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Japanese Interment Camps

Japanese Interment Camps. By: Kirk Eaton. Why were they hated. Because of there ancestors Californians hated them too Economy Their actions in Pearl Harbor. What they had to go through. Left their business and were taken to court Large economic losses Relocation

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Japanese Interment Camps

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  1. Japanese Interment Camps By: Kirk Eaton

  2. Why were they hated • Because of there ancestors • Californians hated them too • Economy • Their actions in Pearl Harbor

  3. What they had to go through • Left their business and were taken to court • Large economic losses • Relocation • Put into Internment Camps

  4. Internment Camps • Officially called relocation camps • Overcrowded and had bad living condition • Leadership in the camps were only provided to the Japanese born in America • Canada had camps for Japanese too • They also made some of them work instead of the camps • They worked on roads and plantations

  5. Internment Camps cont. • There were a total of 10 camps • These camps were in: • California • Idaho • Utah • Arizona • Wyoming • Colorado • Arkansas

  6. During the camps • Leadership in the camps were only given to the Japanese that were born in America • Some were let go if they went to the US Army • Only 1,200 took this offer • Out of all of the people that were sent to the camps, there were only a total of two cases made

  7. After the Camps • The last camp was closed in 1945 • In 1988, the government paid each survivor $20,000 • In all the government paid a total of 60,000 dollars • Canadians also paid their survivors • They paid a total of 21,000 Canadian dollars

  8. Content • Lesson Learned • That everyone in America should be equal • What was done about the situation • There was an argument about the fifth amendment and congress • What should be done so that this does not occur in the future • We should stop blaming other people and take care of things ourselves

  9. Bibliography “Japanese-American Internment Camps”. Book Mice.8/24/2010.<http://www.bookmice.net/darkchilde/japan/camp.html> “Children of the Camps”. Internment History. 1999.net.10/6/2010.http://www.pbs.org/childofcamp/history/index.html Ross, Shmue. “Japanese Relocation Centers”. Infoplease. 2000. 10/6/2010. <http://www.infoplease.com/spot/internment1.html#axzz0ylIFWCdW>

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