Albuquerque Journal

Colorado is now home to newest national park

Amache is one place where Japanese-Americans were incarcerat­ed during WWII

- BY LAUREN PENINGTON

Amache National Historic Site in southeaste­rn Colorado is officially America’s newest national park, the National Park Service announced Thursday.

Amache, located one mile outside of Granada, was one of 10 incarcerat­ion sites used to detain thousands of Japanese-Americans during World War II. The town of Granada acquired and donated the land needed to establish the site as a national park.

“Amache’s addition to the National Park System is a reminder that a complete account of the nation’s history must include our dark chapters of injustice,” National Park Service Director Chuck Sams stated in a Thursday news release. “To heal and grow as a nation we need to reflect on past mistakes, make amends, and strive to form a more perfect union.”

Nearly two years ago in March 2022, President Joe Biden signed into law a bill backed by Colorado lawmakers to designate the camp a National Historic Site.

The goal then was to make Amache, also known as the Granada Relocation Center, eligible for increased funding to protect and preserve the historical site.

“As a nation, we must face the wrongs of our past in order to build a more just and equitable future,” Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland stated in Thursday’s news release. “Today’s establishm­ent of the Amache National Historic Site will help preserve and honor this important and painful chapter in our nation’s story for future generation­s.”

More than 10,000 people were incarcerat­ed at Amache between 1942 and 1945, according to the release.

Although the camp itself is in ruins, Amache’s historic building foundation­s and road alignments are largely intact, preserved through the years by Amache survivors and their descendant­s, residents of Granada, the Amache Preservati­on Society and more.

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