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Discover the curated images, videos, and primary sources featured throughout Foundations and Futures

History is more than just text on a page; it is the photographs, voices, and artifacts of the people who lived it. The images and recordings featured across Foundations and Futures are part of a meticulously curated media repository. Whether you are building a lesson plan or investigating an artifact, you can use this database to trace the provenance of our media: discover who created an asset, the historical context behind it, and how it can be used to bring Asian American and Pacific Islander experiences into your classroom.

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  • Image
    Baseball Game at Tule Lake

    Baseball was a popular pastime at the WRA camps. This photo shows the opening game of the 1944 Tule Lake baseball season. Nearly half of the camp’s inmates attended the game.

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  • Image
    The Down Beats

    Young Nisei formed bands, like the Downbeats pictured here at Tule Lake, to perform at dances and other social gatherings.

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  • Image
    White Shell Corsage Pin

    Many women at Tule Lake collected tiny shells, the remains of mollusks that once inhabited an ancient lakebed located where the camp was built. They painstakingly cleaned, sorted, arranged and decorated the shells into elaborate creations like these pins.

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  • Image
    Stenographers and Clerks In Tule Lake Administrative Office

    All other workers, like the stenographers in this photo taken at Tule Lake, received $12–16 a month. In contrast, white camp employees earned more than ten to twenty times as much as Japanese American workers for the same jobs.

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  • Image
    Dr. James Goto Examines a Patient

    The government paid Japanese American professionals, like the doctor pictured here, nineteen dollars a month. In contrast, white camp employees earned more than ten to twenty times as much as Japanese American workers for the same jobs.

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  • Image
    Pinedale (Calif.) Assembly Center Dining Hall

    Photograph shows Japanese Americans young women in waitress uniforms during forced removal of Japanese Americans to temporary concentration camps during World War II.

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  • Text
    Seattle Times: “Axis Spy Groups Smash in Coast Raids; 300 Jailed”

    Anxious Japanese Americans feared that the government would shoot or deport the Issei leaders that the FBI had arrested.

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  • Video
    Homer Yasui Interview Segment 9

    Hearing about the bombing of Pearl Harbor: “My heart sank down to my toes”

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  • Text
    Japanese Relocation Order, 1942

    Issued by President Franklin Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, this order authorized the evacuation of all persons deemed a threat to national security from the West Coast to relocation centers further inland.

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  • Image
    “How to Tell Your Friends from the Japs”

    For decades, Chinese immigrants were reviled in the United States. But China was a US ally during World War II. A December 22, 1941 Time magazine article, “How to Tell Your Friends From the Japs,” included these comparative images and the guidance that “the Chinese expression is likely to be more placid, kindly, open; the Japanese more positive, dogmatic, arrogant.” Articles like this illustrate how international politics impacted the treatment and perception of Asians in the United States.

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