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Explore

  • Japanese American Incarceration Era Collection
  • Behind Barbed Wire
  • Challenging Patriotism
  • Biography: Yosh Kuromiya
  • Remaking Home Behind Barbed Wire
  • Arts and Crafts
  • Biography: Akio Ujihara
  • Resettlement
  • Biography: Kinji Imada

Japanese American Incarceration Era Collection

Behind Barbed Wire

American History Museum

After their detainment, Japanese Americans had to endure wretched living conditions in the WCCA assembly centers. The sixteen assembly centers were typically constructed on racetracks and fairgrounds throughout Arizona, California, Oregon, and Washington State. They were small staging areas that contained hastily built living quarters for the detainees before they were sent to WRA centers.

A long, rudimentary, single-floor wooden living structure with a flat roof
Tanforan Assembly Center, April 29, 1942.
Source: Library of Congress, photo by Dorthea Lange.

Japanese Americans were dispersed among ten WRA centers. The incarceration centers were stationed in seven states: Tule Lake and Manzanar were in California; Minidoka was in Idaho; Heart Mountain was located in Wyoming; Topaz was posted in Utah; Poston and Gila River were in Arizona; Granada (Amache) was in Colorado; and Rohwer and Jerome were both in Arkansas.

Incarcerated boys and men line up to receive vaccinations from a nurse
Manzanar War Relocation Center. April 2, 1942. Photo by Clem Albers.
Simple building with banner indicating that this is Topaz city. Incarcerated people stand around the building
Topaz War Relocation Center. Source: Library of Congress.
Clothes hanging from clothesline outside of an incarceration camp building
Granada War Relocation Center, December 9, 1942. Source: Library of Congress, photo by Tom Parker.

The incarceration centers resembled Army camps but were commonly below Army standards of living. The camp buildings lacked climate control leaving detainees to deal with freezing winters and brutal summers. The barracks provided hardly any privacy and were usually partitioned with thin wooden walls or curtains. Practically every facility was communal, including the bathrooms and dining hall.

Japanese man washing his face with water in a metal bowl
Source: Library of Congress

Barbed wire fences, armed guards, and surveillance towers were common features in the camps. Strict rules and organization resulted in meticulous documentation of the detainees’ movements. The constant presence of authority, control, and oppression escalated feelings of depression and anxiety among those incarcerated. However, despite these emotions Japanese Americans were able to create a community within the camps and participate in the war effort.

A woman and two men in U.S. military uniform exit barracks
Manzanar War Relocation Center, April 4, 1942.
Source: Library of Congress, photo by Clem Albers



Short-Term Leave Authorization, WRA

The Rohwer Outpost

Resident I.D. card

Immunization card

Evacuee Center Regulations, Evacuation Notice

W.R.A. Leave Pass, Teiji Okuda, No. 15771

W.C.C.A. Center Store coupon book

Postal Savings Plan for the Purchase of United States Defense Savings Bond

War Ration Book #4

War Stamp and Bond Drive Poster

Identification button

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