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Those two huge boulders in the center of the photo used to be part of Mt. St. Helens. They are now about 6.5 miles away from it.
Col. Jeffery Harris, and Command Sgt. Maj. Drew Underwood, 202nd Military Police Group (CID) cover a monument to Brig. Gen. David H. Stem during a relocation ceremony held on Stem Kaserne June 11. (Photo by Jason L. Austin, Herald Post Staff)
8/18/17 by Nancy Doran, Wildlife and Heritage Service
Wildlife biologists relocate a nuisance bear in Westernport
Former residents of Soliman in Agdao, Davao City rebuild their houses at the relocation site in Los Amigos, Tugbok District on Wednesday, 3 August. Around 200 houses in Soliman were demolished following a court order in favor of the land owner. It can be recalled that the planned demolition last July 1 triggered tension between the residents and the demolition team, inciting Mayor Sara Duterte to punch Sheriff Abe Andres who enforced the demolition. MindaNews Photo by Ruby Thursday More
The Zgrip Handle with C300 Grip Relocator combines our new C300 Grip Relocator with our standard Zgrip Handle . The Zgrip Handle mount is fully articulating and is threaded to attach to one of our 15mm threaded rods. This enables you to make your own C300 Relocator mount to fit in seamlessly with your current kit.
To mount this combination to your rig, you can screw on any length female/female rod to the ½” thread on the Zgrip Handle and then add on a Zacuto Z-release accessory. A common attachment would be the Z-Mount II or Z-Mount Zwivel which would allow you to attach the Zgrip Handle with C300 Grip Relocator to a 15mm rod on your rig.
The Canon 300 removable grip attaches directly to our Relocator handle and our exclusive cable connects to the port on your camera. This product is the only option on the market today that includes the necessary cabling to attach to your camera. Once its plugged in, users have trigger or on/off control, lens aperture control, and a programmable function button that can be set to a number of things including waveform, 1 to 1 zoom, zebras, my menu, and many more.
If you already own a set of Zgrips or any Zgrip handle, you can simply purchase the C300 Grip Relocator and upgrade your Zgrip handle.
If you are looking for a double handgrip option check out our Zgrips V3 with C300 Grip Relocator.
8/18/17 by Nancy Doran, Wildlife and Heritage Service
Wildlife biologists relocate a nuisance bear in Westernport
The Packers and Movers enlisted under the Home Relocation category provide door to door relocation & moving services with a personal touch. Dass Packers and Movers was founded by a group with years of experience on their side and the goal of establishing a quality and service. Our people are professional, curteous, and highly trained.
Manzanar Relocation Center, Manzanar, California. Guayule beds in the lath house at this War Relocation center. These plants are year-old seedlings from the Salinas Experiment Station, and are ready to be transplanted in the open ground.
Moving with children is a big change for all families. It can be a big fuss to go out of the country, in the countryside, or out of the city, leave an old house. We made moving easy and stress-free with kids. Visit us - www.safemove.in.
June 30-July 4, 2018: Konnarock Crew 1 working with Roanoke Appalachian Trail Club on an A.T. relocation on Sinking Creek Mountain in Central VA.
Warehouse Live
Houston, TX
10.14.12
© Rebekah Stearns Photography
Do not use without permission- rebekahs.photogrphy@gmail.com
PA100899
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
GRANADA RELOCATION CENTER (AMACHE) HAS BEEN DESIGNATED A NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK
グラナダ強制収容所 (アマチ)は、
国定史跡に指定されています。
DURING WORLD WAR II, MORE THAN 7,300 JAPANESE AMERICANS WERE INTERNED HERE FOLLOWING THEIR FORCED REMOVAL FROM THE WESTERN UNITED STATES UNDER THE TERMS OF EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066
第二次世界大戦中、7,300人以上の日系アメリカ人が、
大統領令9066号によって、合衆国西部から
強制的に退去させられた後、ここに収容されました。
THIS SITE POSSESSES NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE
IN ILLUSTRATING THE HISTORY OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
これはアメリカ合衆国の歴史の実例となる
国家的に重要な史跡です。
2006年
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
米国内務省国立公園局
NPS Brochure Text:
"Amache National Historic Site
Amache, Colorado
WWII Granada Relocation Center
Prowers County, Southeastern Colorado
".. .sprang up overnight where a short time ago only sagebrush, cactus, and Russian thistles survived the winter snow and the hot summer sun."
—War Relocation Authority, 1943
During World War II, the Granada Relocation Center stretched across 16 square miles of Prowers County. Amache was one square mile surrounded by barbed wire fences and armed guards in watchtowers.
Amache was the 10th largest city in the state of Colorado. With 7,500 internees confined to a square mile, the camp was 50% more densely populated than New York City. Amache's residents were men, women, and children of Japanese descent, mostly native-born citizens.
On February 19, 1942, two and a half months after the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor by Japanese warplanes, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the forced removal and internment of all persons of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast.
The War Relocation Authority (WRA) was a civilian agency established by executive order to organize the removal, relocation, and internment of persons of Japanese descent. The WRA was empowered to employ personnel and purchase property, as well as to design and administer all aspects of the internment program including employment of the internees in civilian jobs or for WRA-managed industries.
Many of the internees had a week or less to dispose of any property they could not carry in two suitcases. Cars, stores, houses, pets, toys, and clothing were sold for pennies on the dollar or abandoned. Of the 126,000 Japanese-descended people then living in the US, twothirds were native-born US citizens.
Nevertheless, over 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans were evicted from their homes and imprisoned — under armed guard — in ten WRA detention centers located in isolated rural areas where harsh living conditions prevailed. Over 11,000 people of German ancestry and 250 of Italian ancestry were also interned during World War II, as well as over 2,000 Japanese Latin Americans who were deported to the United States for imprisonment.
"We of America can bring no honor to ourselves nor commend Democracy and the American way of life to others by surrendering to hysteria, or by persecuting the enemy within our gates, little less the loyal, American-born and law-abiding Japanese who consider America their home."
—Rev. Rufus C Baker, Boulder Ministers' Association, Letter to Governor Ralph Carr, April 17, 1942
The WRA operated makeshift camps in various places including horse stalls at the Santa Anita racetrack in southern California. Internees were assembled at these temporary facilities until the permanent camps were hastily constructed in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Utah, and Wyoming.
After assembling in towns and cities near their homes, the internees were transported in trains, trucks, and buses for imprisonment in camps that were strategically placed where labor was required in local agriculture or manufacturing, but far from population centers to reduce the possibility of escape. Population in the camps varied from 7,500 at Amache to 20,000 at Poston in Arizona.
The sprawling Relocation Center was named for the nearby town of Granada, but mail addressed to internees at "Granada, Colorado" overwhelmed the town's post office. A separate postal designation of "Amache, Colorado" was suggested by then Lamar mayor R.L Christy, for the Cheyenne wife of John Prowers after whom Prowers County was named. "Granada" remains the WRA official designation, but former internees and their descendants refer to it as Amache.
Construction
Construction of Amache began on June 12, 1942, with over 1,000 workers including 50 evacuee volunteers. The Center opened in August 1942 and was filled to capacity by October. At its peak, Amache held 7,597 internees from central and southern California, two-thirds of whom were US citizens.
Amache was surrounded by barbed wire fences and eight guard towers that were manned by armed guards. Although the enclosure resembled a prison from the outside, inside was a large city. It included police and fire departments, a 150-bed hospital, stores, and a post office, as well as all the basic community services including a newspaper, schools, churches, and cemetery. Professional inmate workers including doctors and teachers earned from $12 - $19 a month while Caucasian teachers were paid over $100 a month. Amache residents came from varied backgrounds. There were lawyers, dentists, engineers, scientists, businessmen, farmers, fishermen, gardeners, entertainers, as well as artists including a classical opera singer, and two Walt Disney cartoonists.
Education
Pre-school, elementary, and secondary schools opened on October 12, 1942, offering classes for the nearly 2,000 interned school-age children. The school's isolation added to the usual educational challenges: Amache's school administrators described, "unsatisfactory living conditions, unappetizing food, and transportation worries lowered the morale and enthusiasm" of teachers, noting "the rate of turnover was excessive."
"Frequently children showed a need for more sleep. Parents reported the problems confronting them in getting the children to bed early since the family lived in one room."
"All of these rebuffs and disappointments had their effects upon the morale and attitude of student groups. It was extremely difficult to teach the ideas and ideals of democratic society and to urge their relocation when constant reminders confronted boys and girls with evidences of prejudice and undemocratic procedures."
The Land
The Granada Relocation Center included a vast expanse of 16 square miles used to raise livestock and grow a wide variety of produce. It was one of the largest and most diversified agricultural enterprises of the ten major detention camps.
About half of Amache's internees had been gardeners or farmers when they lived in California. During the years they were held at Amache, over 3,000 internees were employed by the WRA in the agricultural and farming programs.
The farm program included raising vegetable crops, feed crops, beef and dairy cattle, poultry, and hogs. Even the high school had a 500 acre farm that was run by vocational agriculture students.
In May 1943, the agricultural projects at Amache encompassed 5,600 acres of vegetables, grain, alfalfa, and pasture lands. The land under cultivation included parts of the XY and Koen Ranches that were purchased by the WRA at the start of World War II. The intensive farming and animal husbandry conducted at the Granada Relocation Center required water rights from the Lamar, Manvel, and XY canals, which the WRA purchased.
Military Service
Amache had the highest rate of volunteerism of all the camps: ten percent of the population volunteered for military service. Amache internees served in many units including the highly decorated 442nd Regimental Combat Team, as well as the Women's Army Corps and the Nurses Army Corps. Amache soldiers received 38 combat pins and badges for conduct under fire as well as various other medals and citations. While some internees embraced the opportunity to serve their country, others protested the idea of military service while they and their families were imprisoned and living under armed guard. In July 1944, 11 young men from Amache received 10-18 month sentences for draft evasion. Nearly three dozen Nisei (second-generation Japanese Americans) soldiers from Amache lost their lives in World War II.
In 1983 the Denver Central Optimist Club placed a monument with the following inscription at the Amache cemetery: "Dedicated to the 31 patriotic Japanese Americans who volunteered from Amache and dutifully gave their lives in World War II, to the approximately 7,000 people who were relocated at Amache, and to the 120 who died here during this period of relocation, August 27, 1942 — October 14, 1945."
Within the Barbed Wire
The one-square-mile camp was surrounded by a four-strand barbed wire fence, with eight guard towers along the perimeter equipped with searchlights and staffed by armed military police. The Amache towers were unique for their octagonal lookouts. The only entry gate was near the center of the north side, about a half mile south of US Highway 50.
The buildings at Amache were laid out on a north-south grid like most of the other internment centers. But its 560 buildings were of superior construction than those in the other nine major camps because Amache was the WRA's showcase for visiting government officials and politicians. Instead of post and pier foundations, which broke and blistered in the desert heat, Amache's barracks generally had concrete perimeter foundations with solid brick or slab floors. These buildings were also finished with fiberboard or asbestos shingles rather than tar paper common at most of the other detention centers.
Amache had 30 residential blocks. Each block included 12 barracks used for living quarters, one for the mess hall, and one for recreation. Many blocks used their recreation barracks as a community hall for civic groups such as the Red Cross, Boy Scouts, YMCA, nursery schools, and churches.
Each block also had one multiple-use building with toilets, showers, and laundry areas. Without toilet facilities in the barracks, internees had to walk through the cold and dark of night and brave blizzards and dust storms to reach the military-style, unpartitioned latrines. The dehumanizing lack of privacy for personal hygiene was one of the fundamental complaints, especially among the elderly.
The slab foundations of most Amache mess halls, communal latrines, and laundry buildings are still in place. Many of the barracks foundations are also intact at Amache because of the concrete perimeter foundations, some of which rise nearly two feet above the ground.
The small building at the cemetery had a concrete foundation, brick walls, and a corrugated metal roof over a wood frame. It was apparently constructed by the internees to store cremated remains and is depicted on the September 1944 WRA map, just west of the grave sites. Shortly before Amache was closed, internees placed a polished granite memorial inside to honor those who died there while imprisoned. The stone has been vandalized and is chipped in several places by rifle slugs.
Following closure of Amache, the agricultural lands reverted to private farming and ranching. The camp buildings were demolished or sold to local towns, school districts, and the University of Denver.
The camp was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 18, 1994, and designated a National Historic Landmark on February 10, 2006. Today, the only surviving signs of the 10th largest city in Colorado — the Amache detention center — is the small brick structure housing the granite slab memorial, the cemetery, building foundations, roads, and a reservoir. In 2013, the original water tank was restored and a replica guard tower was built.
Life in Amache
Life on the block at Amache centered on the mess hall not only for the three daily meals, but for meetings, classes, and entertainment. The hall measured 40 x 100 feet and held up to 250 people.
"The meals are served cafeteria style, each individual lining up at the counter to receive his plate and then sitting down at a long wooden table. The kitchen personnel is comprised entirely of internees." —WRA
Meals combined American and Japanese food, but the assemblyline service and mass seating made the traditional family mealtime impossible. The customarily close-knit Japanese family structure was further undermined by the institutional regulation of daily life.
Amache high school, with its multi-purpose auditorium/gymnasium, was reputedly the most expensive building in Prowers County, which led to outsider complaints of partiality toward the internees at Amache. On November 4, 1942, the Amache newspaper, the Granada Pioneer, reported that the US Congressman from northern Colorado, William S. Hill, wrote to the Greeley Tribune that he had received "many letters protesting the fine treatment received by Japanese in relocation centers," and that he sought to "squelch rumors" about favoritism toward the internees.
The Granada Pioneer noted in its first edition, published October 14, 1942, that the assistant project director, Donald E. Harbison, announced that permits for internees to shop in the nearby town of Lamar had been "curtailed" because the small stores there could not support the needs of the internees as well as their local customers. The internees were apparently "leaving little for farmers who go into town to exchange their eggs and produce for manufactured goods." The Pioneer noted that exceptions would be made for medical and dental emergencies, but only with a doctor's certificate.
Amache was soon served by a 150-bed hospital. Illness was a constant threat because of the dense living conditions in the camp. The Granada Pioneer regularly mentioned outbreaks of illnesses on various blocks and noted in the summer of 1944 that the camp must go "all out" to combat polio.
The residents of Amache soon became virtually self-sufficient. In mid-November 1942, each residential block received five sewing machines and internees established a tofu factory by the fall of 1943. The camp consumer's cooperative — Amache Consumer's Enterprises Inc. — was one of the largest in Colorado. Its 2,387 members owned nearly 5,000 shares and operated a clothing store, variety store, shoe store, shoe repair shop, dry cleaner, barber shop, beauty parlor, canteen, watch repair shop, and an optometry. The coop's gross sales totaled more than $40,000 per month.
The many skilled professionals and crafts people in the camp were a rich source of knowledge for adult night classes. Instruction was offered in a wide variety of areas such as typing, shorthand, English, dressmaking, drafting, woodcarving, painting, embroidery, poetry, Japanese calligraphy, flower arranging, and bonsai. The recreation program included movies, plays, concerts, sports, talent shows, and exhibitions.
"...passage from room to room, to library, office, or lavatory, could be attained only by stepping out in the periodic fury of dust and sand."
—Amache school principal
Internees skilled in farming and gardening established ornamental gardens, often improvising creative methods of specialized irrigation and soil treatment to soften the stark and arid landscape within the residential area. Amache's sandy soil became wind-blown when the native vegetation was removed, so gardening provided a practical ecological function as well as a psychological function of "place-making" — giving one's environment a personal touch.
The ornamental gardens around the Amache school may have been in response to a comment by the Amache school principal who wrote, "passage from room to room, to library, office, or lavatory, could be attained only by stepping out in the periodic fury of dust and sand." Researchers at the on-going archaeological dig at Amache have noted that dozens of schoolchildren submitted landscaping plans for the school.
park map
topo map
Regulation and Administration
The internees, with the exception of the Issei (first-generation Japanese) comprised the camp's governing body. Representatives were elected from each block for the Block Managers Assembly. Five of the block representatives were chosen to serve on an executive council with three WRA administrators. The council passed laws and regulations, in addition to the WRA regulations, and appointed the judicial and arbitration commissions.
The Amache Post Office was managed by five Caucasian civil service personnel who were assisted by an internee postmaster and six internee clerks. Fifteen internee mail carriers delivered mail daily.
The Amache Fire Department was equipped with two up-to-date Ford pump trucks. Three crews of 8-10 firefighters worked rotating shifts under the management of Caucasian supervisors and an internee fire chief. Each block also had volunteer auxiliary firefighters.
The Amache Police Department was headed by a Caucasian security officer and modeled on an urban police force with an internee chief, a dozen captains and sergeants, and 48 patrolmen who worked 8-hour shifts. The Military Police who guarded the camp perimeter were not responsible for internal law enforcement.
" . . . nations that forget or ignore injustices are more likely to repeat them."
—Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians
Redress and Reparations
Farmland property losses from the 1942 forced removal are conservatively estimated at $72.6 million in wartime (1941-1945) dollars, the equivalent of more than one billion dollars in today's currency. Former internees filed a class-action lawsuit for redress in 1983, but it was rejected on a technicality. Had the class action prevailed, meaningful reparations based on proven losses might have been paid to survivors and to the surviving heirs of former prisoners who died before receiving compensation. Instead, in 1988 the US Congress limited compensation to $20,000, which was paid only to the living former internees who agreed to forever release the US government from further claims. Surviving Japanese Latin Americans who were shipped to the US for imprisonment during WWII received only $5000. Children of persons who lost everything received nothing unless they too had been imprisoned. Ultimately, about one-half of those imprisoned received the token compensation, but the lingering impact of their selective imprisonment — for no reason other than their race — continues to resonate within the Japanese American community.
Source: Friends of Amache Brochure (March 2014)
Amache National Historic Site — March 18, 2022 (authorized)
For More Information
Please Visit The NPS Website
Documents
A History of Transplants: A Study of Entryway Gardens at Amache (©David H. Garrison, Master's Thesis University of Denver, August 2015)
Amache Japanese-American Relocation Center (Amache Preservation Society)
Amache: Special Resource Study (October 2022)
Amache Special Resource Study: Newsletter #1 (February 2020)
Amache Special Resource Study: Newsletter #2 (April 2021)
An Analysis of Modified Material Culture from Amache: Investigating the Landscape of Japanese American Internment (©Paul Swader, Master's Thesis University of Denver, March 2015)
Artifacts, Contested Histories, and Other Archaeological Hotspots (Bonnie J. Clark, extract from Historical Archaeology, Vol. 52, 2018)
Auto Tour Podcasts (Amache Preservation Society)
Map
1. Kiosk and National Historic Landmark Marker
2. 6H Garden and Koi Pond, Barracks, Mess Hall, Latrine
2.1. Barracks
2.2. Mess Hall
2.3 Latrine and Laundry
2.4 Garden with Koi Pond
3. 8H Elementary School
4. The Guard Tower
5. Internee Inscriptions and 9L Social Gardens
5.2 9L Social Gardens
6. Amache High School
7. Co-op
8. Amache Cemetery
9. Boy Scouts Headquarters
10. The Silk Screen Shop
11. Amache Agriculture: Yesterday and Today
Bibliography: Amache (Date Unknown)
Brewing Behind Barbed Wire: An Archaeology of Saké at Amache (©Christian A. Driver, Master's Thesis University of Denver, August 2015)
Communities Negotiating Preservation: The World War II Japanese Internment Camp of Amache (Jennifer Otto, extract from Southeast Colorado Heritage Tourism Report, 2009, ©Wash Park Media)
Community Identity in "The Granada Pioneer" (©Jessica P.S. Gebhard, Master's Thesis University of Denver, June 2015)
Confinement and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites (HTML edition, UW Press 2002 rev. ed.) Western Archeological and Conservation Center Publications in Anthropology 74 (Jeffrey F. Burton, Mary M. Farrell, Florence B. Lord and Richard W. Lord, 1999)
Cultivating Community: The Archaeology of Japanese American Confinement at Amache (Bonnie Clark, extract from Legacies of Space and Intangible Heritage: Archaeology, Ethnohistory, and the Politics of Cultural Continuity in the Americas, 2017, ©University Press of Colorado)
Densho Collections & Research
Densho Encyclopedia: Amache (Granda)
DU Amache Research Project
Enabling Legislation: Amache National Historic Site Act P.L. 117-106 (March 18, 2022)
Feminine Identity Confined: The Archaeology of Japanese Women at Amache, a WWII Internment Camp (©Dana Ogo Shew, Master's Thesis University of Denver, June 2010)
Field School Summaries: Amache Research Project (University of Denver)
Summer 2008 • Summer 2010 • December 2014 • 2016 • 2018
Final Report: Japanese Evacuation from the West Coast 1942 (J.L. DeWitt, 1943)
Foundation Document, Amache National Historic Site, Colorado (January 2024)
Foundation Document Overview, Amache National Historic Site, Colorado (January 2024)
Foundation Document (Draft), Amache National Historic Site, Colorado (March 2023)
Granada Pioneer (Amache, Colo.) (1942-1945)
Japanese Americans in World War II: National Historic Landmarks Theme Study (Barbara Wyatt, ed., August 2012)
Japanese American Confinement Sites Digital Collection (National Japanese American Historical Society)
Japanese-American Internment Sites Preservation (January 2001)
Japanese Imprisonment at Amache (Christian Heimburger, Date Unknown)
National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form
Granada Relocation Center (Thoma H. Simmons, R. Laurie Simmons, Diane Bell, Greg Kendrick and Kara M. Miyagishima, August 2004)
Newsletter: Amache Alliance
2022: Winter • Spring • Summer
2023: Winter
2024: Spring
Newsletters: Amache Historical Society II
2017: Spring • Summer • Fall
2018: Spring • Winter
2019: Spring • Fall
2020: Special • Summer
2021: Spring • Fall
Newsletter: Amache Preservation Society
2016: Chirstmas
Newsletters: Amache Research Project (University of Denver)
April 2009 • Winter 2011 • Spring 2012 • Spring 2013 • Spring 2014 • Spring 2015 • Spring 2016 • Spring 2017 • Spring 2018 • Spring 2019 • Winter 2020 • Spring 2022 • Spring 2023
Perseverance and Prejudice: Maintaining Community in Amache, Colorado's World War II Japanese Internment Camp (Dana Ogo Shew and April Elizabeth Kamp-Whittaker, extract from Prisoners of War: Archaeology, Memory, and Heritage of 19th- and 20th-Century Mass Internment, 2017, ©Springer Science+Business Media)
Personal Justice Denied: Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, Part 1 (HTML edition) (December 1982)
Short History of Amache Japanese Internment Camp (Date Unknown)
Snapshots of Confinement: Memory and Materiality of Japanese Americans' World War II Era Photo Albums (©Whitney J. Peterson, Master's Thesis University of Denver, November 2018)
Suggestions for Visitors to Granada Relocation Center (Amache) National Historic Landmark, near Granada, CO (Amache Preservation Society, 2021)
The Archaeology of Entryway Gardens at Amache (Bonnie Clark, extract from The Journal of the North American Japanese Garden Association, Issue No. 4, 2017)
The Archaeology of Interment (Archaeology, Vol. 64 No. 3, May/June 2011, ©Archaeological Institute of America)
The Role of Amache Family Objects in the Japanese American Internment Experience: Examined Through Object Biography and Object Agency (©Rebecca M. Cruz, Master's Thesis University of Denver, August 2016)
The Sounds of Being "Un-American": Embodied Cultural Trauma Within Japanese American Musical Worlds (©Kyle Przybylski, Master's Thesis University of Denver, June 2020)
Through the Eyes of a Child: The Archaeology of WWII Japanese American Internment at Amache (©April Kamp-Whittaker, Master's Thesis University of Denver, June 2010)
When the Foreign is not Exotic: Ceramics at Colorado's WWII Japanese Internment Camp (Stephanie A. Skiles and Bonnie J. Clark, extract from Trade and Exchange: Archaeological Studies from History and Prehistory, 2010, ©Springer Science+Business Media)
Whose Community Museum Is It? Collaboration Strategies and Identity Affirmation in the Amache Museum (©Ting-chun (Regina) Huang, Master's Thesis University of Denver, June 2019)
Words Can Lie or Clarify: Terminology of the World War II Incarceration of Japanese Americans (©Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga, 2009)
Words Do Matter: A Note on Inappropriate Terminology and the Incarceration of the Japanese Americans (©Roger Daniels, 2005)
Wrestling with Tradition: Japanese Activities at Amache, a World War II Incarceration Facility (©Zachary A. Starke, Master's Thesis University of Denver, August 2015)
Videos
An Archaeology of Gardens and Gardeners at Amache Duration: 36:05 (Bonnie Clark, June 12, 2020)
Last Updated: 01-Jan-2025"
this was a bitterly cold day, the wind whipped what snow there was into the air, blowing it around, the temperature was supposed to go down to -25 if you counted the wind chill. on a mission to relocate, this young lady and her friend moved her collection of things in a shopping cart to another location, they pass the Bongo Dave painting on the wall of the Nghiem building, more snow falls, now and then they stop for a smoke, they must have been near broke as that night I saw them while on Ken lookout, panhandling as a duo in front of one of the shops on George Street.
Crews from Verizon Installing New Telephone Poles. The Telephone Pole Relocation is the First Step to Building a New Sidewalk. The Wires will be Transfered to the New Poles. The Old Poles will be Removed.
western diamondback relocated today...he denned under our house. I didn't want to move him because it's getting cold again, but hubby said move him or he dies...so we moved him. I found a good spot for him , someplace where he can be protected for the rest of the winter and food will be close by.
Exhibit inside the Visitor Center
In February 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. It authorized the relocation of all Japanese-Americans living on the West Coast of the United States. Over 120,000 people were sent to 10 war relocation centers. One of them was Manzanar, located in the harsh but beautiful Owens Valley of eastern California. Eventually over 10,000 Japanese-Americans were forced to live in this 500 acre compound for the duration of World War II. Today the National Park Service oversees the site.
www.fuelculture.com/projectcars/author/2013HyundaiGenesis/ A quick look at our power steering relocation using the factory parts in place.
Historic Leon River Bridge in Hamilton, Texas. The bridge is a Warren pony truss and was constructed in 1906 over the Leon River on what became County Road 222. The bridge was replaced 2017 and moved to the Hamilton County Historical Museum in Hamilton.
Tri Valley Recyclers is a premier office mover, committed to help making your business move as simple as possible. Our services include the moving/relocation of:
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8/18/17 by Nancy Doran, Wildlife and Heritage Service
Wildlife biologists relocate a nuisance bear in Westernport
Stream relocation project in Germantown, Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Department of Transportation (DOT) is relocating an existing stream, which currently runs in a straight
roadside channel along Donges Bay Road just east of Fond Du Lac Avenue (STH 145). Latitude, longitude is 43.2062, -88.082. The road is being widened as part of an
intersection reconstruction. The DOT is shifting the channel away from the road and reconstructing it into a meandering channel with rock/riffle material and native
plantings in the riparian zone.
Photo from October 17, 2015. The channel was constructed in summer 2015. Currently, the new channel is "dry" and disconnected from the existing stream at its upstream end;
the existing stream will be rerouted into the new channel in 2016.
Plans and specs for this project are available online from the Wisconsin DOT bidding website. It is State project 2475-00-72. It was Project 16 from the March 10, 2015 bid
letting. I've included a couple snapshots from the plan set.
Relocated closer to the entrance if I remember correctly as well as larger than I recall. (Everyone says it's small). Very crowded.
Apparently the smile changes if you look at the painting in your peripheral vision (BBC article).