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Granada War Relocation Center

Granada Relocation Center
Granada Relocation Center, Amache, Colorado. A general all over view of a section of the emergency . . . - NARA - 539071.jpg
A general view of a section of the site looking north and west.
Granada War Relocation Center is located in Colorado
Granada War Relocation Center
Granada War Relocation Center is located in the US
Granada War Relocation Center
Location 23900 County Road FF, Granada, Colorado
Coordinates 38°2′58″N 102°19′43″W / 38.04944°N 102.32861°W / 38.04944; -102.32861Coordinates: 38°2′58″N 102°19′43″W / 38.04944°N 102.32861°W / 38.04944; -102.32861
Built 1942
Architect US Army Corps of Engineers; Lambie, Moss, Litle, and James
NRHP Reference #

94000425

Significant dates
Added to NRHP May 18, 1994
Designated NHL February 10, 2006

94000425

The Granada War Relocation Center (also Camp Amache) was a Japanese American internment camp located in southeast Colorado, about a mile west of the small farming community of Granada, south of US 50.

The camp was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 18, 1994, and designated a National Historic Landmark on February 10, 2006.

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt authorized the forced relocation of Japanese Americans living on the West Coast with Executive Order 9066. Over the spring of 1942, some 120,000 Japanese Americans were "evacuated" and placed into temporary "assembly centers" before being transferred to more permanent and isolated "relocation centers" like Granada. Run by the War Relocation Authority, the government body responsible for administration of the incarceration program, Granada was one of ten such camps, the only one to be built on private land. The camp site covered 10,000 acres (40 km2), of which only 640 acres (2.6 km2) was used for residential, community and administrative buildings, while the rest was devoted to agricultural projects. The land was owned by several ranchers and farmers before the war, and only one of these property owners willingly sold his acreage to make way for the camp, creating tension between the WRA and the other landholders, whose parcels were taken via condemnation. However, this did not necessarily translate to overall resistance to Japanese Americans being housed in the area: Colorado Governor Ralph Lawrence Carr was one of the few to welcome the Japanese Americans and the only governor not to oppose the establishment of a WRA camp in his state, going against the anti-Japanese sentiment of the times.


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