![]() ![]() ![]() However, she had gone through the appropriate. ![]() In this case Mitsuye Endo had been caught attempting to escape from a detention center. That decision was softened-but only slightly-by Ex parte Endo (1944), handed down the same day. Endo spent two additional years in the internment camps. United States (1944), the justices upheld orders removing Americans of Japanese origin to detention camps. The Archives is interested in learning about any possible copyright restrictions and will gladly remove any image that is in violation. Mitsuye Endo seated at her desk in the administrative office at the Central Utah relocation camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. Please credit “Courtesy of California State Archives.” The California State Archives and the Friends of California Archives cannot be responsible for any use of these images, or any liability resulting from their use. Nakata, Chiyo Inouye, Tamako, A letter to the editor of the University of. We encourage the use of these images for personal, study, and educational purposes. Issued to: A: Koisa Endo B: Toray Endo C: Miyoko Endo. This measure would state the Legislature’s support of the nomination of Mitsuye Endo Tsutsumi for the Presidential Medal of Freedom. There are no known copyright restrictions associated with these digital images. Mitsuye Endo Tsutsumi: Presidential Medal of Freedom nomination. California State Government & the Incarceration of Japanese Americans During World War IIĬorrespondence from James Purcell to Peter Linzer regarding case of Mitsuye EndoĬalifornia State Archives, a division of the California Secretary of State's Office ![]()
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