The Time When America Imprisoned Thousands of Citizens

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 878

  • @MobileInstinct
    @MobileInstinct  5 лет назад +214

    Thanks for watching! Please be mindful that I tried my best to get the most accurate facts as I could but unfortunately there is lots of varying information out there. Most of what I said comes directly from the signs at the site. Regardless, the fundamental history of this place remains the same. Just a message for any future "Know-it-alls" Have a wonderful day!

    • @RecMan2010
      @RecMan2010 5 лет назад +8

      This has got to be one of the most interesting videos you've posted. You should host your own travel show on TV!

    • @MrJohnnyComix
      @MrJohnnyComix 5 лет назад +3

      And thank you. Had no idea that this was still there.

    • @chrisortiz2640
      @chrisortiz2640 5 лет назад +6

      My friend's grandfather was born in one.

    • @MobileInstinct
      @MobileInstinct  5 лет назад +26

      @MX -4-LIFE You need to find a better hobby because no one here cares about your opinion bud. Go there and make your own video then instead of sitting in your parents basement.

    • @accident_prone9964
      @accident_prone9964 5 лет назад +3

      Really interesting video. Defiantly learned something. Thanks :)

  • @evanekstrand2124
    @evanekstrand2124 5 лет назад +370

    This is one of the most underrated history channels on RUclips

    • @om3g4z3r0
      @om3g4z3r0 5 лет назад +7

      I think its more of an exploring channel than history, theres history in it though, but its a side dish, that delicious in-place footage is the main attraction (in my opnion)

    • @evanekstrand2124
      @evanekstrand2124 5 лет назад +3

      @@om3g4z3r0very good way to put it!

    • @FreeHempNow
      @FreeHempNow 5 лет назад +2

      who gave it a bad rating?

    • @samanthacampbell5048
      @samanthacampbell5048 4 года назад

      Definitely

    • @jshaw4757
      @jshaw4757 2 года назад

      @@samanthacampbell5048 All the other similar channels..(jelious) lol

  • @AuntieNay
    @AuntieNay 5 лет назад +138

    I had heard of the internment camps during WWII but had no idea that any buildings were still standing. Thank you for sharing with us.

    • @jeffralston8946
      @jeffralston8946 5 лет назад +2

      Not only there but on military posts through out the nation there are old WWII wooden barracks still standing and still being used, their building numbers begin with the letter "T" for temporary. They are one of the very few military acquisitions that the American people truly got their moneys worth out of, had they been built in 2001 for the war on terror they would already be falling apart

    • @tobeybenway6352
      @tobeybenway6352 4 года назад +1

      I'm not 100% but I think there is still an intact large camp in California

    • @kansas3332
      @kansas3332 3 года назад +1

      Still standing here in SW kansas

    • @Just_A_Guy_Here.
      @Just_A_Guy_Here. 3 года назад +2

      I'm your 100th liker here and bye.

    • @richardcogbill6791
      @richardcogbill6791 3 года назад +1

      @@tobeybenway6352 yes. Manzinar on Hwy 395 on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada in the Owens Valley. I believe it is a state or national historic park.

  • @thattodddude
    @thattodddude 5 лет назад +42

    My grandfather was a Bataan survivor and lived to be 90, so I've always been fascinated with WWII. This was really unfortunate. Thanks for sharing.

    • @paulrock4816
      @paulrock4816 5 лет назад +1

      1st time I ever heard of Bataan. We had a Church inside a small elementary school called Bataan Elementary in Port Clinton Ohio, & they have all the people in that town that did that walk, each name in RED the person died in that walk. Many names were in Red.

    • @jamessaunders1926
      @jamessaunders1926 2 года назад

      What a stupid ignorant coment.

  • @MrGlendale111
    @MrGlendale111 5 лет назад +68

    There are zillions of videos on RUclips. However the ones you make are exceptional. Such a wide variety of topics and locales you cover. I agree with another viewer. For anyone homeschooling kids. Your videos should be part of their studies. I try to watch as many of your videos as I can, and enjoy every one of them.

    • @randomanda
      @randomanda 5 лет назад +6

      Haha! I do homeschool my kids and we've watched a bunch of his videos! Favorite so far was sledding down Mt. Helens.
      Interestingly, we've just moved to southeast Idaho, and I was telling my husband maybe we can take the kids to check out this place.

    • @ELl_e..3
      @ELl_e..3 4 года назад +3

      Homeschooling mom here, I just discovered this channel and I most definitely have already been able to add to our studies for the year!

  • @sarahelizabeth3632
    @sarahelizabeth3632 5 лет назад +31

    What I love so much about your channel is that you have fun videos of nostalgia like the Blockbuster throwback, but then you also have sobering videos like this one. Thank you. You provide so much education that sparks a thirst for knowledge and adventure. I hope you never stop making videos for us!

  • @IntrepidMilo
    @IntrepidMilo 5 лет назад +68

    The Japanese Canadian were also rounded up and placed in camps for fear that Japan or the Japanese Canadians would attack Canada.

    • @MobileInstinct
      @MobileInstinct  5 лет назад +14

      Very interesting, I didn't know that!

    • @ted5128
      @ted5128 5 лет назад +2

      Yep

    • @ToharaAmah
      @ToharaAmah 4 года назад +4

      @Brian Landers Nope. Bigotry is pervasive the world over, unfortunately.

    • @Ekiraly86
      @Ekiraly86 3 года назад +1

      There was couple of these camp also in the Kootenays. Southeastern British Columbia.

    • @michaelsteven1090
      @michaelsteven1090 3 года назад +8

      @@yagirlkobi1003 Your obviously Asian..Are you an ignoramus that doesn't actually do research and then comments?..We were at war with Japan..you CAN'T leave the enemies citizens roam your country free..Get it?..Think about it, child..

  • @jtmichaelson
    @jtmichaelson 5 лет назад +106

    I suspect you will find your way to making documentaries for History Channel or Travel Channel in the near future. Keep moving forward. You're doing great.

    • @greyone40
      @greyone40 4 года назад +10

      I think his material is too good for History Channel.

    • @sio3439
      @sio3439 4 года назад +5

      he didnt have enough aliens in this doc to be on history channel

    • @fhwolthuis
      @fhwolthuis 4 года назад +6

      Please keep your independency, this is so much better than all the commercial crap

    • @TechTokOffical
      @TechTokOffical 4 года назад +5

      Cept the history Channel doesn't have documentaries anymore

    • @thefreeman8791
      @thefreeman8791 3 года назад

      I hope he doesn’t. He is actually good at this and seems to just tell the story.

  • @crackertracker1176
    @crackertracker1176 5 лет назад +27

    Thanks for sharing your video. You are keeping history alive.

  • @wendyjohnson8639
    @wendyjohnson8639 4 года назад +5

    I'm addicted, I've been binge watching your channel. I'm learning more of history than I ever did. You're like a Josh Gates of forgotten history you need your own TV series.

  • @kaitcalys-strohm31
    @kaitcalys-strohm31 5 лет назад +11

    Thank you so so so so much for making and posting this video. My grandfather was imprisoned st Minidoka. He rarely spoke about his experience but being able to see this place gives me a glimpse into what his time in the camp was like. We cannot forget that this is a part of our country’s history-thank you for sharing this. ❤️

    • @jamessaunders1926
      @jamessaunders1926 2 года назад

      Yea ..he had it made. And got to become a citizen.

  • @SueGirling68
    @SueGirling68 5 лет назад +24

    Hi, I actually didn't know about this camp either so thank you for sharing it with us. x

  • @nadiazahroon6573
    @nadiazahroon6573 4 года назад +5

    My mom remembers this as a child and just how very hurt she was that their own country would do this to its own citizens.

  • @mydozer
    @mydozer 5 лет назад +3

    During World War II, the US government incarcerated more than 100,000 American people of Japanese ancestry in internment camps. One of the victims was a five-year-old George Takei, who would later become one of the most recognized Japanese-American actors in history. Takei and his family subsisted in an internment camp in Arkansas until he was eight years old. The Takeis lost everything.
    When their imprisonment ended, they received "a one-way ticket to wherever in the United States [they] wanted to go to, plus $20.”

  • @samandjerrys
    @samandjerrys 5 лет назад +15

    I drive truck & have been to or through Jerome, ID many times & NEVER knew this place existed! I would love to visit this place now! THANKS! Keep these videos coming! 👍👍👍

  • @ronchytrousers
    @ronchytrousers 5 лет назад +11

    I love your videos. It’s nice to watch somebody who takes their time to research the history of the places they visit.

  • @chadthatcher4051
    @chadthatcher4051 5 лет назад +8

    They were also housed in a camp in Crystal City, Texas. My wifes 94 year old Grandmother told me how her mother worked at the camp & allowed her to play baseball & other games with the prisoners.

  • @4g63attack
    @4g63attack 4 года назад +36

    What came out from these camps is a group of Japanese American veterans knows as 442rct.. part of the 100th battalion aka Purple Heart battalion. Most decorated unit in American history.

  • @naotoshirogane1
    @naotoshirogane1 4 года назад +2

    I visited Minidoka years ago (mid 2000s) and the only things I remember that were there were the guard station and waiting room, along with a memorial for those that chose to fight in the war. I'm happy to see that there's restoration plans and more stuff there.
    My grandma was sent to Minidoka, and when I was taking pictures of the memorial stone my mom noticed that one of the names on the stone was my great-aunt's brother, who fought in the war and died in battle in Italy.
    Thanks for this awesome video, I might have to revisit this place sometime to see all the stuff I missed.

  • @gb4670
    @gb4670 5 лет назад +64

    I hit the "like" button, because it is a good video, but I wish there was a "sad" button.

  • @marktaniguchi7901
    @marktaniguchi7901 5 лет назад +3

    Great video and thanks. My family was interned in Benton, Arkansas. Many were afraid to leave when the war ended because of rumors of lynchings.

  • @richardkarl2238
    @richardkarl2238 5 лет назад +13

    What a testament to the spirit of these Americans that they were able to rise above the adversity and hatred directed at them and build a community. Had no idea any of this still remained after all the decades that have passed. Thank you for sharing so much of their history and being able to see what remains. More importantly there is on-going restoration to help prevent their story from being relegated to the history books.

    • @josephinemitchell1307
      @josephinemitchell1307 5 лет назад

      Japanese Anericians tells me they were people from Japan who emigrated to America for a new life. The Americans made these camps just for them. Being an outsider looking in they are concentration camps.

    • @TANTRUMGASM
      @TANTRUMGASM 5 лет назад +1

      @@josephinemitchell1307 ....study history......check out how the japanese treated their prisoners of war or their rounding up of over 100,000 korean women to be sex slaves for japanese soldiers.....you wont feel so bad about these "Concentration camps"

  • @daviddeking2676
    @daviddeking2676 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this video. I know several people who were relocated to the camps. My mother and her family were in Hawaii so they weren't relocated, only people from the West Coast. Unfortunately for many who were relocated, they lost their farms and had nothing to return to at the end of the war. We did a workshop for the Japanese American Youth of the Midwest back in the late 70's. We had people speak and provide personal stories of their camp because the majority of the kids had never heard anything about the camps

  • @TrimJazz
    @TrimJazz 5 лет назад +26

    more facts:
    Preventing espionage on American shores was a priority.
    Canada soon followed suit, relocating 21,000 of its Japanese residents from its west coast. Mexico enacted its own version, and eventually 2,264 more people of Japanese descent were removed from Peru, Brazil, Chile and Argentina to the United States.
    War is hell.....

    • @saxon840
      @saxon840 5 лет назад +5

      That's interesting. Here's some more info:
      "In addition to forcibly evacuating 120,000 Americans of Japanese background from their homes on the West Coast to barbed-wire-encircled camps, EO 9066 called for the compulsory relocation of more than 10,000 Italian-Americans and restricted the movements of more than 600,000 Italian-Americans nationwide."
      www.smithsonianmag.com/history/italian-americans-were-considered-enemy-aliens-world-war-ii-180962021/#gYyxlvtqaKI7LJA5.99
      "Following the attack on Pearl Harbour in 1942, but before America had declared war on Germany, Roosevelt announced that Germans, Italians, and Japanese were now considered to be enemy aliens under the DOJ Alien Enemy Control Unit Program."
      www.warhistoryonline.com/instant-articles/internment-of-germans.html

    • @davidlefranc6240
      @davidlefranc6240 5 лет назад +2

      you cannot justify that crap

    • @KweenT-rex66
      @KweenT-rex66 9 месяцев назад

      Almost sounds the same as what hitler did. The 'almost' thankfully these poor people were not murdered.

  • @CocoaBeachLiving
    @CocoaBeachLiving 5 лет назад +3

    I had a friend whose grandmother and father were in a Colorado camp. They said it sucked, but they also pointed out that many Americans were terrified of the Imperial Japanese... They understood, never liked it, but they understood. They also said that the guards were mostly good people and didn't like it either... They seemed most interested in making sure I understood that it was the times, not the people.

  • @grandmacarla4258
    @grandmacarla4258 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for an amazing historical tour of Minidoka. I have been to Manzanar in Central Calif and was deeply touched by it and the "interpretive" center with recordings and pictures of the residents. Am taking a road trip this summer and definitely plan on going to Minidoka. Thank you again. "Lest we forget".

  • @ditto6330
    @ditto6330 3 года назад +2

    I had never heard of this camp. It's very sad how their living conditions were. Planting is an extremely hard job
    Then sometimes you have many crops to eat and other times there is not enough.
    I'm sure many of them landed up with PTSD Depression and other Illness. I hope no one ever has to go through what so many did at the time
    It's very very sad.
    Thanks for sharing!
    I love your videos I'm still learning! It's never too late!

  • @auralfury
    @auralfury 3 года назад +1

    a truly sad time in history..then and now..Thanx for covering this

  • @RandySchartiger
    @RandySchartiger 5 лет назад +4

    thank you for what you do brother and thank you for sharing with us who may never see these things, your efforts and travels are greatly appreciated, thank you so much!

  • @ericmcquiston9473
    @ericmcquiston9473 5 лет назад +5

    Great job Chris, I knew a little about those camps but never knew all that you showed in your video. Keep up the good work !

  • @beckysnyder4591
    @beckysnyder4591 3 года назад +9

    I remember hearing about this. But at one point as I got older which shocked me. Also there were also Prison camps for German soldiers in America. My dad was a Guard in one in Kentucky.

  • @Bearlake1624
    @Bearlake1624 5 лет назад +78

    Should be taught in school. Least we forget and repeat . Good video

    • @dallascopp4798
      @dallascopp4798 4 года назад +11

      It is taught in school lol

    • @collinq7853
      @collinq7853 4 года назад +3

      It is...

    • @dallascopp4798
      @dallascopp4798 4 года назад +5

      My history teachers had us watch Ann Frank and The Boy in The Stripped Pajamas

    • @tashasmith6179
      @tashasmith6179 4 года назад +6

      I do not remember learning about the American Japanese "captives" in school

    • @dallascopp4798
      @dallascopp4798 4 года назад +4

      @@tashasmith6179 well your school sucked

  • @charlessanchez5921
    @charlessanchez5921 Год назад

    Thank you, Chris. As always, you are sensitive and respectful. You are a fine human being.
    This is one of the saddest things this country has done. These were Americans who were treated like criminals.
    Thank you,
    Charles

  • @philbabineau152
    @philbabineau152 5 лет назад +3

    This is my favorite notification on you tube to get, thanks for making interesting and fun videos.

  • @hydrangeaism
    @hydrangeaism 5 лет назад

    My 87-year old Mom, born in Washington State- an American citizen- was a child those 4 years of internment."Relocated" from the farm and home they'd worked so hard to develop and own in Fife, WA (which they'd eventually lose) they had to leave everything behind. Her 2 older brothers were serving in the 442nd; one died in combat in Italy. She has often pointed out the heart-wrenching irony that when they were on leave and came to Minidoka to see their parents and siblings, they donned the same U.S.Army uniform as the armed soldiers in the watchtowers above barbed wire fence surrounding the compound..

  • @theparrotrescuer3042
    @theparrotrescuer3042 5 лет назад +109

    A dark and unfortunate part of American history.

    • @Barnabas555
      @Barnabas555 4 года назад +10

      Germans were interned also so it wasn't just a racial thing

    • @NeptunesLagoon
      @NeptunesLagoon 4 года назад +11

      yes it was, when Japan attacked America at Pearl Harbour....

    • @blaster1012
      @blaster1012 4 года назад +10

      If you knew history these people would have been all killed because of the hatred for japan ie battan death march etc but remember Democrats did this

    • @TurboThunda
      @TurboThunda 4 года назад +8

      @@blaster1012 Republicans fought for slavery. Your point? Everyone sucks stop acting like 1 side is better than the other. The 2 party system is going to fail

    • @therussianbullfrog3975
      @therussianbullfrog3975 4 года назад +18

      @@TurboThunda Republicans didn't fight for slavery it was Democrats in the south. I agree with your point that the 2 party system is awful but get your facts right before you say something stupid.

  • @russC13
    @russC13 5 лет назад +3

    Another great job. Thanks for all you do!

  • @zacknatural
    @zacknatural 5 лет назад +1

    I have the privilege of exploring Manzanar, another camp like this near Bishop, Ca. It is a National Park now and they are rebuilding many of the structures as well as restoring the Japanese gardens throughout. Truly a unique place. Also, great channel, I just discovered you and am enjoying every video I watch.

  • @Wolfietherrat
    @Wolfietherrat 5 лет назад +2

    Yes, I knew about it. Thank you for bringing it to all of us.

  • @ocean_sapphire
    @ocean_sapphire 2 года назад +1

    Thanks so much for posting this video! As a 4th generation Japanese American, not enough is said & taught about the camps of 1942. My grandfather, his parents, & siblings were internees of Minidoka, and these were the most difficult times of his life. He'll be 98 soon, and it's still hard for him to talk about internment to this day.

    • @jamessaunders1926
      @jamessaunders1926 2 года назад

      Really..? They had it made. Comparable to hydrogen bombs being dropped on him . And your a citizen behind this.

  • @marvincarr1
    @marvincarr1 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this video! I was raised in southern Idaho and was in Jerome many times, but I didn't know about this camp.

  • @sandyca1106
    @sandyca1106 5 лет назад +4

    Wow! That was powerful. I knew about camps for the American/Japanese, BUT that was all. A good lesson to be learned, take a bad situation and make the most of it. This was an amazing video, thank you so much for sharing!

  • @JS-sh3nq
    @JS-sh3nq 5 лет назад +3

    Wonderful documentary. Thank you

  • @erneststidham749
    @erneststidham749 4 года назад +1

    Just found your channel the other day I really like how you interpret things and your videos aren't too long and you actually are understandable.. .. thank you keep up the good work

  • @junzueta91
    @junzueta91 5 лет назад +4

    Wow!! I didn’t know about this at all. It’s really fascinating! Finally RUclips comes thru!

  • @bobbyspapercraft
    @bobbyspapercraft 5 лет назад +3

    Wow i had no idea. Thanks for bringing this video to us. So very interesting and a bit sad also.

  • @DEK33019
    @DEK33019 5 лет назад +3

    Excellent video. This is forgotten history. Thank you!

  • @anitamitchell3452
    @anitamitchell3452 5 лет назад +15

    Every time I watch your videos I think to myself ... I wonder how many home schooled kids are watching your videos? I wish a teacher in public schools would pick it up but I can't see that happening. I still hold out hope.
    I thank you for the pictures and the education ... I pray your channel grows by leaps and bounds. Be safe.

  • @wowsplat
    @wowsplat 5 лет назад +3

    Good stuff, it is amazing to stand somewhere and know there is so much history there. Yet to relize that there is much more history that was lost and we will never know about.. thank you

  • @angelamejia5303
    @angelamejia5303 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing, I heard little about it. And watching footage gives you more understanding. How and What they been through. Blessing

  • @deborahdee27
    @deborahdee27 5 лет назад +1

    As you said many people didn't even know about this, I for one didn't know so thank you for the history lesson.

  • @twimama43
    @twimama43 3 года назад +1

    Because of this video, I was able to stop here on my way home from vacation. I had no idea it was so close to where I live. I was in tears by the time I got to the fire station. Thank you so much for bringing this place to my attention.

  • @sunnyray7819
    @sunnyray7819 5 лет назад +2

    I had no idea about this.....
    Thanks for posting!!!!!

  • @Chris-yy5pj
    @Chris-yy5pj 4 года назад +2

    Remember this anytime someone says you shouldn't be allowed to own a gun or certain guns or that you shouldn't be allowed to say certain things.

  • @americanschweitzer45
    @americanschweitzer45 5 лет назад +40

    It’s amazing what people will do to one another when they’re scared!

    • @will649-5
      @will649-5 5 лет назад +5

      In the 40's we had to be sure that the Japanese American's wouldn't rat us out

    • @DeathOfARockStar
      @DeathOfARockStar 5 лет назад +12

      @@will649-5 what a dumb excuse.

    • @polloborracho9180
      @polloborracho9180 5 лет назад +6

      @@DeathOfARockStar not terribly unfounded though. I knew a family whom the grandparents were first generation, and went through that. They told me that certain japanese families were organizing their nurseries into arrow pointing in the direction of strategic targets in case the Japanese invaded the mainland. Also, people were scare of them, so hate crimes were an issue as well. Homes were destroyed, and so on. In a way, it was safer for them, and there was no way of knowing who supported their homelands cause. The grandmother made parachutes, and the grandfather joined the army, and helped translate messages. I hope so much respect for them, and they loved our country till the day they died. Far more patriotic, humble, and respectful than so many spoiled shits we have roaming the streets today. I miss them very much.

    • @suzannehartmann946
      @suzannehartmann946 3 года назад +1

      @@polloborracho9180 Great excuse for the government to have seized their property and NOT returning it to them.

    • @jamesbass9797
      @jamesbass9797 3 года назад +1

      @@suzannehartmann946 -- Not entirely accurate. Some of their properties were seized by the government. Many were not. Many were left abandoned with back taxes owed and many were actually burned down. The Federal Government did in fact pay restitution to the families that were interned I believe in the 1980's sometime.

  • @thebreakfastmenu
    @thebreakfastmenu 4 года назад +5

    In Good Hope Illinois, there are a series of rentals coming into town that are rumoured to be relocated internment camp houses. And now that I've seen this, the resemblance really is uncanny.

    • @jebronlames7789
      @jebronlames7789 3 года назад

      Good time to learn Spanish eh

    • @emsadventures1154
      @emsadventures1154 3 года назад

      @@jebronlames7789 that doesn't make any since. These are Japanese Americans..

  • @kaytlinjustis5643
    @kaytlinjustis5643 4 года назад +1

    Historically, this is sad all around for the victims involved; from the Holocaust, to the Attack of Pearl Harbor as well as the horrors people witnessed during this time. Remnants such as this force us to remember what people had gone through... It feels scary how similar these prisons were to the Concentration Camps in Germany! While it probably wasn't as bad as it was in Germany, there WERE people living in their own prisons of paranoia and fear, and the history lost leaves multiple large holes of what did and could've happened; schools don't talk about this in American history well enough to keep the memory alive. I've only first heard of this from a Hawaii 5-0 episode (new version) and just now from Mobile Instinct. Thank you for showing us this, and I look forward to more videos from you! ^^

  • @flamingstag2381
    @flamingstag2381 5 лет назад +1

    ur doing a great job , the research , before & after pics make u a stand out in this field of work , thankyou !

  • @strivingx67
    @strivingx67 5 лет назад +5

    The Japanese are truly resilient people. Great video!

  • @seattlescofflaws
    @seattlescofflaws 4 года назад +1

    As a kid I went to a grade school that had a teacher who was in one of the camps. In middle school a classmates dad was in a camp. When he came to share his memories he was an officer in the Navy..

  • @kathycagg6531
    @kathycagg6531 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks, Chris!

  • @ricekrispies1917
    @ricekrispies1917 3 года назад +1

    I think they mentioned this at my school, but it was so brief, I forgot about this even happening for a long while. We really should discuss our country's failures more

  • @johnbouley4514
    @johnbouley4514 5 лет назад

    WWII was a terrable time, for the world and for the detainees. Good job Chris for bringing this history foward.

  • @innertube205
    @innertube205 5 лет назад +12

    I read down through several comments looking to see if this had already been asked. Did you run across a cemetery while you were there?

  • @21stCenturyMaggid
    @21stCenturyMaggid 5 лет назад +3

    Thank you!

  • @sirarnie9837
    @sirarnie9837 5 лет назад +25

    I would like to point out that the US Army's 442nd Regimental Combat Team, which was a segregated unit that consisted of Japanese American Soldiers, was the most decorated US military unit of World War 2. And is still the most decorated unit to this day.

    • @Pantheragem
      @Pantheragem 5 лет назад +4

      I'm actually related to their captain, Robert Hempstead. Or as they affectionately called him, "Captain Bobby".

    • @tobeybenway6352
      @tobeybenway6352 4 года назад +1

      You are correct I also believe something in the number of 10,000 soldiers received purple hearts out of like 15,000 soldiers/ heros

    • @Page-Hendryx
      @Page-Hendryx 3 года назад

      This is well known, because it's rammed down our throats constantly.

  • @gothicshadowstgg
    @gothicshadowstgg 4 года назад

    Excellent video, Chris. I am so glad I found your channels.

  • @AnyM4jorDude
    @AnyM4jorDude Год назад

    THANK YOU for covering this story. The people are resilient and forgiving, but Americans should never forget.

  • @spiderreed350
    @spiderreed350 3 года назад +1

    The U.S. tried to sweep this under the rug so bad.I was in high school from 1978-80 and I never heard a peep about this in my history classes,never.

  • @truethat774
    @truethat774 3 года назад

    And the fact that they managed to make a community for themselves to get through is no less than incredible.
    I wonder what happened to all those people when they were forced to leave at the end of the war. Their homes, jobs and/or businesses long gone. Where did their money come from, where did they go and how did they survive. Would be interesting to have a follow up video.
    My dad was a WW2 vet who served overseas. He was shot in the leg, and taken prisoner by the Germans for 9 months before being liberated. All things WW2 fascinate me.
    Thanks for the videos. New subscriber here who thinks you do a really great job. Your care, respect, research and knowledge in the subjects you do is quite impressive. Keep up the good work! ✌️

  • @brettymike
    @brettymike 5 лет назад +2

    Love your fantastic channel young man!.

  • @laurensmackho
    @laurensmackho 5 лет назад +1

    There was also a camp in Virginia Beach, Virginia. It is now a furniture store called Willis Wayside.

  • @Wombats-1
    @Wombats-1 2 года назад

    I love your channel and others like it. Finding all kinds of new places to visit. Awesome work as always

  • @derweibhai
    @derweibhai 3 года назад +7

    Never forget!!! There are those in the US that would do this again in a heartbeat! God Bless the 2nd Amendment.

    • @jimcook2715
      @jimcook2715 3 года назад

      If the evildoers in America wanted our guns they'd have no problem whatsoever Do you think they'd knock on your door and say pretty please?

    • @ahouse8600
      @ahouse8600 3 года назад

      Like ICE camps? Like private prisons? Yes I agree.

  • @BudFunOne
    @BudFunOne 3 года назад

    Great piece. Very sad time in our history. Thank you

  • @starkconplays
    @starkconplays 5 лет назад +8

    Underrated.

  • @TBONESIDEOFLIFE
    @TBONESIDEOFLIFE 5 лет назад +1

    My, history has a repeat button on it here in America. I'll leave it at that, great video my friend!

  • @wyomingadventures
    @wyomingadventures 3 года назад +1

    We have one those camps in Wyoming. It's called Hart mountain by Cody Wyoming. There's a visitor center for it. Al Simpson became good friends with one of the kids locked up in it. The Japanese man later became a representative in California and Al became one in Wyoming. They were friends for life.

  • @mikefitchNYC1971
    @mikefitchNYC1971 4 года назад +1

    Awesome job on this video.

  • @abaddonaskap
    @abaddonaskap 4 года назад +1

    Nice channel mate, subscribed

  • @Tim-57
    @Tim-57 5 лет назад +3

    Respectfully done. 🙂

  • @guhrizzlee
    @guhrizzlee 2 года назад +1

    Growing up, I always wonder why there were barbed wires on the fences that surrounded our town fair. My parents then later told me that it was where they kept all the Japanese Americans during the war.

  • @bigdawg1944
    @bigdawg1944 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks again for another wonderful and informative video. I just love you sense of "wanderlust". I travel vicariously through you. Thanks again for your quality videos.

  • @JamesEzell
    @JamesEzell 5 лет назад +4

    This is what happens when we let fear dictate our policies. The concentration camp outside of Tulelake is about 45 mins from me. This is very much local history.

  • @AI_Artistic69
    @AI_Artistic69 4 года назад +1

    Every video at this channel is remarkable, best of luck

  • @christel3742
    @christel3742 5 лет назад +7

    I didn’t learn about these camps in school. It wasn’t until maybe 5 years ago that I read about them. How terrifying for these people!

  • @katherinetonner593
    @katherinetonner593 5 лет назад +3

    There are a couple of these in Canada too, especially in the mountains. It’s weird to be walking in the Rockies looking at the beauty and then seeing these Japanese internment camps. There are also some from ww1 for German, Austrian and Hungarians

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays Год назад

      Yes, and anyone who had ever immigrated from the old Austria-Hungarian empire could be interred. A lot of the Ukrainian settlers on the prairies came from Bukovina and Galicia, which was part of the old Austro-Hungarian empire, and were also interred during World War I beside Germans and Hungarian.

  •  5 лет назад +1

    *unpopular opinion* There were Japanese spies at Pearl Harbor who relayed info back to Japan before the attack, the fears of the United States were not entirely unjustified. Imagine what US citizens in Japan would have went through (had there been any), had the tables been turned. War sucks for everyone. Its good to see that the history is being restored and preserved, regardless of anyones views on it.

  • @hollygrinstead7252
    @hollygrinstead7252 Год назад

    Hello from England. I came across your channel the other day. Great videos. Very interesting

  • @priestessmikokikyo77
    @priestessmikokikyo77 3 года назад

    My neighbor Haru who recently died was Japanese American and she and her family was sent to one of the camps she gave me a photo of her. She was a very kind woman and I have few gifts from that family. I speak to her son from time to time. Just a beautiful family inside and out. These people are human beings it’s revolting they were treated like criminals during wartime.

  • @JapaneseAnimalover
    @JapaneseAnimalover 5 лет назад +5

    You forgot Washington State. We turned our internment camp into the state fair grounds but they dont really teach that or advertise that to visitors. This dark time also screwed over a part of our economy. The Japanese on Bainbridge and Vashon island were strawberry farmers of some rare varieties and when imprisoned their farms went into ruin.

  • @ifonly2074
    @ifonly2074 4 года назад +1

    My nisei grandma was in Hawaii when Pearl Harbor was bombed. She was never sent off to a camp, but she and her friends were all basically forced to join the military. The boys went to war and the girls did military office work. The government told them they needed to show where their loyalties lay by helping with the war efforts.

  • @billhollis8555
    @billhollis8555 4 года назад

    Thank you as always Chris, History Geography with nothing forgotten.

  • @baref1959
    @baref1959 5 лет назад +8

    you're historical information is greatly appreciated. we do need to keep history alive and i understand the historical perspective from someone younger that had, i am guessing parents alive at the time but not grand parents who were actually there. i was fortunate to have both. i wont add my perspective but suffice it to say it may have been less scary to be uprooted and shipped to a place that is safe where it seems raw materials (wood for buildings and fences, concrete for foundations, fuel and equipment for farming) were supplied than it would be to have to go thousands of miles from home and be stranded on a beach where artillery from both sides is flying overhead and you are expected to fight for what ever reason and every moment might be your last..

  • @gregggoss2210
    @gregggoss2210 5 лет назад +32

    Nice video. I did read your comment. If I may, I would like to add a short comment of my own. Whatever the main purpose of interning the Japanese population was, you should remember this fact. The Japanese made a deliberate attack on our country and by doing so declared war. Interning Japanese American people was also for their safety as well as a perceived threat from them. Imagine losing a father, brother, uncle, etc. in that attack and now suddenly these Japanese Americans may not look so harmless anymore. You can second guess all you want about segregating these people, but if you have not lived through it, you may not want to be so quick about judging the hard decisions that were made back then.

    • @MobileInstinct
      @MobileInstinct  5 лет назад +17

      Agreed! I look at most historical events that way. Times were very different then. For this situation the government did what they felt was necessary to protect the country.

    • @gregggoss2210
      @gregggoss2210 5 лет назад +7

      @@MobileInstinct , by the way, you are one blessed individual to be able to travel our great country at a somewhat leisurely pace and enjoy some of what it has to offer. I envy you. I have enjoyed your journey thus far. Keep up the great work.

    • @MrHenreee
      @MrHenreee 5 лет назад +1

      So you're saying that a known racist and shitty government made racist and shitty decisions?
      What a shocker

    • @TANTRUMGASM
      @TANTRUMGASM 5 лет назад +3

      @@MrHenreee Racist??....lol......guess you are not very familiar with Japanese war atrocities?? ....it will help you with your fragile guilt, kid

    • @Crowniecrown
      @Crowniecrown 5 лет назад

      @@TANTRUMGASM Yeah, and the Allies are completely guilt free of any war crimes too.

  • @jerryforeman4543
    @jerryforeman4543 4 года назад

    Nice one! Thanks for sharing!

  • @davidchaney9616
    @davidchaney9616 5 лет назад +1

    Good video , Thanks for sharing .

  • @garrisonh
    @garrisonh 5 лет назад +2

    well done, thank you

  • @melissasmith3297
    @melissasmith3297 3 года назад +1

    I've spent a good bit of time at the former camp that was at Rohwer, Arkansas. My grandmother lived there and we visited for weeks each summer growing up. Not a lot left there now except a lot of baby graves and incinerator. The public school was located right next to it which was in operation until about 10 or so years ago where my grandmother taught. We even used to go pick crab apples there left over from when the camp was there.
    George Takei did a documentary for PBS there years ago. You should check it out. He was brought over in one of those camps, then later was an actor on Star Trek.

  • @charltonc7401
    @charltonc7401 3 года назад

    Amazing video. The amount of research and effort you put into it, and the unusual places you visit is truly amazing!