Aerial view of barracks at Topaz War Relocation Center (1942-45)
Aerial view of barracks at Topaz War Relocation Center (1942-45)

Topaz Japanese American Relocation Center Digital Collection

In 1942 shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry were forcibly removed from California, Oregon, and Washington and confined to relocation centers. One of these relocation centers was the Topaz Relocation Center located on 17,500 acres in the middle of the Sevier Desert just outside of Delta, Utah. Until the camp closed in Oct. 1945, over 8,000 men, women and children lived, worked, and went to school there; over 100 of its residents volunteered for and served in the U.S. armed forces.

What was it like to be a resident of one of these relocation centers? School yearbooks and literary magazines written and illustrated by Topaz residents offer insight into the life, activities, and feelings of the Japanese Americans held there from 1942-1945. These and other items housed at Utah State University Libraries were digitized as part of the Topaz Japanese American Relocation Center Digital Collection.

Topics: