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1942 - 1946 .
Theresienstadt (also known by its Czech name, Terezin) was probably the last camp to be liberated (10 May 1945). In some parts of Bohemia fighting continued for a day or two after the German surrender.
There was no battle at Valley Forge. It was the winter camp for Washington's troops.
Camp is usually an English surname name taken from the Old English "kemp", for a "fighter" or "soldier."It can also be an Anglicization of the Dutch surname Van de Kamp, meaning "from the field."
there have been close to 268 wars and the last 100 years
See: Japanese American internment
Franklyn D Roosevelt rescinded the order in 1944. The last camp was closed in 1945.
1947. Crystal City, Texas, was the location of the largest internment camp administered by the INS and Department of Justice. November 1, 1947, more than two years after the end of World War II, the Crystal City internment camp closed; the last facility detaining alien enemies to do so. - The Handbook of Texas Online http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/WW/quwby.html
The last year of World War ll with Japanese was 1945. At the end of 1945, the last internment camp was closed and this also saw Japanese people get a formal apology from Canada.
They segregated the boys and girls, had water balloon fights, and did lots of arts and crafts. On the last day of camp they had a scavenger hunt against the Jewish campers in Germany.
Jan 1945 feb 2ed
1942 - 1946 .
In the movie Camp Rock, Tess's last name is Tyler.
likely. did you know sauskes last name is sauske in japenese lol
In the US, there were three types of "internment camp": WCCA Civilian Assembly Centers, WRA Relocation Centers, and the DOJ's Internment Camps. The Pacific coastal states of California, Oregon, and Washington had quite a few camps, but there were also camps in New Mexico, Texas, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, and Montana.See the related Wikipedia link listed below for more information:
Tule Lake, in northern California, was one of the most infamous of the internment camps. Prisoners there held frequent demonstrations and strikes, demanding their rights under the U.S. Constitution. As a result, it was made a "segregation camp," and internees from other camps who had refused to take the loyalty oath or had caused disturbances were sent to Tule Lake. At its peak, Tule Lake held 18,789 internees. Tule Lake was also one of the last camps to be closed, staying open until March 20, 1946.
The Camp Commando of Treblinka Extermination Camp was Kurt Hubert Franz (He was the 3rd and last commando of Treblinka.