Yes, there were German internment camps in the United States during World War II.
internment camps were during the time of ww1. as Australia were fighting against Germany, Australia was very anti Germans like all the allied countries. internment camps is where Australian-Germans were interned. they were unfair as even if you had German in you you may have been interned
Yes, there were German internment camps in America during World War II. These camps held German nationals, German Americans, and other individuals of German descent who were considered potential threats to national security.
Internment Camps were used to confine and isolate people form the outside world.
The U.S. sent Japanese Americans to Internment camps, right after Pearl Harbor, so they could keep an eye on them.
Yes, there were German internment camps in the United States during World War II.
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US Internment Camps during WW IIThe related link site will have a map of all the Japanese-American Internment camps in the United States during World War II.
The racist Americans of the 1940s realized they could not put all the Italians and Germans into internment camps to weed out spies. They would have had to put half of New York City citizens into internment camps. There were millions of them in the US at that time as there are now too. There were not as many Japanese so they put them into the camps illlegally.
Internment camps
the Japanese Americans.
Not anymore, but there were in the Second World War. They were known more commonly as internment camps during those times; the term concentration camp was created by the Nazis in the 1930's.
Bad
Japanese americans..
Ones with lots of torture
internment camps were during the time of ww1. as Australia were fighting against Germany, Australia was very anti Germans like all the allied countries. internment camps is where Australian-Germans were interned. they were unfair as even if you had German in you you may have been interned
Yes, there were German internment camps in America during World War II. These camps held German nationals, German Americans, and other individuals of German descent who were considered potential threats to national security.