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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOn this date in 1942
The first Japanese-Americans evacuated by the U.S. Army during World War II arrived at the internment camp in Manzanar, Calif.
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On this date in 1942 (Original Post)
Dyedinthewoolliberal
Mar 2022
OP
Bernardo de La Paz
(48,982 posts)1. Ansel Adams made these photographs lest we forget
Library of Congress: https://www.loc.gov/collections/ansel-adams-manzanar/about-this-collection/
In 1943, Ansel Adams (1902-1984), America's most well-known photographer, documented the Manzanar War Relocation Center in California and the Japanese-Americans interned there during World War II. For the first time, digital scans of both Adams's original negatives and his photographic prints appear side by side allowing viewers to see Adams's darkroom technique, in particular, how he cropped his prints. Adams's Manzanar work is a departure from his signature style landscape photography. Although a majority of the more than 200 photographs are portraits, the images also include views of daily life, agricultural scenes, and sports and leisure activities (see Collection Highlights). When offering the collection to the Library in 1965, Adams said in a letter, "The purpose of my work was to show how these people, suffering under a great injustice, and loss of property, businesses and professions, had overcome the sense of defeat and dispair [sic] by building for themselves a vital community in an arid (but magnificent) environment....All in all, I think this Manzanar Collection is an important historical document, and I trust it can be put to good use." The web site also includes digital images of the first edition of Born Free and Equal, Adams's publication based on his work at Manzanar.
betsuni
(25,436 posts)2. I didn't know that the site of the Western Washington Fair in Puyallup, Washington, was
a temporary internment camp until I was an adult. Attended the fair as a young person and had no idea. Also had no idea that a Japanese family in my small town had owned a lot of property near the beach where we lived and grew strawberries. Most of the Japanese people who owned farms, hotels, other businesses in the Pacific Northwest lost all.