Click here for picture source. More than 66% of the Japanese-Americans were sent to the internment camps in 1942. There were 10 Japanese internment camps.

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Presentation transcript:

click here for picture source

More than 66% of the Japanese-Americans were sent to the internment camps in There were 10 Japanese internment camps in America. The prisoners got grub style food (what people eat in prisons today). Over 127,000 United States citizens were imprisoned during World War II. Evacuation orders were posted in JAPANESE-AMERICAN communities. Almost 40 percent of Hawaiian islanders were Japanese-American. Internees stayed in animal stables and stalls where livestock had been kept recently. President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942, authorizing the U.S. military to remove over 120,000 people of Japanese descent. There were 10 Japanese internment camps in the United States located in California, Idaho, Utah, Arkansas, Colorado, Wyoming, and Arizona. The last Japanese internment camp in the United States was closed in Internment Camps click here for link address

Fred Korematsu was born January 30, 1919 in Oakland, CA. Fred Korematsu died on March 30, 2005 in Marin County, CA. Fred Korematsu had 3 brothers. Fred Korematsu was one of the most famous Japanese- Americans of his time. Many Americans worried that citizens of Japanese ancestry might act as spies or saboteurs for the Japanese government. Armed sentries stood watch around the clock and would shoot them if they tried to escape. Fred Korematsu went to Cast Lemont Community of Small Schools. click here to see photo source

In 1988, America gave the 60,000 surviving Japanese- Americans $20,000 each. That means that they gave them $1.3 billion all together. More Facts More than 66% of the Japanese-Americans were sent to the internment camps in the spring of During World War II, more than 127,000 Japanese-American citizens were imprisoned at internment camps in the United States. click here for source

 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ FredKorematsu en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ FredKorematsu   war-ii/japanese-american-relocation war-ii/japanese-american-relocation