7.4: Order for Internment of Japanese Americans in San Francisco (1942)

A Guided Journey through Key Documents, 1865-present
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7.4 Order for Internment of Japanese Americans in San Francisco (1942)
Historical Context
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Abstract

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, many Americans let their fears take over. As a result, they embraced some policies, like internment, that were misguided and racist. Some people in the United States believed that Americans of Japanese descent could not be loyal Americans because of ties to their ancestral homeland. They also feared that Japanese Americans and immigrant spies had helped facilitate the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. There was never any evidence to corroborate this theory.

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