Link to Online Textbook Link to the Boisterous Sea of Liberty Link to Historic Court Cases Link to Historic Newspapers Link to Landmark Documents Link to Classroom Handouts Link to Lesson Plans Link to Resource Guides ink to E-lectures Link to Film Trailers Link to Flash Movies Link to Multimedia Exhibits Link to Ethnic America Link to Materials for Teachers Link to eXplorations Link to Learning Modules Link to Interactive Timeline Link to Games Database Link to A House Divided Link to America's Reconstruction Link to Virtual Exhibitions Link to Current Controversies Link to Ethnic America Link to Film and History Link to Historiography Link to Private Life Link to Science and Technology Link to the Reference Room Link to Writing Guides Link to Biographies Link to Book Talks Link to Chronologies Link to the Encyclopedia Link to Glossaries Link to the History Profession Link to Historical Images Link to Historical Maps Link to eXplorations Link to Do History through... Link to Multimedia Link to Historical Music Link to Museums & Archives Link to Historic Music Link to Historic Speeches Link to Historical Websites Link to Social History section

 

Internment and the Law

Leading to Internment:

How did the U.S. Supreme Court respond to the internment of Japanese Americans?

Supreme Court Decisions:

How did Presidents respond to the internment of Japanese Americans?

Presidential Orders:

  • President Franklin Roosevelt's Executive Order No. 9066 - Authorizing the Secretary of War to Prescribe Military Areas, February 19, 1942
  • President Franklin Roosevelt's Act of March 21, 1942
  • President Gerald R. Ford's Proclamation 4417, Confirming the Termination of the Executive Order Authorizing Japanese-American Internment During World War II, February 19, 1976
  • In 1980, President Jimmy Carter assisted Japanese Americans with the issue of redress and the Commission on the Wartime Relocation of and Internment of Civilians was created. In 1983, that Commission issued a report titled, Personal Justice Denied, in which it stated that relocation could not be justified under the guise of military necessity. It further found that relocation was the result of war hysteria, race prejudice and a failure of political leadership.
  • President Bill Clinton's Letter to Internees
  • President George Bush's Letter to Internees

How did Congress respond to the internment of Japanese Americans?

  • Civil Liberties Act of 1988, "Restitution for World War II internment of Japanese-Americans and Aleuts" (signed by President Ronald Regan)
"Exclusion Order posted at First and Front Streets in San Francisco directing removal of persons of Japanese ancestry from the first section of the city to be affected by evacuation. Evacuees will be housed in War Relocation Authority centers for the duration." FDR Library. April 1, 1942.

 

This site was updated on 20-May-13.

Link to Ask the Hyperhistorian Link to Send Us Comments Link to Search & Site Map