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After the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, US President Franklin Roosevelt ordered the relocation and imprisonment of more than 125,000 people of Japanese ancestry, moving them away from the West Coast. In this violation of civil rights, some who were displaced came to Utah voluntarily to avoid incarceration. Others were forcibly moved to remote concentration camps, such as Topaz, near the town of Delta in Utah's West Desert.
Residents of Topaz were largely from San Francisco's Bay Area and were initially held there at a horse racetrack while Topaz was built. The camp was not finished when they arrived in Utah, beginning on September 11, 1942, and they had to complete construction of their own barracks and community buildings. It was difficult work, and as winter crept closer, they were still without stoves, and a delayed coal shipment forced residents to burn leftover lumber to stay warm.
When the camp was finally completed, Topaz became one of rural Utah’s largest population centers with a peak residency of around 8,100 people. Its total area was 19,000 acres and included agricultural areas, a hospital, post office, fire station, churches, schools, libraries, and community gym. With 623 buildings, Topaz dwarfed the nearby town of Delta, which had a population of just 1,500 people.
Topaz transformed the face of Millard County, both economically and socially. A decade earlier during the Great Depression, the town of Delta struggled with drought and unemployment. But the construction of Topaz brought in new jobs and boosted the local economy. Some people at Topaz received permission to shop in Delta and work off-site on farms and in businesses and homes. Incarcerees could also leave the camp and resettle to the East for work or college, but they could not return to the West Coast until 1945.
By the end of the war, most of those left at Topaz moved back to California to try to rebuild their lives. After transforming the rural Utah desert into one of the largest cities in the state – then back to dust again – the wartime Topaz installation would be considered another of rural Utah’s boom-and-bust towns.
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See Leonard J. Arrington, The Price of Prejudice: The Japanese-American Relocation Center in Utah during World War II (1962); Mine Okubo, Citizen 13660 (1946); Allan Bosworth, American Concentration Camps (1967); Roger Daniels, Concentration Camps of North America, Japanese in the United States and Canada During World War II (1981); Yoshiko Uchida, Desert Exile (1982); Michi Weglyn, Years of Infamy: The Untold Story of America’s Concentration Camps (1976); Huefner, Michael. "Densho Encyclopedia: Topaz". Encyclopedia.densho.org. https://encyclopedia.densho.org/Topaz/