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Published byRosalind Blankenship Modified over 8 years ago
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Japanese Internment Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston
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1869 First Japanese settle in Sacramento, California to help construct the railroad
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1870 Citizenship given to African Americans, but not to Japanese or Chinese Americans
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1886 Japanese government allows citizens to permanently move to other countries
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1911 America does not allow Japanese to become natural citizens
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1913 Japanese are not allowed to own land in California
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1924 All immigration from Japan stops due to the Immigration Act
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1939 Germany declares war on Poland officially beginning World War II
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1941 Japan attacks Pearl Harbor in Hawaii
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1942 Roosevelt signs Executive Order 9066 giving the War Department the right to evacuate Japanese Americans into camps
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1942 cont. Manzanar Camp opens in Owens Valley, CA
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Remembering Manzanar http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ac19C-rfMp8
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1942 cont. 110,000 Japanese Americans are in camps. Evacuation completed
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1944 U.S. Supreme Court rules that loyal citizens cannot be held in camps against their will
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1945 Roosevelt dies from a stroke and Harry Truman takes office
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1945 cont. America drops two atomic bombs on Japan
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1945 cont. Hitler commits suicide after realizing Germany is losing the war
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1945 cont. Japan surrenders, ending World War II
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1945 cont. Manzanar camp officially closes
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1952 Japanese finally given the right to be natural citizens.
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Vocabulary Issei – The first generation. The Issei were born in Japan. Most immigrated to the United States between 1890 and 1915. Nisei – Second generation children of the Issei. American citizens by birth and born before World War II. Sansei – Third generation of Americans with Japanese ancestry born during or after World War II.
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