‘God be with you till we meet again’: The grim scene of Japanese-American businesses forced to close during WWII
In the spring of 1942, in one of the darkest marks in American history, the United States forcefully relocated Japanese-American citizens away from the West Coast. The order, which came from Secretary of War Henry Stimson, followed the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by Japanese troops; all told, around 120,000 people were sent to internment camps away from the Pacific Ocean by the War Relocation Authority and kept there until spring 1944.
This week Yale University released over 170,000 digital images (and counting) from the United States Farm Security Administration and Office of War Information. Among these photos are a series taken by photographer Russell Lee who was in Los Angeles as Japanese-Americans were “evacuated” in the name of national security.