Under an Executive Order, Americans interred Japanese-Americans.
American citizens of Japanese ancestry
the west coast was an exclusion zone.they were believed to be spies and enemies of the state
Fearing that Japanese living in the United States would help Japan, the government gathered up almost 120,000 Japanese-Americans and resident Japanese aliens and placed them in internment camps. Some people remained in the camps for over three years.
I think you are referring to the WWII Japanese internment camps. After Pearl Harbor, it was thought that Japanese-American citizens could not be trusted, so they were rounded up and forced to live at various "camps" around the U.S. until the war was over. See the Related Links below.
Because of the large Japanese population in the west coast states such as California
The effects on the internment of Japanese-Americans was negative psychologically. Shock and fear plagued the Japanese-Americans as a result of the internment camps.
Japenese Americans
The US west Coast.
Japanese internment camps sprung up during World War Two. These camps relocated 110,000 Japanese Americans on the West Coast. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was a factor in the development of these camps.
They were interned in internment camps.
the west coast was an exclusion zone.they were believed to be spies and enemies of the state
Japanese and Japanese Americans living on the US west coast were placed in internment camps on the claim that spies and sabatouers could be hiding among them. Since Japanese and Japanese Americans living in Hawaii and in the US east of the Mississippi were not forced into camps, and since no American citizens of German or Italian descent were placed in internment camps, the actual reason is more likely related to racial stereotypes and anti-Japanese hysteria.Read more: Why_were_Internment_camps_set_up_for_Japanese_Americans
Fearing that Japanese living in the United States would help Japan, the government gathered up almost 120,000 Japanese-Americans and resident Japanese aliens and placed them in internment camps. Some people remained in the camps for over three years.
Because of the large Japanese population in the west coast states such as California
I think you are referring to the WWII Japanese internment camps. After Pearl Harbor, it was thought that Japanese-American citizens could not be trusted, so they were rounded up and forced to live at various "camps" around the U.S. until the war was over. See the Related Links below.
After Pearl Harbor Japanese Americans on the west coast were put into interment camps. It was thought at the time that there could be spies among them. The west coast had blackouts at nights where all lights along the coast were turned off. Civilians worked as outlooks for submarines and some coastal cities had camouflaged netting across streets. There was a real fear of attack on the west coast of a submarine attack.
The USA was worried about the Japanese-Americans on the coast supplying Japanese with information and helping the Japanese attack the USA in any way. So the USA put the Japanese-Americans in internment camps.
no only on the west coast because the most Japanese people living in the U.S. lived on the west coast because when the people came from Japan they didnt want to go all the way across the U.S. so they stayed on the east coast. They interned people in the east coast because that was where most of the Japanese people were and it would be easiest 8--------