Skip to product information
1 of 2

University of Illinois Press

Camp Harmony: Japanese American Internment and the Puyallup Assembly Center

Camp Harmony: Japanese American Internment and the Puyallup Assembly Center

Regular price $27.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $27.00 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity

This book is the first full portrait of a single assembly center-located at the Western Washington fairgrounds at Puyallup, outside Seattle- the held Japanese Americans for four months Prior to their transfer to a relocation centre during World War II. Gathering archival evidence and eyewitness accounts, Louis Fiset reconstructs the events leading up to the incarceration as they unfolded on a local level. arrests of Issei leaders, Nikkei responses to the war dynamics, debates within the white community, and the forced evacuation of the Nikkei community from Bainbridge Island. The book explore the daily lives of the more than seven thousand inmates at "Camp Harmony" detailing how they worked, played, ate, and occasionally fought with each other and with their captors. Fiset also examines the inmates' community life, health care, and religious activities. He includes details on how army surveyors selected the center's site, oversaw its construction, and managed the transfer of inmates to the more permanent Minidoka Relocation Center in Idaho.

Louis Fiset is the author or Imprisoned Apart: The World War II Correspondence of an Issei Couple and Coeditor of Nikkei in the Pacific Northwest: Japanese Americans and Japanese Canadians in the Twentieth Century. He has appointments in the University of Washington's dental and medical schools, where he helps train Alaska Natives to provide dental services in Bush Alaska.

View full details