____
Pomona
The Treatment of Veterans in Pomona During the War
The Pomona Fairgrounds During the War
Most of the internment camps in the United States, the majority were located in California. After the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, nearly “20,000 of the 93,000 Japanese-Americans who lived in California would be led--- without the due process of legal hearing---behind the barbed-wire fences of Santa Anita.”[4] Of those, 5,000 Japanese-Americans were forcibly re-located to the “Pomona fairgrounds near the Los Angeles County’s eastern border.”[5] During the internment of Japanese Americans, the majority were concentrated in the Santa Anita Racetracks with a second concentration at the Pomona Fairgrounds, now known as the Fairplex. About 5,000 Japanese stayed in the interment camp there, that is not including those who were transferred to Wyoming internment camps. Many of these Japanese Americans at the internment camps had to replicate most of their lifestyles they had left behind. This did not only affect those who were in the camps but as well those who participated in the war.
In addition the Fairgrounds were not only used for internment.
Before they were used to imprison the Japanese they were used as a training ground for civilian-soldiers. Southern California and San Joaquin Valley cities sent their citizen-soldiers to the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds at Pomona for the opening of the California National Guard's first winter field training camp since the World War I Armistice [6]. In 1939, The Fairplex was used as the winter camp to have extra training for the soldiers.The training was opened to public. In Compliance with orders of President Roosevelt for extra training by the National Guard, the Pomona encampment will be intensive and there will be night operations[7]. The training was ordered by President Roosevelt and made sure the soldiers were well-trained. The soldiers would carried their own equipment to the winter camps, such as machine-guns. The purpose of the training was to give an idea to the Guardsmen what to expect during war time.
Footnotes
[1] “Invasion Beaches Are Bombed: State Jr, C. of C. Ends War Confab,” The Santa Cruz Sentinel-News, May 7, 1944. 1.
[2]“Invasion Beaches Are Bombed,” 1
[3] Ibid, 1.
[4] Berkley Hudson, “The Hurt Is Still There: Reparations Evoke Painful Recollections,” Los Angeles Times, August 25, 1988. 10.
[5] Berkley Hudson, “The Hurt Is Still There,”10.
[6] Guardsmen Leave Today: “Intensive Training Planned at Pomona,” Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1939, A3.
[7] “Guardsmen Leave Today: “Intensive Training Planned at Pomona,” Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1939, A3.
[6] Guardsmen Leave Today: “Intensive Training Planned at Pomona,” Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1939, A3.
[7] “Guardsmen Leave Today: “Intensive Training Planned at Pomona,” Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1939, A3.
Discussion of "____"
Add your voice to this discussion.
Checking your signed in status ...