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Heart Mountain Relocation Center

Heart Mountain Relocation Center
Heart mountain marker with mountain behind.jpg
Heart Mountain historical marker and mountain behind.
Location Park County, Wyoming, USA
Nearest city Ralston, Wyoming
Coordinates 44°40′18″N 108°56′47″W / 44.67167°N 108.94639°W / 44.67167; -108.94639Coordinates: 44°40′18″N 108°56′47″W / 44.67167°N 108.94639°W / 44.67167; -108.94639
Built 1942
Architect US Army Corps of Engineers; Hazra Engineering; Hamilton Br. Co.
NRHP Reference # 85003167
Significant dates
Added to NRHP December 19, 1985
Designated NHL September 20, 2006

The Heart Mountain War Relocation Center, named after nearby Heart Mountain and located midway between the towns of Cody and Powell in northwest Wyoming, was one of ten concentration camps used for the internment of Japanese Americans evicted from the West Coast Exclusion Zone during World War II by executive order from President Franklin Roosevelt after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941.

This site was managed before the war by the federal Bureau of Reclamation for a major irrigation project. Construction of the 650 military-style barracks and surrounding guard towers began in June 1942, and the camp opened on August 11, when the first Japanese Americans arrived by train from the Pomona, Santa Anita, and Portland assembly centers. The camp would hold a total of 13,997 Japanese Americans over the next three years, with a peak population of 10,767, making it the third-largest "town" in Wyoming before it closed on November 10, 1945.

Heart Mountain is best known for many of its younger residents' challenging the controversial draft of Nisei males from camp in order to highlight the loss of their rights through the incarceration. The Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee, led by Frank Emi and several others, was particularly active in this resistance, encouraging internees to refuse military induction until they and their families were released from camp and had their civil rights restored. Heart Mountain had the highest rate of draft resistance of all ten camps, with 85 young men and seven Fair Play Committee leaders ultimately sentenced and imprisoned for Selective Service Act violations. (At the same time, 800 Japanese American men — volunteers and draftees — joined the American military from Heart Mountain. In 1944, internees dedicated an Honor Roll listing the names of these soldiers, located near the camp's main gate.)


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