The Denver Post

INTERNMENT CAMP A HISTORIC SITE?

- By Justin Wingerter

Camp Amache, where more than 7,000 people of Japanese descent were held, would become a national historic site under a bill by two Coloradans.

Camp Amache, where thousands of Japanese-Americans and Japanese immigrants were held against their will during World War II, would become a national historic site under bipartisan legislatio­n introduced Wednesday by two Coloradans.

Republican U.S. Rep. Ken Buck and Democratic U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse co-authored the bill. Buck represents the rural southeast Colorado area where the Amache incarcerat­ion site is, and Neguse leads the U.S. House subcommitt­ee that oversees national parks and public lands.

The internment camp west of Granada, at that time known as the Granada War Relocation Center, was constructe­d in 1942. It housed more than 7,000 people of Japanese descent — most of whom were American citizens — in the 1940s because of a presidenti­al executive order and was one of 10 internment camps. The site has been a national historic landmark since 2006.

“The Amache Preservati­on Society has always wanted to do what was best for the Japanese-American families that had to

endure Amache,” John Hopper of the Amache Preservati­on Society said in a news release. “It is for this reason that we feel that it needs to become a part of the national park system.”

A barracks at the site has been reconstruc­ted, and a water tower and guard tower were restored.

“The nation is better today because of the lessons we have learned from our past,” Buck said. “Preserving Amache serves as one of those hard lessons for the people of eastern Colorado and the rest of our nation.”

Buck’s news release also quoted former U.S. Rep. Mike Honda of California, whose family was sent to Amache when he was a year old.

“I hope that Congress will pass the Amache legislatio­n to build on Congress’ bipartisan leadership to acknowledg­e that what happened to Japanese-Americans was wrong and to help us live as one nation, indivisibl­e, with liberty and justice for all,” Honda said.

Neguse says the bill will be considered April 21 by a subcommitt­ee he chairs.

He said the legislatio­n “will provide education for future generation­s on this dark time in our nation’s history, as well as healing and honor to those that lived it.”

 ?? Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file ?? A replica of a guard tower can be seen at Camp Amache in 2016. A renovated building that was once living quarters can be seen in the back. More than 7,000 people of Japanese descent were interned there during World War II.
Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file A replica of a guard tower can be seen at Camp Amache in 2016. A renovated building that was once living quarters can be seen in the back. More than 7,000 people of Japanese descent were interned there during World War II.
 ?? Western History/Genealogy Department Courtesy of Denver Public Library ?? Prefabicat­ed barracks are shown in December 1942 at Camp Amache, which is west of Granada.
Western History/Genealogy Department Courtesy of Denver Public Library Prefabicat­ed barracks are shown in December 1942 at Camp Amache, which is west of Granada.

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