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Archives in Context: Teachable Topics from the CSU Japanese American Digitization Project
Main Menu
About this Guide
Introduction to Archives in Context
Lessons: Testing Loyalties
Lessons: In the Courts
Resources for Teaching & Learning
Educational resources to assist teachers and students
California State University, Dominguez Hills
Korematsu found guilty
1
2021-03-29T10:17:52-07:00
Steve Kutay
2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3
38502
1
Fred Toyosaburo Korematsu’s trial took place before Federal Judge Adolphus F. St. Sure in San Francisco. Fred was found guilty, sentenced to 5 months probation, and sent back to Tanforan Assembly Center, while his lawyer, Wayne M. Collins, filed the planned appeal. This flyer for a UCLA event on October 19, 1982 featured the Korematsu case.
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2021-03-29T10:17:52-07:00
Steve Kutay
2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3
This page has tags:
1
media/crt_des_sac_jaac_2104.jpg
2021-01-03T21:44:22-08:00
Steve Kutay
2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3
Timeline: Cases
Steve Kutay
39
A timeline of events associated with court cases involving Japanese American incarcerees.
timeline
2021-06-07T21:48:28-07:00
Steve Kutay
2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3
Contents of this tag:
1
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2021-03-10T18:59:24-08:00
U.S. declares war on Japan
8
U.S. declares war on Japan and the arrests of Japanese American community leaders begin. Three days later war is also declared on Germany and Italy. This photograph of Tomoji Wada was taken December 7, 1941 after being questioned and released by the FBI at Terminal Island.
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2021-03-15T11:04:41-07:00
1
2021-03-12T15:04:53-08:00
Military zones designated on West Coast
6
After General DeWitt designates western coastal areas as places where people of Japanese descent should be removed, the Wartime Civil Control Administration (WCCA) opened 15 Assembly Centers to detain them. This is a map, circa 1942, of military areas in Washington, Oregon, California, and Nevada, describing the amount of Japanese population in these areas. A page from Wartime Civil Control Administration bulletin, 12.
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2021-03-15T13:12:11-07:00
1
2021-03-05T16:23:21-08:00
Roosevelt signs Alien Registration Act
6
After the fall of France and rumors of espionage, President Roosevelt signed the Alien Registration Act (popularly known as the Smith Act), which for the first time required all resident aliens to register, be fingerprinted, and inform the government of any change of address. Aliens were issued identity cards. This aided the initial FBI roundup of aliens within 24 hours of Pearl Harbor totaling 1,717 people of which 1,212 were Japanese. Seen here is an alien registration receipt card, Form AR-3, for Tomoye Takano from 1942.
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2021-03-15T10:57:20-07:00
1
2021-03-15T16:31:39-07:00
Minori Yasui challenges curfew
5
Minori Yasui, a twenty-five-year-old lawyer, deliberately made himself a test case by walking around Portland after 8 pm to challenge the constitutionality of the curfew and turned himself in. He was charged with curfew violation. This article titled, "Curfew Law is Questioned" from the April 3, 1942 issue is of the official newspaper of the Granada concentration camp reports on the the challenges by Yasui & Gordon Hirabayashi.
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2021-03-15T16:42:21-07:00
1
2021-03-11T15:14:23-08:00
Japan attacks U.S.
3
Attack on Pearl Harbor where 3,500 U.S. servicemen were killed or wounded. This article by John Nevin Sayre was published in January of 1942, in an issue of "Fellowship: the journal of the Fellowship of Reconciliation." It focuses on the problems in going to war, racial discrimination, and focus on pacifism.
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2021-03-15T11:01:15-07:00
1
2021-03-15T10:27:21-07:00
Public proclamation no.3 creates selective ethnic curfew
3
General DeWitt issued Proclamation 3, which ordered a curfew requiring all alien Japanese, Germans, and Italians to stay within their place of residence or employment (if it was not more than 5 miles from home) between the hours of 8:00 pm and 6:00 am. This was followed 3 days later by Proclamation 4 prohibiting all persons of Japanese ancestry in the coastal Military Area No. 1 from leaving that area for any purpose and then Proclamation 6 extended it to all the Japanese in Military Area No. 2 further inland.
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2021-03-15T13:21:20-07:00
1
2021-04-09T16:02:19-07:00
Exclusion order rescinded
3
War Department announces that the exclusion order is rescinded since the military necessity for the incarceration had been alleviated, effective January 2, 1945, and the ban on Japanese Americans returning to their former homes would be rescinded. WRA announces all the camps would close before the end of 1945. Included here is the press release announcing the recission.
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2021-04-12T19:33:16-07:00
1
2021-03-10T19:57:21-08:00
Japanese American draft status restricted
3
Japanese American draft status is changed from 1-A (available for unrestricted military service) to 4-C (“enemy alien” or dual national). Draft boards had stopped calling up Japanese Americans for military service before this. Seen here is a letter from Hideo Hashimoto to The Japanese Methodist Church, on April 13, 1942, to the congregation and friends where he summarizes his treament after Pearl Harbor and the state of the country the day before the mass removal order.
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2021-03-15T11:07:04-07:00
1
2021-03-12T10:18:53-08:00
Executive order 9066 paves way for incarceration camps
3
President Roosevelt signs Executive Order 9066 authorizing military authorities to exclude civilians from any area without trial or hearing. The text of Executive Order 9066 which authorized the Secretary of War to prescribe military areas. This order allowed the Secretary of War to create the internment and incarceration camps as well as the authority to enforce compliance for evacuation.
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2021-03-15T13:05:29-07:00
1
2021-03-23T19:29:59-07:00
ACLU drops challenge to consitutionality of Japanese American incarceration
3
American Civil Liberties Union decides not to contest the constitutionality of incarcerating Japanese American citizens. This statement delivered by Dillon S. Myer, Director, War Relocation Authority details the constitutional principles involved in the relocation program by focusing on the leave regulations permitted and how they are carried out.
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2021-03-29T09:45:16-07:00
1
2021-03-15T17:11:39-07:00
Student activist Hirabayashi fights treatment of Japanese Americans
2
Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi, a twenty-four-year-old college student, turned himself in to the Seattle FBI office and was charged with failing to register after the removal orders and violating the curfew. He chose to stay in the Seattle King County Federal jail refusing bail, which would have only provided him with the option to go to one of the WRA camps. This letter from the Hirabayashi Defense Committee was distributed to potential donors in January, 1943 to raise funds to take his case to the Supreme Court.
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2021-03-23T19:01:44-07:00
1
2021-03-29T15:41:35-07:00
Yasui, Hirabayashi, and Korematsu before Ninth Circuit Court
2
The Yasui, Hirabayashi, and Korematsu court cases came before the seven-judge Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. Edward J. Ennis represented the War Department and argued for the military necessity of the curfew and mass removal. The judges declined to rule on Hirabayashi and Yasui, sending their cases directly to the Supreme Court, and asked the Supreme Court whether it was appropriate to rule on the Korematsu appeal since the previous judge only sentenced probation, which technically is not a final judgment that can be appealed. Included here is a 1982 reprint of a report on "un-American activities" from 1943-45.
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2021-03-29T15:42:07-07:00
1
2021-03-11T15:33:49-08:00
West Coast Congress calls for evacuations
2
A resolution signed by every member of Congress from the West Coast was sent to President Roosevelt calling for the immediate evacuation of all persons of Japanese lineage from Alaska (territory), Washington, Oregon, and California. Here is a list created on February 10, 1942 containing names, addresses, number of acres held and parcel numbers on map of Japanese tenants. It seems this document is preparation for Executive Order 9066 issued on February 19, 1942.
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2021-03-15T11:10:22-07:00
1
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2021-03-23T19:47:33-07:00
Fred Korematsu arrested in San Francisco
2
Fred Toyosaburo Korematsu, a twenty-three-year-old welder, had plastic surgery and assumed a false identity to pass himself off as a Spanish Hawaiian. He was recognized and arrested for not obeying the exclusion order and jailed in San Francisco. Ernest Besig, an ACLU lawyer looking for a test case, bailed Fred out and he ended up at Tanforan Assembly Center and later the Topaz WRA camp. Fred is seen in this photo from January 15, 1988 with Jack Herzig at the Smithsonian Institute National Museum of American History during the reception following the ceremony awarding Fred the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
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2021-03-23T19:49:30-07:00
1
2021-03-29T16:49:54-07:00
Supreme Court hears curfew cases
2
Supreme Court agrees to hear Hirabayashi and Yasui cases, but sends Korematsu back to the Ninth Circuit for a decision. Supreme Court upholds the Hirabayashi decision of guilt for the curfew violation, 9-0, and turned a blind eye to his failing to report for the mass removal. They also ruled unanimously to uphold the Yasui conviction and sent it back to the Ninth Circuit for sentencing. Judge Fee considered the nine months Yasui already served in prison sufficient and suspended the fine. Yasui was escorted to the Minidoka WRA Camp. This issue of the Rowher Outpost from June 26, 1943 discusses the results of the Supreme Court decision.
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2021-03-29T16:59:36-07:00
1
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2021-05-16T16:05:33-07:00
U.S. bombs Japan
2
The U.S. drops an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima, and bombs Nagasaki three days later on August 9th. Japan surrenders. This is a group photo of the Hiroshima Nikkei Club. Photograph inscription: "Top row, 2nd from left Bill Rokumoto, who died in the Hiroshima nuclear bombing. Ruby Sakoda Row 2, second from right with Susie and Betty Niko. May Sakoda, Row 1, second from left. Hiroshima Nikkei Club members with Rev. Huckabee. James M. Sakoda, Row 1, right end."
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2021-05-16T16:07:56-07:00
1
2021-03-23T20:23:27-07:00
Trial of Minori Yasui
2
Minori Yasui’s trial before Federal District Judge James Alger Fee, who for reasons that are unclear, did not reveal his verdict for 5 months. Yasui was sent back to the Portland Assembly Center and then on to the WRA camp in Minidoka, Idaho. This front page from the Granada Camp newsparer issue from June 23, 1943 features an article regarding the consistutionality test cases such as Yasui's.
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2021-03-23T20:25:47-07:00
1
2021-03-29T22:31:13-07:00
War dept. creates segregated military
2
The date that the 100th Infantry Battalion was shipped to North Africa. The War Department decided to create segregated Japanese American army units—the 100th Infantry Battalion and the 442nd Regiment Combat Team. There were calls for volunteers and about 10,000 volunteers (2,686 chosen) from Hawaii (where there were no incarceration camps) and 1,256 volunteers (about 800 chosen) from mainland WRA camps. This pamphlet from 1944 covers Nisei in the 100th battalion serving in the armed forces during World War II.
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2021-03-29T22:31:49-07:00
1
2021-03-12T14:34:52-08:00
Executive order 9102 creates War Relocation Authority
2
The War Relocation Authority (WRA) was established through Roosevelt's Executive Order 9102, which defined its functions and duties and resulted in the transfer of 119,803 men, women, and children to these more permanent facilities occurred when they were completed.
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2021-03-15T13:07:47-07:00
1
2021-05-16T16:55:48-07:00
Manazanar Pilgrimage
2
Manzanar Pilgrimage becomes exemplar for refocusing community attention on the WRA camps. Here is page 8 from the 40th anniversary program from 2009, featuring information from previous events.
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2021-05-16T16:57:19-07:00
1
2021-03-12T15:28:58-08:00
Disobedience a misdemeanor in Public Law 503
2
A statute was drafted by the War Department providing penalties for civilians who disobeyed a military order, unless martial law had been declared, making disobedience a misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment of not more than a year or a $5,000 fine upon conviction. This passed both houses without a dissenting vote and the president made it Public Law 503 in March 21st.
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2021-03-15T13:15:27-07:00
1
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2021-04-09T15:44:24-07:00
63 resist draft at Heart Mountain
2
63 Japanese American draft resisters known as the Fair Play Committee at Heart Mountain, Wyoming was the only organized resistance to the draft. After being indicted they were later pardoned by President Truman in 1947. There were a total of 315 draft resisters in all the WRA camps. Included here is a photograph of the Fair Play Committee at a court hearing in Cheyenne, Wyoming in 1944.
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2021-04-09T15:44:50-07:00
1
2021-03-29T10:38:44-07:00
Hirabayashi found guilty
1
Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi’s trial took place in Seattle’s Federal courthouse before Judge Lloyd L. Black and a jury. He was found guilty of not complying with the registration and curfew regulations imposed on those of Japanese ancestry. Hirabayashi was sentenced to and chose 3 more months in the Seattle jail, in addition to the 5 months already served, rather than have to go to one of the WRA camps. This pamphlet by the Gordon Hirabayashi Defense Committee discusses the case leading up to the trial.
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2021-03-29T10:38:44-07:00
1
2021-06-07T21:25:44-07:00
Commission finds incarceration not justified
1
Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians concludes that incarceration was not justified by military necessity, but caused by racial/war hysteria and calls for presidential apology. In the summary of the report entitled, Personal Justice Denied, it was stated, “The promulgation of Executive Order 9066 was not justified by military necessity, and the decisions which followed from it—detention, ending detention and ending exclusion—were not driven by analysis of military conditions. The broad historical causes which shaped these decisions were race prejudice, war hysteria and a failure of political leadership. Widespread ignorance of Japanese Americans contributed to a policy conceived in haste and executed in an atmosphere of fear and anger at Japan. A grave injustice was done to American citizens and resident aliens of Japanese ancestry who, without individual review or any probative evidence against them, were excluded, removed and detained by the United States during World War II.” (Irons, Justice Delayed, 1989, p. 120). Here is a copy of the newsletter from the National Coalition Redress/Reparations discussing the travelling commission.
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2021-06-07T21:25:46-07:00
1
2021-03-29T15:19:06-07:00
Yasui found guilty
1
Minori Yasui was brought back to Portland from the Minidoka camp to hear Judge Fee announce the result of his 5-month deliberation. He ruled that the statute of March 1942, which made it a criminal offense to disobey General DeWitt’s orders, was unconstitutional when applied to American citizens. However, the judge held that Minori must be deemed to have renounced his American citizenship because of his employment at the Japanese Consulate. As an alien enemy, Minori was subject to the curfew, which he deliberately violated. Judge Fee sentenced Minori to a year in prison and fined him the maximum of $5,000. His lawyer, Earl Bernard, filed an appeal.Pages 17 through 20 of this pamphlet identifies the major cases against Japanese Americans including that of Minori Yasui.
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2021-03-29T15:19:06-07:00
1
2021-04-12T20:16:43-07:00
Supreme Court decides on Korematsu and Endo
1
Supreme Court agrees to hear Endo appeal and schedules it and Korematsu for the fall. The Justices met to decide on Korematsu and Endo, but delayed the announcement until after the November presidential election. They announced decisions upholding the Korematsu conviction, 6-3, the dissenting opinions refer to violations of constitutional rights. Endo’s petition is unanimously granted. In ex parte Endo the Supreme Court ruled that the WRA had no authority to detain “concededly loyal” American citizens. Included is a list of aggregated facts and opinions on the topic assembled by the WRA.
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2021-04-12T20:16:43-07:00
1
2021-06-07T21:46:37-07:00
Suppressed incarceration evidence published
1
Peter Irons, a University of California, San Diego, attorney and professor of political science published a book entitled “Justice at War.” He found archival evidence demonstrating the suppression of evidence in the Japanese American cases casting doubt on the military necessity of Japanese American WWII incarceration. He persuaded Yasui, Hirabayashi, and Korematsu to try using the somewhat obscure writ of coram nobis to force a reconsideration of their wartime convictions and recruited lawyers in Portland, Seattle, and San Francisco to take on this work pro bono. Here are the November 11, 1983 proceedings from the petition of Fred Korematsu for writ of error coram nobis and the government's motion to vacate conviction and dismiss indictment of Korematsu before the honorable Marilyn Hall Patel.
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2021-06-07T21:46:37-07:00
1
2021-04-12T21:37:19-07:00
Nazis Surrender
1
Germany surrenders, ending war in Europe. This edited newspaper of the Stars and Stripes Medieterranean reports on the surrender of German forces in Austria and Italy. For the complete issue, click title and visit source link.
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2021-04-12T21:37:19-07:00
1
2021-05-16T16:20:51-07:00
Japanese American Evacuation Claims Act
1
Truman signs Japanese American Evacuation Claims Act providing $38 million for lost income and property (less than 10 cents on the dollar). This is an informational pamphlet for all "evacuee-claimants" filing claims for losses incurred during forced removal and incarceration during World War II. It includes analysis of public law 886, assistance in preparing claims, how to answer form questions, and types of real and personal property.
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2021-05-16T16:20:52-07:00
1
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2021-03-24T20:55:58-07:00
Mitsuye Endo resists removal of Japanese American civil servants
1
Mitsuye Endo, a twenty-two-year-old typist at a Sacramento Department of Motor Vehicles office, first resisted by protesting against the efforts of the California State Personnel Board to remove Japanese American civil servants. Then, San Francisco lawyer, James Purcell, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus after Mitsuye had been sent to the Tule Lake WRA camp and later Topaz. U.S. District Court Judge Michael J. Roche began an all-day hearing and then held on to the writ for almost a year, delaying and subsequently denying it. Purcell appealed.
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2021-03-24T20:55:58-07:00
1
2021-03-30T10:29:41-07:00
Korematsu conviction sustained
1
Ninth circuit sustains Korematsu conviction, 6-1. Judge Wilbur noted that the Supreme Court had ruled that DeWitt’s curfew order was valid in the Hirabayashi case. Wayne Collins filed a petition and the case was sent to the Supreme Court. This pamphlet addresses some of DeWitt's actions and the constitutionality of the curfew.
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2021-03-30T10:29:41-07:00
1
2021-05-16T16:33:34-07:00
McCarran-Walter Immigration and Nationality Act
1
McCarran-Walter Immigration and Nationality Act signed into U.S. law abolishing racial and ethnic bars to naturalized citizenship and establishing token quota for immigrants from Japan allowing Japanese and other Asian immigrants to become naturalized citizens for the first time. Here is the proposal leading to the passage of the act.
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2021-05-16T16:33:35-07:00
1
2021-03-30T12:59:55-07:00
Reinstitution of Selective Service
1
The War Department announced that normal Selective Service procedures would be applied to Japanese Americans inside and outside the WRA camps and draft procedures begin. This booklet from June of 1944 discusses the Selective Service program. Pages have been extracted that pertain specifically to Japanese Americans.
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2021-03-30T12:59:55-07:00
1
2021-03-29T10:17:52-07:00
Korematsu found guilty
1
Fred Toyosaburo Korematsu’s trial took place before Federal Judge Adolphus F. St. Sure in San Francisco. Fred was found guilty, sentenced to 5 months probation, and sent back to Tanforan Assembly Center, while his lawyer, Wayne M. Collins, filed the planned appeal. This flyer for a UCLA event on October 19, 1982 featured the Korematsu case.
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2021-03-29T10:17:52-07:00
1
2021-05-16T17:15:49-07:00
Executive Order 9066 formally rescinded
1
President Ford issues Proclamation 4417 formally rescinding Executive Order 9066. Included here is the official verification form for Masaichi Ishibashi confirming that he was detained in a War Relocation Center During World War II. In June 1983, the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians recommended that the United States Government make a one-time payment of $20, 000 to each of the surviving persons who were excluded from their places of residence pursuant to Executive Order 9066.
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2021-05-16T17:15:50-07:00