Evacuated People

JAPANESE-AMERICAN INTERNMENT

Item#: 118173 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Evacuated People
Evacuated People

"SELECTED STATISTICS FOR THE 120,313 PERSONS OF JAPANESE DESCENT WHO CAME UNDER THE JURISDICTION OF THE WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY": THE EVACUATED PEOPLE, 1946 FIRST EDITION

(JAPANESE-AMERICAN INTERNMENT) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY. The Evacuated People. A Quantitative Description. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, (1946). Quarto, original printed paper wrappers. Housed in a custom clamshell box.

First edition of this extensive and revealing compilation of statistics about the Japanese Americans who were interned during World War II, with folding table, in the original wrappers.

"The War Relocation Authority, established by the Executive Order of the President, No. 9102, on March 18, 1942, was charged with the responsibility of relocating all persons of Japanese descent who had been evacuated from the West Coast by military order" (1). This statistical compilation regarding Japanese Americans interned during World War II includes demographic comparisons to the U.S. population as a whole. For example, the folding table shows that the internees were disproportionately of military age, between 15 and 24 years old, as compared to the U.S. population as a whole. Also of interest are the tables showing the population of each of the camps, by month, during the war (Table 6); county-by-county totals of the persons interned at each of the camps (Table 19); the number of men who joined the army after internment, by camp (Table 49); the tabulation of responses to the loyalty oath "Question 28" (Section IX); and the report on the "renunciants" who refused to declare loyalty to the U.S. after they were interned (Sections X and XI). This report also documents the thousands of Japanese who protested their internment, many of whom were relocated to Tule Lake in remote northeastern California as a result.

Interior clean. Three shallow closed tears to outer edges of wrappers. Near-fine in original wrappers. Scarce and important.

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