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	<Facility UID="w-gila">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Gila River</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Gila River Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Gila River</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>July 20, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>November 10, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Rivers, Arizona</LocationName>
			<CityName>Rivers</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>Located in a valley within the Gila River Indian Reservation in Pinal County, 50 miles south of Phoenix, 3 miles north of the Sacaton Mountains. Consisted of two separate camps: Canal and Butte, located 3.5 miles apart between irrigation canals. The 16,500 acres are in an arid desert valley with average summer temperatures over 100 degrees. Vegetation includes mesquite, creosote, and cactus.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>32.1667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-111.8667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2349069</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Los Angeles, Sacramento, and Amador Counties; 3,000 were sent from southern San Joaquin Valley; also held 155 Japanese immigrants from Hawaii. Canal Camp housed people from the Turlock Assembly Center and San Joaquin Valley, while Butte Camp housed people from the Tulare and Santa Anita Assembly Centers.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-11-30">13,348</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Despite the fact that the Gila River Indian tribe objected to the imposition of an incarceration camp on their land, the Bureau of Indian Affairs granted a five-year lease for 16,500 acres to the War Relocation Authority (WRA). Today, the tribe limits access to the land, which the tribe considers sacred.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Eleanor Roosevelt made a surprise visit to Gila River incarceration camp along with War Relocation Authority (WRA) director Dillon Myer on April 23, 1943.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>There was only one guard tower at Gila River because of staff shortages; the barbed wire fences around the camps were removed after six months.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Gila River had an extensive agricultural program; at its peak 7,000 acres were devoted to crops, 3,000 of which were vegetable crops. A seed farm was established to address shortages.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Butte camp featured perhaps the best baseball diamond of any of the WRA incarceration camps; it was designed by professional baseball player Kenichi Zenimura and held 6,000 spectators.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce4.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gila-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i141-00021">
				<Label>Gila News-Courier, Vol. I No. 21, November 21, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gila-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gila-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i141-00060">
				<Label>Gila News-Courier, Vol. II No. 24, February 25, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gila-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gila-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i141-00065">
				<Label>Gila News-Courier, Vol. II No. 29, March 9, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gila-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gila-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i141-00085">
				<Label>Gila News-Courier, Vol. II No. 49, April 24, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gila-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gila-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i141-00268">
				<Label>Gila News-Courier, Vol. III No. 112, May 9, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gila-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gila-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00399">
				<Label>Parade, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Harvest Festival Celebration. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gila-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00599">
				<Label>Harvesting spinach, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gila-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00468">
				<Label>Eleanor Roosevelt's visit, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, accompanied by Dillon Myer, National Director of the War Relocation Authority. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gila-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00609">
				<Label>Aerial view, March 14, 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gila-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00214">
				<Label>Monument, April 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Located at the former site of Gila River's Butte Camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gila-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-gila-v-001">
				<Label>Kay M</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=146&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-gran">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Granada (Amache)</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Granada Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Granada (Amache)</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>August 27, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 15, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Amache, Colorado</LocationName>
			<CityName>Amache</CityName>
			<StateName>Colorado</StateName>
			<Description>Located at 3,600 feet of elevation on a wind-swept prairie in southeastern Colorado 140 miles east of Pueblo, 16 miles east of Lamar, and 15 miles west of the Kansas border. The Arkansas River runs 2 1/2 miles north of the camp, but the 10,500 acres of land is arid when not irrigated. Vegetation includes wild grasses, sagebrush, and prickly pear cactus.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>38.0500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-102.3000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2015676</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from California: Los Angeles, San Diego, and Santa Clara Counties (Merced and Santa Anita Assembly Centers), northern California coast, west Sacramento Valley, and the northern San Joaquin Valley.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-02-01">7,318</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Unlike other camps built on federal land, the 10,500 acres of the Granada incarceration camp were acquired by purchase or condemnation of eighteen privately owned ranches and farms, arousing the anger of some local residents.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Granada had the smallest population of the ten War Relocation Authority (WRA) incarceration camps but was the tenth largest "city" in Colorado.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Despite its small population, Granada had one of the largest and most diversified agricultural enterprises of the ten War Relocation Authority (WRA) incarceration camps. These included planting gardens, vegetables, and feed crops, in addition to the raising of dairy and beef cattle, poultry, and hogs. Granada had the advantage over other camps in that it already had in place fields, canals, and a dairy barn, all in need of only minor repairs.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Granada was the site of a polio epidemic within the camp.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce5.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>The Granada Relocation Center Site</Label>
				<Link>http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/wwcod/granada.htm</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gran-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i147-00019">
				<Label>Granada Pioneer, Vol. I No. 19, December 30, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gran-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gran-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i147-00063">
				<Label>Granada Pioneer, Vol. I No. 62, May 5, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gran-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gran-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i147-00093">
				<Label>Granada Pioneer, Vol. I No. 92, August 18, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gran-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gran-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i147-00134">
				<Label>Granada Pioneer, Vol. II No. 21, January 15, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gran-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-gran-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i147-00152">
				<Label>Granada Pioneer, Vol. II No. 39, March 18, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-gran-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gran-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00389">
				<Label>Sagebrush and barracks, October 1, 1945</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gran-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00523">
				<Label>Softball game, March 6, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gran-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00775">
				<Label>Festival, August 14, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Dancers participating in Bon Odori, the Buddhist summer festival of the dead, which honors ancestors. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gran-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00525">
				<Label>Mess hall meal, December 12, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-gran-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00398">
				<Label>Water tower foundation, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Granada incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-gran-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-gran-v-001">
				<Label>Mutsu H</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=147&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-hear">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Heart Mountain</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Heart Mountain Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Heart Mountain</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>August 12, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>November 10, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Cody, Wyoming</LocationName>
			<CityName>Cody</CityName>
			<StateName>Wyoming</StateName>
			<Description>Located on 46,000 acres in Park County in northwest Wyoming, 12 miles northwest of Cody, in open sagebrush desert at 4,700 feet of elevation near the Shoshone River. Heart Mountain, 8 miles to the west, creates a dramatic backdrop. Dust storms are common. Winters are severe, with lows dipping to -30 degrees.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>44.5167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-109.0500</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7013629</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Los Angeles, Santa Clara, and San Francisco, California; Yakima, Washington; and Oregon.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-01-01">10,767</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Heart Mountain incarceration camp was the third largest "city" in Wyoming between 1942 and 1945.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Heart Mountain played a major role in the largest single draft resistance movement in the history of the U.S. In total, 267 Japanese American nisei from the War Relocation Authority (WRA) incarceration camps were convicted for resisting the draft. Of those, 85 came from Heart Mountain--the highest rate of draft resistance for any of the camps.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The <i>Denver Post</i> ran a series of articles saying the population of Heart Mountain was being "coddled."</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Local residents recall that Heart Mountain incarceration camp was one of the few wartime communities in the state to have electricity.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce6.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation</Label>
				<Link>http://www.heartmountain.us</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
			<AdditionalResourceLink>
				<Label>Heart Mountain Digital Preservation Project</Label>
				<Link>http://chem.nwc.cc.wy.us/HMDP/homepage.htm</Link>
			</AdditionalResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-hear-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i97-00113">
				<Label>Heart Mountain Sentinel, Vol. II No. 5, January 30, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-hear-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-hear-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i97-00116">
				<Label>Heart Mountain Sentinel, Vol. II No. 8, February 20, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-hear-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-hear-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i97-00146">
				<Label>Heart Mountain Sentinel, Vol. II No. 38, September 18, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-hear-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-hear-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i97-00186">
				<Label>Heart Mountain Sentinel, Vol. III No. 25, June 17, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-hear-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-hear-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i97-00242">
				<Label>Heart Mountain Sentinel, Vol. IV No. 30, July 21, 1945</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-hear-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-hear-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00427">
				<Label>Boy Scouts, June 5, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>These boy scouts are conducting a morning flag raising ceremony. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-hear-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00795">
				<Label>Street scene, August 28, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-hear-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00430">
				<Label>Boarding trains, July 1945</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-hear-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00797">
				<Label>Hospital and ambulance, November 18, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-hear-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00437">
				<Label>Remains of hospital boiler house, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Heart Mountain incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-hear-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-hear-v-001">
				<Label>Kara K</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=148&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-jero">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Jerome</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Jerome Incarceration Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Jerome</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>October 6, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 30, 1944</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Denson, Arkansas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Denson</CityName>
			<StateName>Arkansas</StateName>
			<Description>Located in the Mississippi River delta region 12 miles west of the Mississippi River, 18 miles south of McGehee, 120 miles southeast of Little Rock. The 10,000-acre area was impoverished and consisted of heavily wooded swampland. It was 27 miles south of the Rohwer incarceration camp. Summers were hot and humid, with chiggers, mosquitoes, and poisonous snakes.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>33.3833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-91.4667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2008597</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Los Angeles, Fresno, and Sacramento, California; also held people from Honolulu, Hawaii.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-02-11">8,497</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>On October 6, 1942, Jerome incarceration camp was the last large War Relocation Authority (WRA) incarceration camp to open and, in June 1944, was the first to close. The WRA cited it as an example of the success of the leave program, which resettled people of Japanese descent outside the West Coast exclusion zone.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Jerome was the site of the only known shooting of incarcerees by local civilians. A tenant farmer on horseback, returning from deer hunting, came across three Japanese Americans on a work detail in the woods. He fired one round of buckshot, wounding two incarcerees. The farmer claimed he thought the Japanese Americans, supervised by a white engineer, were trying to escape.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>After the incarceration camps closed, Jerome was converted into a prisoner of war (POW) camp for German soldiers.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The camp was situated on 10,000 acres of tax-delinquent lands purchased in the 1930s by the Farm Security Administration.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Jerome was situated on swampland, and thus had severe drainage problems. Standing water and the insects it attracted contributed to health problems such as dysentery and malaria. The swampland was home to four species of poisonous snakes.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce7.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-jero-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i144-00024">
				<Label>Denson Communique, No. 24, January 5, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-jero-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-jero-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i144-00074">
				<Label>Denson Tribune, Vol. I No. 33, June 22, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-jero-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-jero-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i144-00076">
				<Label>Denson Tribune, Vol. I No. 35, June 29, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-jero-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-jero-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i144-00084">
				<Label>Denson Tribune, Vol. I No. 43, July 27, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-jero-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-jero-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i144-00146">
				<Label>Denson Tribune Bulletin, February 22, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-jero-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-jero-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00624">
				<Label>Guard tower, June 19, 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Incarcerees in an unmanned guard tower. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-jero-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00630">
				<Label>Aerial view, November 17, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>This view is of the west section of the hospital. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-jero-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00799">
				<Label>Incarcerees behind a fence, June 19, 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Incarcerees waving goodbye to their friends who are leaving the camp. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-jero-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00406">
				<Label>Tending a garden, June 23, 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-jero-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00404">
				<Label>Monument, March 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Jerome incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-jero-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-jero-v-001">
				<Label>Sarah S</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=149&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-manz">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Manzanar</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Manzanar Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Manzanar</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>June 2, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>November 21, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Manzanar, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Manzanar</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at 3,900 feet of elevation in the desert of the southern Owens Valley in east-central California, 220 miles north of Los Angeles, 250 miles south of Reno, between the towns Lone Pine and Independence. The 6,000 acres are framed by the Sierra Nevada mountains to the west and the White-Inyo range to the east. Summers are hot, winters cold; annual rainfall is under 6 inches, although the area has rivers fed from mountain runoff. Vegetation is mostly sagebrush.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.7333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-118.0667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>4006871</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Over 90 percent of the people held here were from the Los Angeles, California, area; others were from Stockton, California, and Bainbridge Island, Washington.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-09-22">10,046</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Manzanar was initially the Owens Valley Reception Center (an "assembly center") run by the U.S. Army's Wartime Civil Control Administration (WCCA). Later it became the first incarceration camp to be operated by the War Relocation Authority (WRA). Its central developed area comprised 540 acres.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The "Manzanar Riot" or "Manzanar Revolt" erupted in December 1942. Three incarcerees were arrested on suspicion of beating a fellow incarceree they alleged was a pro-camp administration "informer." The next evening a crowd of about 500 incarcerees demanded the release of the three arrested men. Military police (MP) used tear gas to break up the crowd; chaos ensued and without an order the MP fired, killing a seventeen-year-old and a twenty-one-year-old and wounding nine. In the aftermath of this incident, authorities created the Moab citizen isolation center to hold sixteen men they labeled "troublemakers."</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Manzanar is well documented in photographs by Ansel Adams, who visited in 1943; photojournalist Dorothea Lange; and incarceree Toyo Miyatake, who smuggled a camera lens into camp and was later allowed to set up a photo studio.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>An orphanage called Children's Village housed 101 Japanese American orphans removed from the exclusion zone, including half-Japanese babies living in white foster homes.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Incarcerees built elaborate garden complexes throughout the camp.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The camp is sited on a former farm and orchard community that was abandoned when the city of Los Angeles purchased the land for its water rights in the 1920s.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Due to the arid desert conditions, extensive irdenshopd-i125-00018
rigation was required for any crops to grow.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.nps.gov/manz/</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>The Manzanar Committee</Label>
				<Link>http://www.manzanarcommittee.org</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-manz-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i125-00018">
				<Label>Manzanar Free Press, Vol. I No. 19, June 4, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-manz-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-manz-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i125-00034">
				<Label>Manzanar Free Press, Vol. I No. 34, July 9, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-manz-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-manz-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i125-00117">
				<Label>Manzanar Free Press, Vol. III No. 26, March 31, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-manz-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-manz-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i125-00154">
				<Label>Manzanar Free Press, Vol. III No. 62, August 4, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-manz-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-manz-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i125-00212">
				<Label>Manzanar Free Press, Vol. V No. 15, February 19, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-manz-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-manz-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00467">
				<Label>Barracks and American flag, July 3, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-manz-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00417">
				<Label>Farming, July 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-manz-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00817">
				<Label>Girls' basketball game, February 13, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-manz-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00819">
				<Label>Temporary hospital barrack, July 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-manz-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00118">
				<Label>Cemetery monument, April 2000</Label>
				<Caption>Located at the former site of Manzanar's cemetery. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-manz-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-manz-v-001">
				<Label>Paul B</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=150&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-mini">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Minidoka</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Minidoka Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Minidoka</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>August 10, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 28, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Hunt, Idaho</LocationName>
			<CityName>Hunt</CityName>
			<StateName>Idaho</StateName>
			<Description>Located at 4,000 feet of elevation on uneven terrain in southern Idaho, Minidoka is in the Snake River Plain of Jerome County, 15 miles east of Jerome and 15 miles north of Twin Falls. The 33,000 acres of arid desert was dominated by sagebrush; the southern boundary of the camp was formed by the man-made North Side canal.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>42.6667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-114.2333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2025735</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Washington, Oregon, and Alaska; in 1943 many of the incarcerees from Bainbridge Island, Washington, were transferred at their own request to Minidoka from Manzanar.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-03-01">9,397</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Two thousand Minidoka residents took "agricultural leave" to work in sugar beet fields in Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah, during peak harvest and planting seasons. These incarcerees effectively alleviated a labor crisis and saved crops from ruin.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The Fair Play Committee represented the incarceree-organized labor council. The Coal and Hospital workers went on strike, mostly in objection to the low wage scale and the disparity of wages between incarcerees and white staff.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Nearly 1,000 nisei (U.S. citizens) from Minidoka served in the military during World War II as members of the Military Intelligence Service Language School, the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps, and the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Minidoka had the largest casualty list of the ten incarceration camps: 73 Minidoka incarcerees died in military service.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Incarcerees at Minidoka endured dysentery and a typhoid epidemic.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.nps.gov/miin/</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-mini-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i119-00004">
				<Label>Minidoka Irrigator, Vol. I No. 4, September 25, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-mini-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-mini-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i119-00153">
				<Label>Minidoka Irrigator, Vol. I No. 20, November 21, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-mini-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-mini-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i119-00045">
				<Label>Minidoka Irrigator, Vol. III No. 18, June 26, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-mini-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-mini-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i119-00049">
				<Label>Minidoka Irrigator, Vol. III No. 22, July 24, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-mini-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-mini-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i119-00112">
				<Label>Minidoka Irrigator, Vol. IV No. 36, November 11, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-mini-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-mini-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i39-00044">
				<Label>Two children, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Wing Luke Asian Museum, the Hatate Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-mini-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i39-00006">
				<Label>Laundry, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Wing Luke Asian Museum, the Hatate Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-mini-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00049">
				<Label>Christmas, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-mini-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00330">
				<Label>Mess hall cook, December 9, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-mini-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00001">
				<Label>Military pre-induction physical, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-mini-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-mini-v-001">
				<Label>Akiko K</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=151&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-post">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Poston (Colorado River)</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Poston Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Poston (Colorado River)</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>June 2, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>November 28, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Parker, Arizona</LocationName>
			<CityName>Parker</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>Located at 320 feet of elevation in southwestern Arizona on the Colorado River Reservation in Yuma County (now La Paz), 12 miles south of the town of Parker. The Colorado River runs 2 1/2 miles to the west. The 71,000 acres in the lower Sonoran desert are near the California border. The harsh climate featured hot and humid summers and cold winter nights. Dust was a constant problem.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.1500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-114.2833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2007106</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Arizona, Oregon, and Washington. Salinas, Santa Anita, and Pinedale Assembly Centers in California as well as Mayer Assembly Center, Arizona, sent their populations here.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-09-02">17,814</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Colorado River Indian Reservation Tribal Council opposed the use of their land for an incarceration camp because they did not want to participate in inflicting the same type of injustice they had suffered. The U.S. Army and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) overruled the tribe.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Poston, opened initially as the Parker Dam Reception Center (an "assembly center"), was the largest War Relocation Authority (WRA) incarceration camp. Encompassing 71,000 acres, it was the third largest "city" in Arizona. The large population made possible a daily paper written by the incarcerees. At other sites, the camp newspapers were distributed once or twice weekly.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Poston consisted of three separate quarters, set at three-mile intervals. The sections were known officially as Poston I, II, and III, but were nicknamed "Roasten," "Toasten," and "Dustin"  by the incarcerees.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In November 1942, a suspected informer was beaten and administrative officials arrested two kibei men. Demanding that the kibei be freed, workers went on strike and the police station was picketed. The protest ended peacefully when issei leaders of the protest helped negotiate a settlement with the administration.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Guard towers were not erected at Poston because of its extremely isolated location.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Due to the arid desert conditions and ubiquitous dust, extensive irrigation was required for any crops to grow.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce10.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>Poston Restoration Project</Label>
				<Link>http://www.postonproject.org/</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-post-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i145-00144">
				<Label>Poston Press Bulletin, Vol. VI No. 19, October 27, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-post-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-post-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i145-00314">
				<Label>Poston Chronicle, Vol. XII No. 21, May 16, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-post-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-post-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i145-00363">
				<Label>Poston Chronicle, Vol. XIV No. 7, July 16, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-post-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-post-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i145-00400">
				<Label>Poston Chronicle, Vol. XV No. 14, August 28, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-post-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-post-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i145-00525">
				<Label>Poston Chronicle, Vol. XIX No. 17, June 29, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-post-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-post-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00402">
				<Label>Military sentry, May 10, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-post-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00404">
				<Label>Filling mattresses, May 28, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-post-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00400">
				<Label>Highway sign, April 9, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Sign marking the highway leading to the Poston incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-post-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00827">
				<Label>Vacated barracks, May 1, 1945</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-post-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00216">
				<Label>Barrack, November 1993</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Poston incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-post-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-post-v-001">
				<Label>Rudy T</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=152&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-rohw">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Rohwer</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Rohwer Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Rohwer</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>September 18, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>November 30, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>McGehee, Arkansas</LocationName>
			<CityName>McGehee</CityName>
			<StateName>Arkansas</StateName>
			<Description>Located at 140 feet of elevation in Desha County in southeastern Arkansas, 110 miles southeast of Little Rock and 11 miles north of McGehee. The 10,161 acres of wooded swampland were in an impoverished area 27 miles north of the Jerome incarceration camp. The Mississippi River is 5 miles to the east. Summers are hot and humid, with chiggers and mosquitoes adding to the discomfort. The site had severe drainage problems; about half of the site was under swampy water during the spring.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>33.7500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-91.2667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2009393</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Los Angeles and San Joaquin, California; incarcerees endured a three-day train ride to Arkansas.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-03-11">8,475</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Early in the camp's occupation, incarceree volunteers clearing brush were taken to a local jail at gunpoint by local residents who thought the incarcerees were Japanese paratroopers.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Rohwer incarceration camp grew 85 percent of the vegetables consumed at the center. In 1943, 610 acres were in cultivation.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In June 1944, when the Jerome incarceration camp closed, 2,734 people were transferred to nearby Rohwer.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Rohwer was situated on swampland and thus had severe drainage problems. Standing water and the insects it attracted contributed to health problems such as malaria.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce11.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-rohw-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i143-00013">
				<Label>Rohwer Outpost, Vol. I No. 12, December 5, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-rohw-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i143-00042">
				<Label>Rohwer Outpost, Vol. II No. 22, March 17, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-rohw-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i143-00050">
				<Label>Rohwer Outpost, Vol. II No. 29, April 10, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-rohw-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i143-00158">
				<Label>Rohwer Outpost, Vol. IV No. 31, April 19, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-rohw-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i143-00170">
				<Label>Rohwer Outpost, Vol. IV No. 43, May 31, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-rohw-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00545">
				<Label>Judo class, November 25, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-rohw-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00552">
				<Label>Warehouses, November 21, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-rohw-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00456">
				<Label>Ninth grade class, November 25, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-rohw-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00541">
				<Label>Barracks, December 9, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-rohw-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00412">
				<Label>Monument, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>This monument, erected by incarcerees during World War II, was a tribute to the soldiers of the 100th Battalion and 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-rohw-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-rohw-v-001">
				<Label>Daniel Inouye</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=153&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-topa">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Topaz (Central Utah)</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Topaz Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Topaz (Central Utah)</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>September 11, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 31, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Delta, Utah</LocationName>
			<CityName>Delta</CityName>
			<StateName>Utah</StateName>
			<Description>Located at 4,600 feet of elevation in west-central Utah, Topaz was set in Millard County near the town of Delta, 140 miles southwest of Salt Lake City. Topaz Mountain was 9 miles northwest. The 19,800 acres of extremely flat terrain were within the Sevier Desert. Dust was a major problem. Temperatures range from 106 degrees in summer to -30 degrees in winter. Vegetation is mainly high desert brush.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>39.3833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-112.7167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2108669</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Most of those held in Topaz were from the San Francisco Bay area: Alameda, San Francisco, and San Mateo Counties in California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-03-17">8,130</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>On April 11, 1943, 63-year-old James Hatsuaki Wakasa was walking near the perimeter fence when he was fatally shot by a military guard. After a brief work stoppage, a compromise was reached on the funeral location (near, but not at the spot of death), and weapons restrictions were placed on the guards. A little more than a month later, a guard fired at a couple strolling close to the fence.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Over 7,500 trees and 10,000 shrubs were planted during the first nine months, but nearly all died due to heat, wind, alkaline soil, and lack of water.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In 1942, the first killing frost was recorded in September and the first snowfall in October. Some of the living units still had no windows installed at that time.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The plaques and photographs commemorating the Topaz incarceration camp have been vandalized and damaged by bullets.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp at Antelope Springs, 90 miles west of Topaz, was converted for use as a recreation area for children from Topaz.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Dust was everywhere at Topaz. An epidemic of dysentery added to the hardship.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce12.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>Topaz Museum</Label>
				<Link>http://topazmuseum.org/</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-topa-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i142-00007">
				<Label>Topaz Times, Pre-issue No. 7, October 14, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-topa-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-topa-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i142-00007">
				<Label>Topaz Times, Vol. IV No. 10, July 24, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-topa-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-topa-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i142-00007">
				<Label>Topaz Times, Vol. IV No. 20, August 17, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-topa-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-topa-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i142-00007">
				<Label>Topaz Times, Vol. V No. 13, November 2, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-topa-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-topa-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i142-00007">
				<Label>Topaz Times Extra, December 18, 1944</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-topa-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-topa-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00432">
				<Label>Drum and bugle corps, October 17, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-topa-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00567">
				<Label>Clearing land, December 27, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-topa-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00833">
				<Label>Aerial view of barracks, October 18, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-topa-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00457">
				<Label>Remains of concrete sink, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Topaz incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-topa-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00465">
				<Label>Remains of perimeter fence, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Topaz incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-topa-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-topa-v-001">
				<Label>Mitsue M</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=154&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="w-tule">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Tule Lake</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Tule Lake Relocation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Tule Lake</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Incarceration Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 27, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>March 20, 1946</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Newell, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Newell</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at an elevation of 4,000 feet on a flat treeless area in Modoc County, 35 miles southeast of Klamath Falls, Oregon, and 10 miles from the town of Tulelake. (The town is spelled as one word and the incarceration camp as two.) Mt. Shasta is 50 miles away and visible on a clear day. The soil is sandy loam; vegetation is sparse grass and sagebrush. Winters are long and cold; summers are hot and dry.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>41.8833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-121.3667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2012922</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>First to arrive were 500 volunteer residents from the Portland and Puyallup Assembly Centers. Others arrived from the Marysville, Pinedale, Pomona, Sacramento, and Salinas Assembly Centers in California. Some were sent directly from the southern San Joaquin Valley. After it became a segregation center, the camp held people from California, Hawaii, Washington, and Oregon.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1944-12-25">18,789</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>In July 1943, Tule Lake was designated as a segregation center for those the War Relocation Authority (WRA) considered "disloyal" as a result of their answers on the mandatory so-called "loyalty questionnaire." In September 1943, "loyal" incarcerees from Tule Lake began departing to other camps and "disloyal" incarcerees from other incarceration camps started arriving at Tule Lake. The number of guards increased from a few hundred to 930; an eight-foot high double fence was erected. The camp's capacity was 15,000 but the peak population reached 18,789 as 6,249 original "loyal" incarcerees chose to stay rather than be uprooted again.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In November 1943, increasing tensions between inmates and the camp administration sparked an altercation. Camp director Raymond Best called in the military police; eighteen inmates were beaten in the police squad room and all ended up hospitalized. Forced searches commenced, lasting until March 1944.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On May 16, 1944, an army sentry shot and killed a nisei boy. Tensions mounted, and the camp administrators decreed that no gatherings would be permitted, which meant no school, work, sports, or recreation.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On July 2, 1944, the Tule Lake canteen manager, known to be friendly with the camp administration, was murdered.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>By April 1945, 5,589 nisei and kibei signed a form agreeing to give up their U.S. citizenship. Many of these "renunciants" were intimidated or signed “under protest.” Of these, 2,360 “renunciants” were sent to higher security Department of Justice (DOJ) internment camps. Another 2,031 were deported to Japan. Almost all “renunciants” originated from the Tule Lake segregation camp.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Tule Lake incarceration camp was located on a dry lake bed that had been drained as a federal reclamation project. Incarcerees gathered the remains of freshwater mollusk shells to craft into jewelry.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Near the incarceration camp site, large remnants of Tule Lake are now designated as a National Wildlife Refuge.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce13.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>Tule Lake Committee</Label>
				<Link>http://www.tulelake.org/</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-tule-n-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i65-00049">
				<Label>Tulean Dispatch, Vol. III No. 52, September 15, 1942</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-tule-n-001.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-tule-n-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i65-00170">
				<Label>Tulean Dispatch, Vol. IV No. 83, March 1, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-tule-n-002.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-tule-n-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i65-00257">
				<Label>Tulean Dispatch, Vol. VI No. 3, July 20, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-tule-n-003.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-tule-n-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i65-00281">
				<Label>Tulean Dispatch, Vol. VI No. 30, August 20, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-tule-n-004.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<PublicationItem uid="sos_w-tule-n-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i65-00297">
				<Label>Tulean Dispatch Farewell Message, 1943</Label>
				<Link>assets/site/sos_w-tule-n-005.pdf</Link>
			</PublicationItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-tule-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-p2-00033">
				<Label>Barracks with "Castle Rock," 1940s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of Densho, the Bain Family Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-tule-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00208">
				<Label>Stockade interior, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-tule-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00163">
				<Label>Nursery school students, November 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>These students are playing with model barracks. Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-tule-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-p2-00047">
				<Label>Digging for shells, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Tule lake was located on a dry lake bed, and incarcerees would dig for shells to make into jewelry. Courtesy of Densho, the Bain Family Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_w-tule-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00079">
				<Label>Fields and "Castle Rock," March 1994</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tule Lake incarceration camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_w-tule-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_w-tule-v-001">
				<Label>Frank F</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=155&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-fres">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fresno</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fresno Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fresno</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 6, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 30, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fresno, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fresno</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at the Fresno County Fairgrounds in central California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.7333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-119.7667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014030</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from the central San Joaquin Valley and Amador County, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Jerome, Gila River</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-09-04">5,120</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Fresno Assembly Center was located at the Fresno County Fairgrounds; barracks were erected on the fairgrounds and on the racetrack infield.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Fresno was the last "assembly center" to close.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-fres-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00003">
				<Label>Tending a garden, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-fres-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00001">
				<Label>Buildings, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fresno Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-fres-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00002">
				<Label>Aerial view, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-fres-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00004">
				<Label>Grandstand and racetrack, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fresno Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-fres-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00466">
				<Label>Gravel track, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fresno Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-fres-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-mary">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Marysville</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Marysville Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Marysville</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 8, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 29, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Marysville, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Marysville</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located about 8 miles south of Marysville, California. Late spring rains delayed the camp's opening from the slated date of April 16, 1942. </Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>39.0500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-121.5500</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2136287</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Placer and Sacramento Counties, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Tule Lake</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-06-02">2,451</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Marysville Assembly Center was located at a migrant workers’ camp.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Marysville was also known as the Arboga Assembly Center after the nearby small town of the same name.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16b.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-mary-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00006">
				<Label>Broken pottery, October 1996</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Marysville Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-mary-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00005">
				<Label>Field, October 1996</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Marysville Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-mary-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00008">
				<Label>Aerial view, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-mary-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00470">
				<Label>Fence, October 1996</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Marysville Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-mary-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00469">
				<Label>Concrete rubble, October 1996</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Marysville Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-mary-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-maye">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Mayer</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Mayer Assembly Center, Arizona</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Mayer</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 7, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 2, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Mayer, Arizona</LocationName>
			<CityName>Mayer</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>Located 75 miles northwest of Phoenix, Arizona, Mayer was set on land that was originally farmland.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.3833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-112.2333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2007019</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from southern Arizona.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Poston</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-25">245</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Mayer Assembly Center utilized a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Mayer, at 245 people, was the smallest "assembly center" and was open the shortest time.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16c.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-maye-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00472">
				<Label>Residential area, September 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Mayer Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-maye-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00473">
				<Label>Neighborhood, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Mayer Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-maye-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00011">
				<Label>Buildings, September 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Mayer Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-maye-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00010">
				<Label>Map, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-maye-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00471">
				<Label>Neighborhood, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Mayer Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-maye-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-merc">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Merced</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Merced Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Merced</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 6, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>September 15, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Merced, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Merced</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located in California's central San Joaquin Valley within the town of Merced at the county fairgrounds; the buildings were sited south of the fairgrounds proper.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.3000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-120.4667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2012671</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from the Northern California coast, west Sacramento Valley, and northern San Joaquin Valley, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Granada</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-06-03">4,508</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Merced Assembly Center was within the town of Merced at the county fairgrounds.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16d.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-merc-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00449">
				<Label>Train en route to Merced, May 20, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-merc-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00477">
				<Label>Parking lot, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Merced County Fairgrounds, on the former site of Merced Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-merc-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00474">
				<Label>Field, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Merced Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-merc-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00014">
				<Label>Aerial view, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-merc-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00013">
				<Label>Memorial plaque, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Merced Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-merc-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-merc-v-001">
				<Label>Hiroshi K</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=156&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-pine">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Pinedale</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Pinedale Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Pinedale</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 7, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>July 23, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Pinedale, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Pinedale</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located 8 miles north of downtown Fresno, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.84</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-119.80</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>1002392</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Sacramento and El Dorado Counties in California; also held people from Oregon and Washington.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Tule Lake, Poston</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-06-29">4,792</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Pinedale Assembly Center was located 8 miles north of downtown Fresno on vacant land near an existing millworkers' housing area.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16e.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pine-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00016">
				<Label>Children and boundary sign, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pine-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00491">
				<Label>Warehouses, September 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Pinedale Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pine-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00492">
				<Label>Road, September 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Pinedale Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pine-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00015">
				<Label>Aerial view, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pine-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00478">
				<Label>Residential neighborhood, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Pinedale Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pine-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-pine-v-001">
				<Label>Betty S</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=157&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-pomo">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Pomona</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Pomona Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Pomona</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 7, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>August 24, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Pomona, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Pomona</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds (Fairplex) in Southern California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.0500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-117.7500</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014425</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Santa Clara Counties in California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Heart Mountain</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-07-20">5,434</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts/>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16f.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pomo-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00018">
				<Label>Incarcerees in front of barrack, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pomo-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00571">
				<Label>Construction, April 8, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pomo-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00021">
				<Label>Boundary sign, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pomo-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00572">
				<Label>Construction, April 8, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-pomo-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00022">
				<Label>Horse stall, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Pomona Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-pomo-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-pomo-v-001">
				<Label>Jimi Y</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=158&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-port">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Portland</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Portland Assembly Center, Oregon</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Portland</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 2, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>September 10, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Portland, Oregon</LocationName>
			<CityName>Portland</CityName>
			<StateName>Oregon</StateName>
			<Description>Located at the eleven-acre Pacific International Livestock Exposition Pavilion in Portland, Oregon.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>45.5167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.6667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014273</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from northeast Oregon and central Washington.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Heart Mountain, Minidoka, and Tule Lake</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-06-06">3,676</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>More than 3,800 people were housed under one roof at the pavilion, which was subdivided into living spaces.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16g.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-port-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00023">
				<Label>Mess hall, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-port-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00025">
				<Label>Parked cars, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-port-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00024">
				<Label>Historical marker, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>This marker is located inside the Portland Exposition Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-port-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00026">
				<Label>Aerial view, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-port-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00481">
				<Label>Portland Exposition Center, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Portland Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-port-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-port-v-001">
				<Label>Kara K</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=159&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-puya">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Puyallup (Camp Harmony)</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Puyallup Assembly Center, Washington</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Puyallup (Camp Harmony)</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 28, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>September 12, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Puyallup, Washington</LocationName>
			<CityName>Puyallup</CityName>
			<StateName>Washington</StateName>
			<Description>Located on the Western Washington State Fairgrounds, 35 miles south of Seattle, Washington.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>47.1833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.2833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2116562</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Seattle and Tacoma, Washington; also held some from Alaska.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Tule Lake, Minidoka</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-07-25">7,390</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Puyallup Assembly Center was built on the grounds and surrounding acres of the Western Washington State Fairgrounds. People of Japanese ancestry were housed in barracks as well as animal stalls.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>This "assembly center," also known as "Camp Harmony," effectively doubled Puyallup's population.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>A sculpture by artist George Tsutakawa and plaques serve as a memorial on the current fairgrounds.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16h.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>Camp Harmony Exhibit</Label>
				<Link>http://www.lib.washington.edu/exhibits/harmony/exhibit/</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-puya-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i40-00048">
				<Label>Family in a barrack, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Manuscripts, Special Collections, University Archives Division, University of Washington Libraries.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-puya-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i36-00043">
				<Label>Barracks and muddy conditions, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Museum of History &amp; Industry.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-puya-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i36-00034">
				<Label>Cooking, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Museum of History &amp; Industry.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-puya-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i36-00040">
				<Label>Barracks, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Museum of History &amp; Industry.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-puya-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00027">
				<Label>View from grandstand, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Puyallup Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-puya-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-puya-v-001">
				<Label>Masao W</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=160&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-sacr">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Sacramento</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Sacramento Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Sacramento</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 6, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 26, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Sacramento, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Sacramento</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located 15 miles northeast of downtown Sacramento, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>38.5667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-121.4833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7017902</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Tule Lake</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-30">4,739</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Sacramento Assembly Center was constructed at a migrant workers' camp 15 miles northeast of downtown Sacramento.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>This "assembly center" was also known as Walerga.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16i.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sacr-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00575">
				<Label>Two friends, May 20, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sacr-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00391">
				<Label>New arrivals, May 20, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sacr-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00035">
				<Label>Aerial view, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sacr-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00849">
				<Label>Incarcerees walking, May 20, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sacr-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00034">
				<Label>Historical marker, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Sacramento Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sacr-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-sali">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Salinas</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Salinas Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Salinas</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 27, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>July 4, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Salinas, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Salinas</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at the north end of the town of Salinas, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.6667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-121.6500</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014451</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from the Monterey Bay area of California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Poston and Tule Lake</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-06-23">3,586</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Salinas Assembly Center was built at a fairgrounds at the north end of the town of Salinas.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16j.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sali-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00387">
				<Label>Marked luggage, March 31, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sali-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00577">
				<Label>Racetrack and barracks, April 20, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sali-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00386">
				<Label>Moving luggage, March 31, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sali-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00578">
				<Label>Barrack interior, March 31, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sali-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00039">
				<Label>Historical marker, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Salinas Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sali-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-sali-v-001">
				<Label>Rudy T</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=161&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-sant">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Santa Anita</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Santa Anita Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Santa Anita</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>March 27, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 27, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Arcadia, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Arcadia</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at the world-famous Santa Anita Racetrack in Arcadia, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.1333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-118.0333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7013315</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Los Angeles, San Diego, and Santa Clara Counties, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Poston, Topaz, Gila River, Heart Mountain, Jerome, Rohwer, Granada, and Manzanar</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-08-23">18,719</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Santa Anita Assembly Center, at 19,348 people, was the largest "assembly center" and was occupied for the longest period of time, 215 days.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>More than half the residents, about 8,500 people, lived in converted horse stalls.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16k.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sant-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00392">
				<Label>Military police, April 6, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sant-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00484">
				<Label>Mess hall, April 6, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sant-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00483">
				<Label>Military policeman patrolling fence, April 6, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sant-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00041">
				<Label>Horse stables, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Santa Anita Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-sant-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00043">
				<Label>Fairgrounds, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Santa Anita Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-sant-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-sant-v-001">
				<Label>Mits K</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=162&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-stoc">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Stockton</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Stockton Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Stockton</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 10, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 17, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Stockton, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Stockton</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at the San Joaquin County Fairgrounds in Stockton, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.9500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-121.2833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014545</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from San Joaquin County, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Rohwer, Gila River</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-21">4,271</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts/>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16l.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-stoc-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00587">
				<Label>New arrivals, May 19, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-stoc-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00395">
				<Label>Baggage inspection, May 19, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-stoc-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00051">
				<Label>Cemetery monument, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stockton Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-stoc-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00847">
				<Label>Standing outside barrack, May 19, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-stoc-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00052">
				<Label>Historical marker, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stockton Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-stoc-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-tanf">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Tanforan</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Tanforan Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Tanforan</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 28, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 13, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>San Bruno, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>San Bruno</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located 12 miles south of San Francisco, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.6167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.4000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7015414</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from the San Francisco Bay area of California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Topaz</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-07-25">7,816</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Tanforan Assembly Center was located at the Tanforan Racetrack in San Bruno, 12 miles south of San Francisco, California.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>People of Japanese ancestry were housed in barracks and converted horse stalls, one of which had been used for the famous racehorse Seabiscuit.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The area is now a shopping mall, Tanforan Mall.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16m.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>20 Views of the Tanforan Assembly Center</Label>
				<Link>http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist8/ppoint.html</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tanf-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00481">
				<Label>Standing in line, April 29, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tanf-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00450">
				<Label>Incarceree inside a barrack, June 16, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tanf-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00463">
				<Label>Entrance gate, June 16, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tanf-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00356">
				<Label>Buildings and guard tower, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tanf-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00055">
				<Label>Memorial plaque, 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tanforan Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tanf-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_a-tanf-v-001">
				<Label>Tom A</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=163&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-tula">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Tulare</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Tulare Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Tulare</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 20, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>September 4, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Tulare, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Tulare</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located in the southern San Joaquin Valley of California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.2000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-119.3333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7015506</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from California: Los Angeles and Sacramento Counties and the Southern California coast.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Gila River</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-08-11">4,978</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Tulare Assembly Center was located in the southern San Joaquin Valley in the town of Tulare at the county fairgrounds.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16n.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tula-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00483">
				<Label>Racetrack, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tulare Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tula-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00057">
				<Label>Fairgrounds, 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tulare Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tula-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00059">
				<Label>Tractor and grandstand, 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tulare Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tula-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00058">
				<Label>Aerial view, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-tula-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00482">
				<Label>Building, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tulare Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-tula-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-turl">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Turlock</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Turlock Assembly Center, California</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Turlock</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 30, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>August 12, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Turlock, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Turlock</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located in the town of Turlock, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.4833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-120.8333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014665</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from the Sacramento River delta and Los Angeles, California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Gila River</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-06-02">3,661</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Turlock Assembly Center was at the Stanislaus County Fairgrounds in the town of Turlock, California.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Turlock closed as an "assembly center" in August 1942. The next month, Turlock was designated a Rehabilitation Center for U.S. Army prisoners who required retraining and discipline prior to being restored to military duty. The maximum number of U.S. Army prisoners allowed was 1,500 in the same space where 3,699 Japanese Americans had once been housed.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16o.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-turl-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00633">
				<Label>New arrivals, May 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-turl-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00060">
				<Label>Barracks, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-turl-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00631">
				<Label>Baggage inspection, April 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-turl-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00635">
				<Label>Baggage inspection, April 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-turl-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00061">
				<Label>County Fair Entrance, June 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Turlock Assembly Center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-turl-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-owen">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Owens Valley</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Owens Valley Reception Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Owens Valley</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>March 21, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 2, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Manzanar, California </LocationName>
			<CityName>Manzanar</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located on the site that later became the WRA-run incarceration camp Manzanar.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.7333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-118.0667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>4006871</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>More than 90 percent were from the Los Angeles area; others were from Stockton, California, and Bainbridge Island, Washington.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Manzanar</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">9,666</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The first people of Japanese ancestry to be moved from designated military zones under Executive Order 9066, a group from Bainbridge Island, Washington, were brought to the Owens Valley Assembly Center.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The Owens Valley Assembly Center became the Manzanar incarceration camp under the management of the War Relocation Authority (WRA).</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-owen-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00409">
				<Label>Camp construction, April 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-owen-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-owen-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="a-park">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Parker Dam</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Parker Dam Assembly Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Parker Dam</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Temporary Assembly Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 8, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>May 31, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Parker, Arizona</LocationName>
			<CityName>Parker</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>Located on the site that later became the WRA-run incarceration camp Poston.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.1500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-114.2833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2007106</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people from Arizona, California, Oregon, and Washington.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Poston</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The Parker Dam Assembly Center became the Poston incarceration camp under the management of the War Relocation Authority (WRA).</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce16.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_a-park-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00858">
				<Label>Barrack construction, April 2, 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_a-park-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_a-park-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-crys">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Crystal City</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Crystal City Internment Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Crystal City</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>November 2, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>January 1948</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Crystal City, Texas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Crystal City</CityName>
			<StateName>Texas</StateName>
			<Description>Located in Zavala County in South Texas, 170 miles west of Corpus Christi.
Semiarid grasslands with an average annual rainfall of about 21 inches. Summers are hot and humid, with temperatures exceeding 100 degrees.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>28.6667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-99.8167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2103556</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese ancestry from the U.S. and Latin America and their families; also held German and Italian nationals and their families.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">4,000</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Crystal City was originally built to house 2,000 migratory farm laborers under the Farm Security Administration.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The first internees were German nationals and their families. The camp also held families of Italian descent. The people of Japanese descent, who made up two-thirds of the camp, lived in separate quarters from the European internees.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The families of the issei men interned at Crystal City were transferred there from War Relocation Authority (WRA) camps.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The U.S. government arranged with Latin American countries to deport residents of Japanese descent for internment at Crystal City. The purpose was to exchange the Japanese Latin Americans for U.S. prisoners held by the Japanese army. The U.S. government seized the deportees' papers, so when the war ended the Japanese Latin Americans were treated as illegal aliens.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17c.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-crys-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i115-00001">
				<Label>Aerial view, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the UT Institute of Texan Cultures at San Antonio.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-crys-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i115-00002">
				<Label>Woman cutting fabric, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the UT Institute of Texan Cultures at San Antonio.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-crys-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-p91-00008">
				<Label>Baseball team, c. 1946</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of Densho, the Shibayama Family Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-crys-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i115-00003">
				<Label>Women doing needlework, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the UT Institute of Texan Cultures at San Antonio.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-crys-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00303">
				<Label>Monument, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Crystal City internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-crys-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_d-crys-v-001">
				<Label>Mako N</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=164&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="c-moab">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Moab</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Moab Isolation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Moab</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Citizen Isolation Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>January 11, 1943</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>April 27, 1943</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Dalton Wells, Utah</LocationName>
			<CityName>Dalton Wells</CityName>
			<StateName>Utah</StateName>
			<Description>Located at Dalton Wells, 13 miles north of Moab in southeastern Utah. Summer temperatures reach the high 90s. Vegetation included sagebrush, tumbleweed, cottonwood, and tamarisk trees. The drab and desolate area was used for stock grazing.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>38.5667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-109.5333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2109079</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Nisei and kibei men designated "troublemakers" by War Relocation Authority (WRA) camp directors were imprisoned at Moab. (U.S. citizens could not be sent to the Department of Justice or U.S. Army internment camps.) The first to arrive were sixteen men removed from Manzanar after a riot.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Leupp Citizen Isolation Center</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">83</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The men held at the camp were not charged with crimes and did not receive hearings.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The 150 military police who guarded the inmates outnumbered them by more than two to one. The WRA called the camp a "rehabilitation center."</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Dalton Wells, referred to as "Moab" by the WRA, was a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce14a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-moab-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00285">
				<Label>Concrete foundation, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Moab citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-moab-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00286">
				<Label>Vegetation, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Moab citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-moab-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00288">
				<Label>Concrete entrance pillars, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Moab citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-moab-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00287">
				<Label>Field, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Moab citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-moab-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00289">
				<Label>Unpaved road, July 1995</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Moab citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-moab-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="c-leup">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Leupp</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Leupp Isolation Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Leupp</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Citizen Isolation Center</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 27, 1943</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>December 2, 1943</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Leupp, Arizona</LocationName>
			<CityName>Leupp</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>The Leupp camp, in the high desert of northeastern Arizona about 30 miles northwest of Winslow, was located at an abandoned Navajo Indian Reservation boarding school.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>35.2833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-110.9500</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2557291</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Inmates from the Moab Citizen Isolation Center were transferred to Leupp, and other designated "troublemakers" were sent to Leupp from various War Relocation Authority (WRA) camps at the discretion of camp administrators.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Tule Lake Segregation Center</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Five of the men held in the Grand County jail after protesting their treatment at Moab were forced to make the eleven-hour trip to Leupp confined in a four-by-six-foot box on the back of a flatbed truck.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Men could be sent to the isolation center for offenses such as insulting a WRA employee, leading a work walk-out, or trying to form a union.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The WRA assistant solicitor criticized the Leupp center as "an un-American institution … premised on Gestapo methods." In recommending the closing of the camp, the Leupp Review Committee stressed: "The Leupp Center is not to be explained as a mistake, despite the fact that it was unfortunate that such a center had to be established."</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce14b.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-leup-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00277">
				<Label>Concrete rubble, July 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Leupp citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-leup-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00284">
				<Label>Brick structure, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Leupp citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-leup-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00281">
				<Label>Brick structure, July 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Leupp citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-leup-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00280">
				<Label>Field, July 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Leupp citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_c-leup-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00283">
				<Label>Field and unpaved road, September 1997</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Leupp citizen isolation center. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_c-leup-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="f-ante">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Antelope Springs</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Antelope Springs Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Antelope Springs</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Additional Facility</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Antelope Springs, Utah</LocationName>
			<CityName>Antelope Springs</CityName>
			<StateName>Utah</StateName>
			<Description>Located in a sparse pinyon and juniper forest at an elevation of 7,400 feet at the base of the 9,669-foot Swasey Peak, part of the House Range in western Utah. The closest town is Delta.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>39.3833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-113.3000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>1107569</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Used for recreation by children from the Topaz incarceration camp, which was 90 miles west.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Youth groups such as the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts used the camp as a recreational facility for swimming and hiking. Little information is available about this facility.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Antelope Springs was a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp, built in 1935.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce15a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-ante-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00310">
				<Label>Building foundations, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Antelope Springs. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-ante-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00313">
				<Label>Building remains, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Antelope Springs. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-ante-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00312">
				<Label>Adobe building remains, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Antelope Springs. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-ante-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00505">
				<Label>Pipeline, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Antelope Springs. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-ante-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00311">
				<Label>Road and hillside, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Antelope Springs. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-ante-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="f-cowc">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Cow Creek</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Cow Creek Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Cow Creek</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Additional Facility</Category>
		<DateOpened>December 10, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>February 15, 1943</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Cow Creek, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Cow Creek</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located in the desert of California near the Death Valley National Monument, one of the hottest places on Earth. Summer temperatures stay well over 100 degrees. Death Valley encompasses the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere at 282 feet below sea level and is the driest place in North America with an average rainfall of only 1.96 inches a year.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>36.5000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-117.0000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7019393</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held forty men and their families from the Manzanar incarceration camp.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>resettled outside camps</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">150</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>After the fatal riot at Manzanar, the War Relocation Authority (WRA) briefly held "pro-administration" individuals at Cow Creek before giving them leave from the camps. The men had been threatened by protestors who considered them to be informants.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Cow Creek was a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Once when the supply truck from Manzanar was several days late, wild burro meat was served.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce15b.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-cowc-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00300">
				<Label>Former barrack, May 1993</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Cow Creek. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-cowc-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-cowc-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-cowc-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00301">
				<Label>Former barracks, May 1993</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Cow Creek. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-cowc-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-cowc-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="f-tule">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Tulelake</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Tulelake Center</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Tulelake</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Additional Facility</Category>
		<DateOpened>March 1943</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>October 1943</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Tulelake, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Tulelake</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located 5 miles west of the Tule Lake incarceration camp in the Tulelake-Butte Valley of Siskiyou County in northeastern California. Tulelake is southeast of Klamath Falls and northeast of Mt. Shasta.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>41.9500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-121.4667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2014671</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Two different groups of men were put in this camp: more than one hundred men from the Tule Lake incarceration camp who refused to answer the "loyalty questionnaire," and later, the WRA brought in men from other camps whom they paid higher wages in order to break a strike by Tulelake farm workers.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The camp was originally a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) facility, and had been converted to a prisoner of war (POW) camp for German and Italian prisoners before holding persons of Japanese ancestry.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce15c.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-tule-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00532">
				<Label>German POWs, c. 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-tule-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00536">
				<Label>Site overview, c. 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-tule-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00533">
				<Label>German POW work crew, c. 1944</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-tule-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00534">
				<Label>Mess hall and kitchen, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tulelake. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_f-tule-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00535">
				<Label>Barrack, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Tulelake. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_f-tule-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-east">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>East Boston</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>East Boston Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>East Boston</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>East Boston, Massachusetts</LocationName>
			<CityName>East Boston</CityName>
			<StateName>Massachusetts</StateName>
			<Description>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) detention station located in East Boston, Massachusetts.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>42.3667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-71.0333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7015009</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants; German, Italian, and other foreign nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>One of five INS detention stations that held individuals the government considered "potentially dangerous" until they were moved to internment camps.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-elli">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Ellis Island</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Ellis Island Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Ellis Island</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened>December 1, 1941</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 1944</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Ellis Island, New York</LocationName>
			<CityName>Ellis Island</CityName>
			<StateName>New York</StateName>
			<Description>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) detention station located on Ellis Island, a mostly artificial island of 27 acres in Upper New York Bay.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>40.6833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-74.0333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014105</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants on the East Coast arrested by the FBI immediately after the attack on Pearl Harbor; other foreign nationals were also held there.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1941-12-01">608</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Ellis Island was designated as a permanent detention station, and foreign nationals from enemy nations were transferred in and out of Ellis Island for more than two years.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_i-elli-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00529">
				<Label>Main building interior, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_i-elli-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00526">
				<Label>View from water, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_i-elli-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00530">
				<Label>View from ferry, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_i-elli-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00528">
				<Label>Ellis Island Immigration Museum, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_i-elli-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00527">
				<Label>Ellis Island ferry, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_i-elli-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-sanf">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>San Francisco</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>San Francisco Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>San Francisco</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>San Francisco, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>San Francisco</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) detention station located on Silver Avenue in San Francisco, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.7667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.4167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014456</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants arrested by the FBI in Northern California.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This facility was soon filled to capacity with detainees. In order to relieve crowding, the INS opened the Sharp Park Detention Station located twelve miles south.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-sanp">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>San Pedro</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>San Pedro Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>San Pedro</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>San Pedro, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>San Pedro</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) detention station located near Los Angeles in San Pedro, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>33.7333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-118.2833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014463</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants arrested by the FBI.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts/>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-seat">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Seattle</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Seattle Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Seattle</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Seattle, Washington</LocationName>
			<CityName>Seattle</CityName>
			<StateName>Washington</StateName>
			<Description>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) detention station located in Seattle, Washington.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>47.6000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.3167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014494</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts/>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-shar">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Sharp Park</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Sharp Park Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Sharp Park</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened>March 30, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>1946</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Sharp Park, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Sharp Park</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located near Sharp Park in Northern California; set on a former state relief camp.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.6167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.4667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>1103075</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese descent from California and Peru; also held German, Italian, and Chinese nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-07-14">379</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>When the San Francisco immigration station was filled to capacity, the INS opened a former state relief camp and renamed it the Sharp Park Temporary Detention Station. This INS detention station became the main holding center for those arrested in Northern California.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In 1943, a fight broke out among the Chinese, Japanese American, and Japanese Peruvian detainees over the raising of a Chinese flag.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_i-shar-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i35-00134">
				<Label>Overview, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Immigration and Naturalization Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_i-shar-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_i-shar-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="i-tuna">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Tuna Canyon</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Tuna Canyon Detention Station</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Tuna Canyon</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Immigration Detention Station</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Tujunga, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Tujunga</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) detention station located at a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp near Pasadena in Los Angeles County, California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.2500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-118.2833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7015468</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp was used by the INS as a temporary center to hold individuals the U.S. government considered "potentially dangerous." Many of the detainees of Japanese ancestry were sent to inland internment camps from here.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The INS used a barbed-wire fence to separate visiting family members from the detainees and allowed only English to be spoken.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-linc">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Lincoln (Bismarck)</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Lincoln Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Lincoln (Bismarck)</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>December 7, 1941</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>March 6, 1946</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Bismarck, North Dakota</LocationName>
			<CityName>Bismarck</CityName>
			<StateName>North Dakota</StateName>
			<Description>Located in Morton County, 5 miles south of Bismarck, North Dakota, on a U.S. Army base.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>46.8000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-100.7833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7013429</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese and German nationals; German and Italian seamen; and Japanese American "renunciants," those who had given up their U.S. citizenship.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-02-01">1,518</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Originally a U.S. Army post, this camp held German and Italian seamen captured in U.S. waters when the war started in Europe in 1939. It was turned over to the Department of Justice (DOJ) on December 7, 1941.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On February 14, 1945, 650 "renunciants" were sent from the War Relocation Authority (WRA) Tule Lake segregation center and from the internment camps at Santa Fe, New Mexico. Another one hundred arrived in July. Over half of them were deported to Japan later that year.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17f.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-linc-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00331">
				<Label>Stone entry gate, October 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Lincoln (Bismarck) internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-linc-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00333">
				<Label>Army barracks, October 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Lincoln (Bismarck) internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-linc-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00332">
				<Label>Entry gates, October 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Lincoln (Bismarck) internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-linc-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00507">
				<Label>Technical college sign, October 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Lincoln (Bismarck) internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-linc-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00508">
				<Label>Army barracks, October 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Lincoln (Bismarck) internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-linc-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_d-linc-v-001">
				<Label>Arthur O</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=165&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-miss">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Missoula</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Missoula Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Missoula</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>December 18, 1941</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>July 1, 1944</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Missoula, Montana</LocationName>
			<CityName>Missoula</CityName>
			<StateName>Montana</StateName>
			<Description>Located at an old U.S. Army post on the southwest edge of Missoula, Montana, that was turned over to the Department of Justice (DOJ) in 1941. Missoula is in western Montana.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>46.8667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-113.9833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014085</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held more than 1,000 Italian seamen captured in U.S. waters; also held 1,250 Japanese immigrants from the continental U.S. and Hawaii.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">2,003</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Alien Enemy Hearing Boards for the issei were held from June to August 1942, and if the issei was recommended for permanent internment, he was sent to Camp Livingston, a U.S. Army internment camp in Alexandria, Louisiana. By August, there were only 109 issei left at Fort Missoula.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The internees of Japanese and Italian descent lived in different barracks and ate in separate mess halls but occasionally played softball together.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>After the internees were sent to U.S. Army camps, Fort Missoula was used to hold military prisoners of war (POWs) from Europe.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17g.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-miss-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i44-00002">
				<Label>Internees and guard, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the K. Ross Toole Archives, University of Montana at Missoula.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-miss-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i40-00162">
				<Label>Internees behind a fence, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Manuscripts, Special Collections, University Archives Division, University of Washington Libraries, the Matsushita Family Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-miss-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i44-00003">
				<Label>Camp overview, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the K. Ross Toole Archives, University of Montana at Missoula.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-miss-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i40-00164">
				<Label>Internees, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Manuscripts, Special Collections, University Archives Division, University of Washington Libraries, the Matsushita Family Collection.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-miss-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00328">
				<Label>Former army barracks, October 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Missoula internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-miss-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_d-miss-v-001">
				<Label>Marion K</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=166&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-blan">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Camp Blanding</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Camp Blanding Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Camp Blanding</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Starke, Florida</LocationName>
			<CityName>Starke</CityName>
			<StateName>Florida</StateName>
			<Description>U.S. Army Internment Camp located in Starke, Florida, southwest of Jacksonville, in northeast Florida.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>29.9333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-82.1000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2021369</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S. Also held German and Italian nationals, as well as fourteen German prisoners of war (POWs) captured in a submarine.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-04">343</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The capacity of this facility was 200, yet the U.S. Army interned more than 300 people here.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17k.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-forr">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Camp Forrest</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Camp Forrest Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Camp Forrest</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Tullahoma, Tennessee </LocationName>
			<CityName>Tullahoma</CityName>
			<StateName>Tennessee</StateName>
			<Description>U.S. Army internment camp located in a wooded area of rural Tennessee, 70 miles south of Nashville.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>35.3500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-86.2000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2101873</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S.; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>At this site, the barracks consisted of five-man huts for a total capacity of 300 persons.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The population of internees of Japanese ancestry reached 190 in early 1942; however, by June of that year most had either been repatriated to Japan or transferred to Camp Livingston, Louisiana.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17p.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-forr-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i35-00130">
				<Label>Camp entrance, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-forr-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-forr-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-forr-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i35-00131">
				<Label>Living quarters, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-forr-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-forr-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-forr-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i35-00132">
				<Label>Guard tower, c. 1942</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-forr-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-forr-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-livi">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Camp Livingston</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Camp Livingston Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Camp Livingston</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>June 8, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Alexandria, Louisiana</LocationName>
			<CityName>Alexandria</CityName>
			<StateName>Louisiana</StateName>
			<Description>Located in Alexandria, Louisiana, north of Baton Rouge in the central part of the state. Hot and humid summer months with temperatures up to 130 degrees, poisonous reptiles, and stinging insects added to the hardship.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>31.3000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-92.4333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7013268</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held internees of Japanese ancestry sent from the Department of Justice-run Fort Missoula internment camp and from the U.S. Army-run Fort Sill and Camp Forrest internment camps.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-03-12">1,123</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The U.S. Army constructed Camp Livingston to accommodate 5,000 people in mid-1942.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>To gain some relief from the extreme heat, the internees of Japanese ancestry dug shallow depressions in the dirt under the barracks and rested there during the hottest hours.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The internees were told that they could volunteer for work unrelated to the maintenance of the camp and would be paid ten cents per hour. Other internees were ordered to work in the nearby forest to cut pine trees to construct an airport.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17p.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-mcco">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Camp McCoy</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Camp McCoy Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Camp McCoy</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>March 1, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Camp McCoy, Wisconsin</LocationName>
			<CityName>Camp McCoy</CityName>
			<StateName>Wisconsin</StateName>
			<Description>Located 9 miles west of Tomah and 92 miles northwest of Madison, Wisconsin. </Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>44.0167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-90.6833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2121220</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from Hawaii; German and Italian nationals; and Japanese and German prisoners of war (POWs).</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-03-01">293</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This camp was initially chosen by the U.S. Army because of its location on the Chicago and Northwestern Railway lines.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>After the issei internees were transferred back to Department of Justice (DOJ) camps in 1943, this facility was briefly converted into a training center for the 100th Infantry Battalion, the all-Japanese American Hawaiian National Guard unit.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>During the later years of the war, Camp McCoy was also used to hold 4,000 Japanese and German prisoners of war (POWs)--soldiers captured and brought to the U.S. There were fourteen escape attempts by the Japanese POWs; all were recaptured.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17p.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-mcco-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00522">
				<Label>Barracks, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the U.S. Army.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-mcco-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-mcco-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="p-leav">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Leavenworth</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Federal Prison</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Leavenworth, Kansas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Leavenworth</CityName>
			<StateName>Kansas</StateName>
			<Description>Located 15 miles northwest of Kansas City. At 1,583 square acres, it is currently the largest maximum-security prison in the U.S., housing about 2,000 inmates.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>39.3000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-94.9167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2036674</GISTGNId>			
			,</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held twenty-eight nisei soldiers from Fort McClellan, Alabama; seven leaders of Heart Mountain's Fair Play Committee; and thirty older draft resisters from Heart Mountain incarceration camp.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>In March 1944, 106 nisei soldiers at Fort McClellan, Alabama, refused to undergo combat training to protest the unjust incarceration of their families. Twenty-eight were court-martialed and sent to Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. They were kept separate from the civilian inmates.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On June 26, 1944, sixty-three draft resisters from Heart Mountain were convicted by a federal grand jury and sentenced to jail terms. Thirty of the older resisters were sent to Leavenworth, while the others were sent to McNeil Island Penitentiary. They were all pardoned by President Harry S. Truman in 1947.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The seven leaders of Heart Mountain's Fair Play Committee were convicted of counseling others to resist the draft. They were sentenced to four years in Leavenworth, and the verdict was eventually overturned.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce18b.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-leav-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00521">
				<Label>Main building, 1990s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-leav-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-leav-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-stan">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Stanton</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Stanton Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Stanton</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Stanton, New Mexico</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Stanton</CityName>
			<StateName>New Mexico</StateName>
			<Description>Located in isolated southern New Mexico in Lincoln County, 35 miles north of Ruidoso. Fort Stanton was originally established in 1855 and was used in 1899 as a tuberculosis sanatorium.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>33.4833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-105.5167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2066966</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Mostly held German nationals and German seamen from the luxury liner <i>Columbus</i> captured in U.S. waters in 1939. Also held those considered by the Department of Justice to be the most "troublesome" Japanese internees: ten nisei and kibei "renunciants" and seven issei transferred from the Santa Fe internment camp.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This high-security facility contained two segregated sub-camps, one for the internees of Japanese descent and the other for thirty-one Germans also labeled "troublemakers" by the Department of Justice (DOJ). There were more guards and greater restrictions here than at any other DOJ-run camp. The internees of Japanese ancestry arrived March 10, 1945, and by October 10, 1945, they were transferred to Terminal Island, California, and repatriated to Japan.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>The exact location of the seventeen internees of Japanese descent was kept secret by the DOJ who referred to Fort Stanton as "Japanese Segregation Camp Number 1." The internees' mail was sent to and from the Santa Fe internment camp located 200 miles north.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17h.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>New Details of an American Injustice</Label>
				<Link>http://www.artsci.washington.edu/newsletter/Autumn98/injustice.html</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-stan-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00518">
				<Label>Aerial view, date unknown</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-stan-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-stan-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-stan-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00519">
				<Label>Fort Stanton, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-stan-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-stan-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-stan-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00520">
				<Label>Barracks, 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-stan-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-stan-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_d-stan-v-001">
				<Label>Tom A</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=167&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="p-mcne">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>McNeil Island Penitentiary</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>McNeil Island Penitentiary</NPSName>
			<ShortName>McNeil Island</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Federal Prison</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>McNeil Island, Washington</LocationName>
			<CityName>McNeil Island</CityName>
			<StateName>Washington</StateName>
			<Description>Work prison located on an island in the southern portion of Puget Sound, 10 miles southwest of Tacoma, Washington. Currently a medium-security state correctional facility holding about 1,000 male inmates.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>47.2000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.6833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>1008106</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Younger draft resisters from Heart Mountain and Minidoka incarceration camps were held here. Gordon Hirabayashi was also imprisoned here for draft resistance.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>On June 26, 1944, sixty-three resisters from Heart Mountain were convicted by a federal grand jury and sentenced to jail terms. Thirty-three of the younger resisters were sent to McNeil Island, while the others were sent to Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Thirty resisters from Minidoka were also convicted and sentenced to McNeil Island in October 1944. They were joined by a second group of Heart Mountain resisters in July 1945.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>McNeil Island was a work prison and inmates held a variety of jobs, including canning fish, clearing land, and farming.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>World War II draft resisters, including nisei draft resisters, were pardoned by President Harry S. Truman on December 24, 1947.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce18c.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-mcne-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00839">
				<Label>Prison cells, August 14, 1935</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-mcne-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00838">
				<Label>Utility building, c. 1937</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-mcne-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00840">
				<Label>Overview of prison, June 23, 1937</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-mcne-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00841">
				<Label>Prison dock, March 3, 1936</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-mcne-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i37-00842">
				<Label>Cell house and officers' quarters, date unknown</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-mcne-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_p-mcne-v-001">
				<Label>Gene A</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=169&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="p-cata">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Catalina Federal Honor Camp</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Catalina Federal Honor Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Catalina</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Federal Prison</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Santa Catalina Mountains</LocationName>
			<CityName>Santa Catalina Mountains</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>Located in the Santa Catalina Mountains, northeast of Tucson, Arizona. The camp was established in 1939 within southern Arizona's Coronado National Forest to provide prison labor to build mountain highways.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>32.4167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-110.7000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2643964</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held draft resisters mainly from Granada incarceration camp, some from Poston and Topaz incarceration camps; Gordon Hirabayashi, who was imprisoned after losing his Supreme Court case against the exclusion order, was transferred here to complete his sentence.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">46</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The resisters were transferred to Catalina in leg shackles and under armed guard.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Like McNeil Island Penitentiary, Catalina functioned as a labor camp. Inmates drilled holes, broke rocks with sledgehammers, cleared trees, grew food, and cooked for the entire prison population.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Gordon Hirabayashi had to hitchhike from Spokane, Washington, to Tucson, Arizona, to serve his sentence.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce18a.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-cata-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00270">
				<Label>Retaining wall, March 22, 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Catalina Federal Honor Camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-cata-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00273">
				<Label>Prison Camp Road sign, April 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Catalina Federal Honor Camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-cata-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00380">
				<Label>Recreation site sign, November 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Catalina Federal Honor Camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-cata-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00274">
				<Label>Clearing, April 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Catalina Federal Honor Camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_p-cata-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00271">
				<Label>Former penitentiary site, March 22, 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Catalina Federal Honor Camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_p-cata-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-flor">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Florence</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Florence Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Florence</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Florence, Arizona</LocationName>
			<CityName>Florence</CityName>
			<StateName>Arizona</StateName>
			<Description>Located in Florence, Arizona. Florence is northeast of Casa Grande Ruins National Monument, between Phoenix and Tucson in southern Arizona. Hot desert area with extreme summer temperatures.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>33.0167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-111.3833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7016521</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held individuals of Japanese ancestry.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>A small quantity of Japanese goods including green tea and soybeans were distributed here from the exchange ship M.S. <i>Gripsholm</i> in June 1942 and December 1943.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17p.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-blis">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Bliss</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Bliss Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Bliss</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Bliss, Texas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Bliss</CityName>
			<StateName>Texas</StateName>
			<Description>Located near El Paso in southern Texas, close to the Mexico border.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>31.8000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-106.2000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7021840</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from mainland U.S. and Hawaii, including seventy-three internees transferred from the Santa Fe internment camp; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-10-01">91</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The War Department selected Fort Bliss as one of the three inland facilities to intern people of Japanese descent from Hawaii.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-howa">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Howard</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Howard Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Howard</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Howard, Maryland</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Howard</CityName>
			<StateName>Maryland</StateName>
			<Description>Located on old army barracks within Fort Howard Army Post, Baltimore County, Maryland.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>39.2000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-76.4333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7016252</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S., German nationals, and German prisoners of war (POWs).</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-07-14">30</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts/>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-lewi">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Lewis</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Lewis Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Lewis</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>3/30/1943</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Lewis, Washington</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Lewis</CityName>
			<StateName>Washington</StateName>
			<Description>Located within Fort Lewis Army Base, 17 miles south of Tacoma, Washington.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>47.1333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.4833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7016956</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese descent from Alaska, Hawaii, and the mainland U.S.; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-04">42</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The War Department planned Fort Lewis as a temporary facility. By 1943, all the internees of Japanese and Italian descent were sent to the Department of Justice (DOJ) internment camp at Fort Missoula, Montana; the German internees were transferred to the DOJ internment camp at Fort Lincoln, North Dakota.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-mcdo">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort McDowell</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort McDowell Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort McDowell</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort McDowell, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort McDowell</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Also known as "Angel Island," a 740-acre island in the middle of the San Francisco Bay.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>37.8500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-122.4167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2335391</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese, German, and Italian immigrants from Hawaii; one Norwegian national; and one Japanese prisoner of war (POW).</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-02-21">199</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This facility served as a port of arrival for internees from Hawaii who were then transferred to other inland facilities.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Fort McDowell is more commonly known as "Angel Island," an immigration station that opened in 1910 and was turned over to the War Department in 1940.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-mead">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Meade</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Meade Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Meade</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort George Meade, Maryland</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort George Meade</CityName>
			<StateName>Maryland</StateName>
			<Description>Located southwest of Baltimore in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>39.0000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-76.6167</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014651</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S.; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-04">384</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts/>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17p.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<AdditionalResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link/>
			</AdditionalResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-rich">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Richardson</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Richardson Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Richardson</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Richardson, Alaska</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Richardson</CityName>
			<StateName>Alaska</StateName>
			<Description>Located 9 miles north of downtown Anchorage, Alaska.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>61.2500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-149.6833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2335498</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from Alaska, plus two German nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-02-14">17</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Family members of the interned issei were held here for a short time en route to the Puyallup Assembly Center in Washington.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17o.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-samh">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Sam Houston</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Sam Houston Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Sam Houston</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Sam Houston, Texas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Sam Houston</CityName>
			<StateName>Texas</StateName>
			<Description>Located in San Antonio, Texas.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>29.4167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-98.4833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7014453</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese descent from Alaska and Hawaii; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-04">106</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This facility was used as a temporary holding place while permanent internment camps were being constructed.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17p.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-sill">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Fort Sill</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Fort Sill Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Fort Sill</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed>June 24, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Fort Sill, Oklahoma</LocationName>
			<CityName>Fort Sill</CityName>
			<StateName>Oklahoma</StateName>
			<Description>Located in Comanche County, 3 miles north of Lawton, Oklahoma, southwest of Oklahoma City. The camp saw unusually strong windstorms in the spring and scorching hot temperatures in the summer.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.6167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-98.3667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2335535</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held approximately 700 Japanese immigrants from the continental U.S., plus three German nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-05-04">707</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>In April 1942 windstorms blew so strong that internees often stayed up all night to prevent their tents from collapsing. The internees also suffered through 100 degree temperatures during the summer with no shade to escape the heat.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Fort Sill was run in strict military fashion. The guard towers were equipped with 30-caliber machine guns, shotguns, and searchlights. The internees slept in four-man tents and were forbidden from resting during the day.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On May 13, 1942, a mentally ill internee was shot dead by guards who claimed that he was trying to escape.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17m.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-sill-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00336">
				<Label>Historic marker and tower, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Sill internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-sill-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00512">
				<Label>Concrete slab, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Sill internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-sill-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00509">
				<Label>Field, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Sill internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-sill-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00337">
				<Label>Historic marker, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Sill internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-sill-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00513">
				<Label>Buildings, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Fort Sill internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-sill-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-grif">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Griffith Park</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Griffith Park Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Griffith Park</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>March 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Burbank, California</LocationName>
			<CityName>Burbank</CityName>
			<StateName>California</StateName>
			<Description>Located at a former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp in Southern California.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.1667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-118.3000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7013464</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S.; also held German and Italian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-03-12">19</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This facility temporarily held internees considered by the U.S. government as "potentially dangerous" until they could be transfered to other internment camps.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-hono">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Honouliuli</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Honouliuli Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Honouliuli</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>February 1943</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Honouliuli, Oahu, Hawaii</LocationName>
			<CityName>Honouliuli, Oahu</CityName>
			<StateName>Hawaii</StateName>
			<Description>Located on 160 acres of sugarcane fields northwest of Honolulu. One of two camps used to imprison people of Japanese ancestry in Hawaii.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>21.4167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-158.0667</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2024962</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese ancestry, citizens and non-citizens, male and female; also held European nationals and prisoners of war (POWs) from the Pacific theater. </PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">320</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The U.S. Army housed inmates in fifteen wooden barracks as well as large tents that held six to eight people. Females and POWs were kept in separate areas, each surrounded by barbed-wire fences. Some inmates stayed for a few months, while others remained for more than two years.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>If an inmate of Japanese descent wished to leave the camp and was eligible to do so, he or she was forced to sign a statement promising that he or she would not contest the imprisonment in court. Failure to sign would result in continued imprisonment.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17o.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<AdditionalResourceLink>
			    <Label>World War II Japanese American Internment Sites in Hawaii (22MB pdf)</Label>
				<Link>http://www.densho.org/assets/media/Burton-HawaiiInternmentSitesOverview2007.pdf</Link>
			</AdditionalResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-lord">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Lordsburg</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Lordsburg Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Lordsburg</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>June 15, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>1944</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Lordsburg, New Mexico</LocationName>
			<CityName>Lordsburg</CityName>
			<StateName>New Mexico</StateName>
			<Description>Located on 1,300 acres of desert land near Lordsburg in southwest New Mexico.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>32.3500</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-108.7000</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2067142</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held internees of Japanese ancestry transferred from numerous U.S. Army- and Departmen of Justice-run internment camps; also held German nationals, German and Japanese prisoners of war (POWs), as well as U.S. Army soldiers who had been convicted of various offenses.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">2,500</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Held the U.S. Army's largest number of issei internees with the population peaking at 1,500.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On June 27, 1942, Toshio Kobata and Hirota Isomura, two elderly issei internees, were shot and killed by a guard who claimed they were running towards the fence to escape. The guard was tried and found not guilty by an Army court-martial board even after many internees testified that Kobata and Isomura were both physically disabled.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On August 10, 1942, representatives from the U.S. State Department and Spanish Consulate visited at the request of internees who had been protesting work conditions since June. The Lordsburg military commander, Colonel Lundy, had been ordering internees to build military facilities in harsh conditions and without pay, a violation of the Geneva Convention. Protests had been met with threats and arrests.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17l.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-lord-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00315">
				<Label>P.O.W. Road sign, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Lordsburg internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-lord-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00320">
				<Label>Building, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Lordsburg internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-lord-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00316">
				<Label>Fenced field, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Lordsburg internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-lord-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00321">
				<Label>Concrete debris, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Lordsburg internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-lord-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00318">
				<Label>Decorative seal detail, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Lordsburg internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-lord-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_u-lord-v-001">
				<Label>Tosh Y</Label>
	<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=170&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video</DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-sand">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Sand Island</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Sand Island Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Sand Island</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>December 1941</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>March 1, 1943</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Sand Island, Oahu, Hawaii</LocationName>
			<CityName>Sand Island, Oahu</CityName>
			<StateName>Hawaii</StateName>
			<Description>Located on a five-acre facility near Honolulu Harbor in Hawaii.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>21.3000</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-157.8833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>1008979</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese descent, citizens and non-citizens, men and women; also held Austrian, Finn, German, Italian, and Norwegian nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">300</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Inmates slept in small tents without floorboards and were not permitted newspapers, pencils, pens, or writing paper.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In January 1942, when two spoons and a knife appeared to be missing after a meal, guards conducted a humiliating strip search of 164 male issei internees. The missing utensils were later found in the kitchen.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In July 1942, the camp administrators installed loudspeakers in each barrack. The loudspeakers not only broadcast music, but also served as receivers to monitor inmates' conversations.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17o.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
			    <Label>World War II Japanese American Internment Sites in Hawaii (22MB pdf)</Label>
				<Link>http://www.densho.org/assets/media/Burton-HawaiiInternmentSitesOverview2007.pdf</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>			
			<AdditionalResourceLink>
			    <Label>Sand Island Supplemental Maps (19MB pdf)</Label>
				<Link>http://www.densho.org/assets/media/Burton-SandIsland11x17maps.pdf</Link>
			</AdditionalResourceLink>			
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-sand-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00517">
				<Label>Camp entrance, 1940s</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-sand-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-sand-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="u-stri">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Stringtown</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Stringtown Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Stringtown</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>U.S. Army Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened/>
		<DateClosed/>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Stringtown, Oklahoma</LocationName>
			<CityName>Stringtown</CityName>
			<StateName>Oklahoma</StateName>
			<Description>Located 5 miles north of Stringtown in southern Oklahoma. Currently a medium-security facility, the Mack Alford Correctional Center.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>34.4667</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-96.0500</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2084058</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S., as well as German prisoners of war (POWs).</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>.</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="">176</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Stringtown was established in 1933 as a sub-prison to relieve overcrowding at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17n.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-stri-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00341">
				<Label>Guard tower, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stringtown internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-stri-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00338">
				<Label>Administration building, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stringtown internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-stri-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00340">
				<Label>Wall and barbed wire, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stringtown internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-stri-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00514">
				<Label>Prison building, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stringtown internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_u-stri-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00516">
				<Label>Prison buildings, July 1999</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Stringtown internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_u-stri-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-kene">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Kenedy</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Kenedy Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Kenedy</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 1, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>September 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Kenedy, Texas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Kenedy</CityName>
			<StateName>Texas</StateName>
			<Description>Located 50 miles southeast of San Antonio, Texas, in Karnes County on the site of a closed Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>28.8167</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-97.8333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2105320</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese, German, and Italian descent from the U.S. and Latin America; also held Japanese and German prisoners of war (POWs).</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1943-01-01">2,000</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The townspeople of Kenedy lobbied the federal government to open Kenedy internment camp in order to create jobs and revenue for the town.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) guards counted the inmates twice daily and conducted bed checks three to four times per night.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>This camp held the fourth largest group of Japanese military POWs in the country with the population reaching 590 in 1943.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17d.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-kene-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i115-00004">
				<Label>Internees being processed, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the UT Institute of Texan Cultures at San Antonio.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-kene-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00307">
				<Label>Residential neighborhood, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Kenedy internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-kene-p-003" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00308">
				<Label>Residential street, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Kenedy internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-003s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-003t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-kene-p-004" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00309">
				<Label>Industrial plant, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Kenedy internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-004s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-004t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-kene-p-005" densho_uid="denshopd-i112-00502">
				<Label>Residence, September 1998</Label>
				<Caption>Former site of Kenedy internment camp. Courtesy of the National Park Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-005s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-kene-p-005t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-koos">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Kooskia</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Kooskia Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Kooskia</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>May 1943</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>May 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Kooskia, Idaho </LocationName>
			<CityName>Kooskia</CityName>
			<StateName>Idaho</StateName>
			<Description>Located in Clearwater National Forest in North Central Idaho, 40 miles east of the town of Kooskia. Set in a remote, heavily wooded area, the facility had been a highway construction camp sited on an old Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>46.1333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-115.5833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2025845</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held Japanese immigrants from the U.S. and Latin America, as well as German nationals.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>This camp was unusual in that it operated as a work camp for a road construction project during WWII. Due to a civilian labor shortage in early 1943, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) offered the Public Roads Administration use of male internee labor to build the Lewis and Clark Highway (U.S. Highway 12). In May 1943, the first 175 issei arrived from various locations to the work camp in Kooskia.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>In total, 256 Japanese aliens, 27 white civilian employees (24 male and 3 female) worked here along with a Japanese American interpreter and a German national physician from Bolivia who had volunteered to run the medical facility.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17e.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
			<OfficialResourceLink>
				<Label>The Kooskia Internment Camp Project</Label>
				<Link>http://www.uidaho.edu/LS/AACC/KOOSKIA.HTM</Link>
			</OfficialResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-oldr">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Old Raton Ranch</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Old Raton Ranch Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Old Raton Ranch</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>January 23, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>December 18, 1942</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Lincoln, New Mexico</LocationName>
			<CityName>Lincoln</CityName>
			<StateName>New Mexico</StateName>
			<Description>This short-lived camp was located 13 miles east of Fort Stanton internment camp in the Lincoln National Forest in southern New Mexico.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>33.4833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-105.3833</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2067130</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>This little-known camp held thirty-two inmates of Japanese descent, all from Clovis, New Mexico. Men, women, and children--citizens and non-citizens alike--were rounded up based on their Japanese ancestry. The Department of Justice (DOJ) categorized the issei as "enemy aliens" who were accompanied by their citizen children.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination>Poston, Gila River and Topaz WRA incarceration camps</ExitDestination>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1942-01-23">32</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>On January 23, 1942, a month before Executive Order 9066, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) rounded up all thirty-two Japanese American residents of Clovis and detained them at Old Raton Ranch, an isolated and abandoned campsite. Work, school, and other activities were unavailable to the inmates. After almost a year of these bleak conditions, the Japanese Americans were transferred to War Relocation Authority (WRA) incarceration camps. None of the thirty-two Japanese Americans ever returned to Clovis after the war.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-sant">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Santa Fe</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Santa Fe Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Santa Fe</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>February 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>September 1946</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Santa Fe, New Mexico</LocationName>
			<CityName>Santa Fe</CityName>
			<StateName>New Mexico</StateName>
			<Description>Located 2.5 miles west of the Santa Fe city center, this 80-acre site in northern New Mexico included a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>35.6833</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-105.9333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>7013950</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held people of Japanese descent from the continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, Latin America, and the Pacific Islands. Later included internees transferred from Tule Lake segregation center: 866 Japanese American "renunciants," those who had given up their U.S. citizenship, and 313 designated "troublemakers." After 1942, German and Italian nationals were held here.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate="1945-06-01">2,100</PeakPopulation>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>The security at this facility was similar to that of a military prison: the camp was encircled by twelve-foot-high barbed-wire fences and eleven guard towers with searchlights. The guards were heavily equipped with rifles, side arms, and tear gas.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>This camp operated in two phases. The first phase was as a temporary detention facility that held 826 Japanese immigrants from California who were all sent to War Relocation Authority (WRA) camps by September 1942. The next phase began in February 1943 and included internees transferred from U.S. Army camps as well as issei, nisei, and kibei "troublemakers" from the Tule Lake segregation center.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>On March 12, 1945, tensions erupted at Santa Fe following weeks of conflict between the camp administration and a group of internees from Tule Lake. Guards fired tear gas into a crowd of 250 and began beating the internees. Four were seriously injured and the guards isolated 350 others. Seventeen were transferred to the high-security facility at Fort Stanton, New Mexico.  </Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17i.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-sant-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i116-00001">
				<Label>Poetry group, 1943-1944</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of ManyMountains.org and R. Matsumoto.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-sant-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-sant-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<VideoItem uid="sos_d-sant-v-001">
				<Label>Bill N</Label>
				<DisplayLink>http://www.densho.org/assets/sharedpages/primarysource/primarysource.asp?id=168&amp;display_format=4&amp;section=home&amp;text=1&amp;mediaType=video </DisplayLink>
			</VideoItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
	<Facility UID="d-seag">
		<Name>
			<DenshoName>Seagoville</DenshoName>
			<NPSName>Seagoville Internment Camp</NPSName>
			<ShortName>Seagoville</ShortName>
		</Name>
		<Category>Dept of Justice Internment Camp</Category>
		<DateOpened>April 12, 1942</DateOpened>
		<DateClosed>June 30, 1945</DateClosed>
		<Location>
			<LocationName>Seagoville, Texas</LocationName>
			<CityName>Seagoville</CityName>
			<StateName>Texas</StateName>
			<Description>Located southeast of Dallas, this site was originally a federal prison for women.</Description>
			<GISInfo>
				<GISLat>32.6333</GISLat>
				<GISLong>-96.5333</GISLong>
				<GISTGNId>2107550</GISTGNId>
			</GISInfo>
		</Location>
		<CurrentDisposition></CurrentDisposition>
		<Population>
			<PopulationDescription>Held women and children of Japanese ancestry from the U.S. and Latin America; also held German, Italian, and Japanese immigrants being repatriated to their home countries.</PopulationDescription>
			<ExitDestination/>
			<PeakPopulation peakDate=""/>
		</Population>
		<DistinctiveFacts>
			<Factoid>Seagoville was built as a minimum-security women's prison in 1940. It became the primary location for female internees of Japanese ancestry, such as Japanese language teachers, from 1942 to 1943.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Many German and Japanese immigrants were repatriated to their home countries from Seagoville, including 250 Japanese families.</Factoid>
			<Factoid>Today, Seagoville is a low-security prison for men.</Factoid>
		</DistinctiveFacts>
		<ResourceLinks>
			<NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
				<Label/>
				<Link>http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/anthropology74/ce17j.htm</Link>
			</NPSMoreInfoResourceLink>
		</ResourceLinks>
		<MediaPackage>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-seag-p-001" densho_uid="denshopd-i115-00005">
				<Label>Ball teams and band, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the UT Institute of Texan Cultures at San Antonio.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-seag-p-001s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-seag-p-001t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
			<ImageItem uid="sos_d-seag-p-002" densho_uid="denshopd-i35-00133">
				<Label>Internee children, c. 1943</Label>
				<Caption>Courtesy of the Immigration and Naturalization Service.</Caption>
				<DisplayLink>assets/site/sos_d-seag-p-002s.jpg</DisplayLink>
				<ThumbLink>assets/site/sos_d-seag-p-002t.jpg</ThumbLink>
			</ImageItem>
		</MediaPackage>
	</Facility>
</SoSFacilities>
