
Confinement and Ethnicity, an Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites. With an essay by Eleanor Roosevelt, cartography by Ronald J. Beckwith, and a contribution by Irene J. Cohen
Tucson: Western Archeological and Conservation Center, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 1999. Paperback. xx, 449p., profuse construction plans (elevations and plats), site and aerial photos, period snapshots; first edition oblong 8.5x11 inch plain printed buff wraps, very good. Abstract states: "This report provides an overview of the tangible remains currently left at the sites." Publications in Anthropology 74.
"Through the presentation of text, photographs, maps, and illustrations, this volume details the physical features of all of the facilities used by U.S. government to confine people of Japanese ancestry during World War II. Each of the facilities is treated separately, with coverage including treatments of the relatively historically neglected internment camps."
Cat.No: 176660
Price: $25.00