped to assist the Japanese population affected by this evacuation in the following ways:
The Following Instructions Must Be Observed:
Go to the Civil Control Station between the hours of 8:00 A.M.
and 5:00 P.M.,
Monday, May 4, 1942, or between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and
5:00 P.M.
Tuesday, May 5, 1942, to receive further
instructions.
J. L. DeWITT
Lieutenant General, U.S. Army
Commanding
Return to the top of this page.
from Ten Visits, by Frank and Joanne Iritani, Asian American Curriculum Project, Inc.; San Mateo, CA; © 1995.
Return to the top of this page.