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D2:

THE
WAR RELOCATION"
WORK CORPS
A Circular of Information for Enlistees
and Their F amities

>

"This generation of Americans has come to realize, with a present
and personal realization, that there is something larger and more
important than the life of any individual or of any individual
group-something for which a man will sacrifice, and gladly
sacrifice, not only his pleasures, not only his goods, not only his
associations with those he loves, but his life itself. In time of
crisis when the future is in the balance, we come to understand,
with full recognition and devotion, what this nation is, and what
we owe to it."

-PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT,
in his Message to the American People.
on February 23, 1942.

The War Relocation Authority
Washington, D. C.

DEFINITIONS
Assembly Center-A convenient gathering point, within the
military area, where evacuees live temporarily while
awaiting the opportunity for orderly, planned movement
to a Relocation Center outside of the military area.
Relocation Center-A pioneer community, with basic hous,
ing and protective services provided by the Federal
Government, for occupancy by evacuees for the dura,
tion ,.,f the war.
Reloca_!ion Area-The entire area surrounding a Relocation
Center, under the jurisdiction of the War Relocation
Authority. The relocation lands are Federally owned,
are designated as military areas, _and are protected by
military police.
Work Project-Work projects, such as development of irrigated land, manufacturing enterprises, and farming,
undertaken by the War Relocation Work Corps.
Enlistee-A person who enlists in the War Relocation Work
Corps. Enlistment is for the duration of the .war.

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To

AMERICANS OF JAPANESE ANCESTRY :

The democracies of the world are joined in a fight that will be fought
until it is won. In this fight, all Americans are making difficult sacrifices.
Americans in every portion of the country, Americans of many ancestries,
are being put to the test. How each individual, how each group, meets a
particular trial will measure his devotion to his Nation.
Americans of Japanese ancestry are now making great sacrifices. You
are meeting a most difficult test. Wartime considerations make it necessary
for you to leave your homes, your property, and old associations on the
Pacific Coast military frontier, and to seek out a new, temporary way of
living for the duration of the war.
To help you as much as possible, to assist you in establishing new war,
time homes, and to make certain that you will have ample opportunity to
earn a living and to contribute the maximum to the Nation's production,
the Federal Government has undertaken a planned, orderly relocation
program.
On March 18, 1942, the President of the United States established the
War Relocation Authority and directed it, a civilian agency, to cooperate
with the War Department in evacuating, relocating, and providing work
opportunities for all who must leave designated military areas in the interest
of national security. Within the Authority, the President established the
War Relocation Work Corps.
The War Relocation Authority is now establishing Federally-owned and
protected relocation projects. Within these areas you will have an opportunity to build new communities where you may live, work, worship, and
educate your children. Life in these new communities will be as well-rounded
and normal as possible under wartime conditions.
Many of you have asked for an opportunity to undertake useful work
contributing to the war effort. That is why the President established a War
Relocation Work Corps in which all able-bodied workers over 16 years
of age may enlist for the duration of the war. Enlistment in the Corps is
wholly voluntary. Your enlistment will give you an opportunity to serve
your new community in many ways: To develop natural resources, to pro,
duce food, to manufacture essenti~l articles, , and to provide community
services.
My personal observations during the past month agree with the reports
I have received from numerous military and civilian offici~ls: You are all
cooperating wholeheartedly and cheerfully in the evacuation_and relocation

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WAR RELOCATION WORKS CORPS

program. You are demonstrating to the American people as a whole that
you will make your contribution, no matter how trying it may be.
For the War Relocation Authority I wish to say that we intend to demon,
strate to the world-to our friends and our enemies alike-that this Nation,
grim in the fight it is waging, can at the same time be tolerant, patient, and
considerate in handling this human problem of wartime migration and
resettlement.

Director
WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY

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WAR RELOCATION WORKS CORPS

The War Relocation Work Corps
The principal purpose of this circular is to explain the War Relocation
Work Corps in which you will soon have an opportunity to enlist.
However, first, to understand fully the purpose of the Corps and how
it will operate, you should have in mind some essential facts about the
whole evacuation and relocation program.
Evacuation and relocation involve the transplanting of more than 100,000
people from the military area of the Pacific Coast to selected Relocation
Areas in the interior. A Relocation Area cannot be located merely by
chance or whim. Relocation must be so managed as to enable you to establish
communities where you have a real chance to obtain some return for your
labor, where you can improve your homes, foster education, and build
democratic institutions of government.
The mass migration of more than 100,000 people must involve several
steps. The first is the evacuation from your homes to Assembly Centers
within the military area.
An Assembly Center is merely a way-station to a war-duration Relocation
Area. It is a temporary stopping place, where you are provided with food,
shelter, medical care, and protection while Relocation Centers are being
constructed.
Because Assembly Centers are only temporary residences, not many of
you can be provided jobs while you are there. Of course, there will be some
work in helping to operate the community services. As the Assembly Centers
are emptied, there will be additional work in getting the people and their
belongings ready to move and in salvaging the assembly buildings for later
construction of schools and school equipment at Relocation Centers.
Relocation Areas

The second step in the evacuation and relocation program is the selection
of Relocation Areas. The lands of the West are plentiful. But the water is
scarce. Consequently, for weeks the War Relocation Authority has had
many experts who know the West's resources thoroughly searching out the
best possible Relocation Areas. They have combed the country from the
border of Military Area No. 1 to the Mississippi River. These men, in their
search, have in mind that they are selecting the home communities of large
numbers of evacuees for the duration of the war. They are determined to
find the places that will best provide opportunity for normal, secure, and
industrious living for you and your families.
Their work is proceeding as rapidly as it can. Whenever these experts
find what seems to be a promising Relocation Area they apply these specific
tests:

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WAR RELOCATION WORKS CORPS

1. The area must provide work opportunities throughout most of the
year for the population to be relocated there. Such opportunities may consist of the following classes or combination of classes of work:
Public Works-Such as development of land for irrigation, conservation of soil resources, flood control operations, range improve,
ment, operation of experimental projects for production of rubber
and silk;
Agricultural Production-First for the production of foodstuffs
for the relocated community, and second to aid in the Food for
Freedom program;
Manufacturing-The manufacture of goods requiring a great
deal of hand labor, including products needed in Relocation Areas.
2. Each Relocation Area must have adequate transportation and power
facilities to nieet the needs of the relocated community; it must have a suffi,
cient acreage of good quality ·soil and an adequate supply of water for irrigation to provide the community with a good agricultural base; the climate
must be satisfactory; the domestic and industrial water supply for the area
must be suitable in quality and quantity.
3. Each area must be able to support a minimum population of 5,000
persons. Efficient administration of the program, provision of protective
services by the Army, and the effective development of com~unity services,
such as schools, hospitals, fire-control facilities, and recreational opportunities, all require that communities be at least this large.
4. Each area must be on public land, owned or leased by the Federal
Government, so that improvements made at public expense will become
public, not private, assets. Any land purchased for Relocation Areas will
remain in public ownership.
5. Each area must meet certain specifications of the War Department.
The War Relocation Authority and the Army already have selected five
Relocation Areas capable of providing homes and a living for 60,000 people.
Within a few weeks additional areas will be selected for an additional fifty
thousand to sixty thousand evacuees.

A brief description of the Relocation Areas approved thus far appears at
the bac~ of this circular.
Relocation Centers

After a relocation area is approved, the next step is the ·construction of a
Relocation Center.
Had canvas for great tent cities been available it would have been- used.
Tents would have been pitched and evacuees would then have gone to work
building their new wartime homes.

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WAR RELOCATION WORKS CORPS

Unfortunately, canvas could not be obtained. So, before evacuees leave
the Assembly Centers group houses must be built, streets must be laid out,
wells must be drilled and the water must be piped around the Center.
Electric power lines and telephone lines must be brought in. This construction proceeds swiftly when the site is approved; houses for several thousand
families are built in the matter of several weeks. The houses might be called
"basic" structures; they are soundly constructed and provide the essentials
for decent living. They are not fancy, but they are good. They are almost
identical to most of the houses at Assembly Centers. At the Relocation
Centers evacuees will have an opportunity to improve their quarters, as they
wish, by their own work.
As the Relocation Centers are ready for occupancy, you will move to
them. 'This is the last step in the evacuation process, but it is the first step in
the development of communities on the Relocation Areas.

Family Life-Self Government
At Relocation Centers, as at Assembly Centers, families will be kept
together, if they so wish. You may feel assured on this point: There is no
reason whatever for interfering with normal family arrangements, and the
Authority has no intention of doing so.
As you settle in a Relocation Center, it will be up to you to plan the
design of the community life within the broad basic policies determined by
the Authority for over-all administration of Relocation Areas. It will be up
to you to establish and manage your own governmental services. You will
elect your community officials, after having determined how you wish to
manage elections. It will largely be up to you to maintain a police force,
fire-control facilities, recreational activities, and many other essentials.

Health and Education
As at Assembly Centers, each Relocation Center will have hospitals and
hospital equipment. Your own doctors will operate these hospitals and if
additional space in them is needed you may build it.
Elementary schools and high schools will be maintained by the Authority,
in cooperation with the States and the United States Office of Education.
You may organize and manage nursery schools, as you no doubt will wish
to do.
The Authority is now enlisting the help of non-governmental organiza,
tions which will try to arrange for the attendance of Qniversity and college
students at midwestern institutions.

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Household Effects
Most families will want to have various personal belongings, such as
furniture, extra clothing, and household equipment, as soon as possible after
settling in a Relocation Center. The Authority, on your request, will remove
from storage and transport to your new home at the Center such furniture
and personal belongings as can readily be used there.

Details of the War Relocation Work Corps
By now you probably are asking, "Just where does the War Relocation
Work Corps fit into this program?"
The answer to that is simple: The Work Corps is a means for mobilizing
the energies, skills ;md abilities of employable evacuees to do constructive
work for your country and your community.
The Work Corps provides a means for orgamzmg and apportioning
opportunities for work and income on the relocation projects. It enables
individuals to do the work for which they are most fitted by training and
experience. It will provide additional training to adapt old skills to new
· jobs, and to develop new skills. It will recruit personnel for community and
administrative services. It will give you an opportunity to demonstrate, in a
very concrete way, your loyalty and willingness to serve your country.

Eligibility-All evacuees who are employable and more than 16 years
of age, both men and women, may apply for enlistment in the Work Corps.
Enlistment is entirely voluntary.
Method of Enlistment-Enlistment is accomplished by filling out an
official form WRA-1 in duplicate at an Assembly Center or at a Relocation
Center. The enlistment must be made before an official of the War Reloca,
tion Authority.
Obligations of Enlistee-The enlistee assumes certain definite obligations
when he enlists:
First-He agrees to serve as a member of the Corps for the duration of
the war, and for 14 days after the end of the war.
Second-He swears or affirms that he will be loyal to the United States
of America in thought, word, and deed; that he will faithfully perform all
tasks assigned him by the Authority; that he will accept in full payment for
his service such cash and other allowances as may be provided by law or by
regulations issued by the Authority.
'Third-He agrees that :
1. He may be transferred from one Relocation Center to another as

determined by the Authority from time to time.

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WAR RELOCATION WORKS CORPS

2. Medical and hospital services will be provided, but any injury received or disease contracted while a member of the Corps cannot be
made the basis of any claim against the United States Government.
3. He shall be subject to such special assessments for educational,
medical, recreational, protective, and other public or community
services and facilities as may be provided for in the regulations
of the Authority or the ordinances of the community.
4. He may be granted furloughs for work in agricultural, industrial,
or in other private employment, and while on such furlough will
pay for the support of any dependents who may remain at Relocation Centers.
5. He will be responsible for any loss, willful destruction, sale, or disposal of any property issued to him by the Authority.
(i. Any infraction of rules or regulations of the Authority, or any

act or utterance disloyal to the United States, will render him
liable to trial and suitable punishment.
Enlistment in the War Relocation Work Corps is accepted as a clear
indication of the enlistee's patriotism and loyalty to the United States.

Obligations to Enlistees-The Federal Government accepts an obliga,
tion to provide the enlistee with a chance to work so that he may earn a
living for himself and his family and also contribute to needed national production of agricultural and industrial goods.
The Government also accepts an obligation to see to it that, regardless
of the financial success or failure of the project, housing, food, clothing,
education, and health service are provided to the enlistee and his family.

Types of Work
There will be work for all able hands. There also will be a demand for a
wide range of skills so that an enlistee, generally, will have an opportunity
to continue at the same kind of work as he has been following, or if such
work is not available, or if he can better use his capabilities at other types
of endeavor, he will be given an opportunity to undertake training for
other, more useful occupations.
One of the first tasks for enlistees at Relocation Centers will be to build
schools and equipment so that children may continue their education. As
previously indicated, the Authority is planning, in cooperation with State
Departments of Education and the United States Office of Education, to
provide competent teachers at all Centers, either by use of trained teachers
among enlistees, or by hiring of teachers. Each Center will have its own
school system.

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Another early task for enlistees in the Relocation Centers will be the construction of additional hospitals, meeting halls, recreation facilities, and
general improvement of buildings and grounds.
It will be highly important that agricultural production be started on the
Relocation Area as soon as possible. All enlistees with agricultural experience .
and others, too, will be immediately employed in preparing land for farming,
constructing irrigation canals and laterals, planting, cultivating, harvesting,
and processing crops. It is hoped that all relocated communities will become
self-sufficient in production of foodstuffs within the turn of a season, and
that they will be producing additional crops for the Food for Freedom program in the very near future.
Another major undertaking at each Center will be the manufacture of
many kinds of articles needed by the community and by the Nation. Simple
factories using a large amount of hand labor and readily available materials
will be established on the Relocation Projects wherever feasible, for operation by enlistees in the production of such products as clothing, wood
products, ceramics, netting, woven and knitted materials, building materials.
These suggested opportunities cover only a few of the broader fields of
activity in which enlistees may be engaged. Actually, their work will run
the gamut of employment in a normal community. There will be much
clerical and stenographic work, machinists' work, reporting and editing
for the Center newspaper, nursing, cooking, radio repairing, and work for
doctors and lawyers.
Incomes for Enlistees

The incomes earned on Relocation Areas by enlistees will · depend to a
great extent on the success that relocated communities have in organizing
and managing their various productive enterprises.

In effect, the relocation projects will be a partnership enterprise between
the relocated communities and the Federal Government. The precise methods
of keeping costs, making monthly cash allowances, and computing income
and profit will be described in detail in a publication to be issued soon by
the Authority.
Private Employment

Furloughs may be granted for specific periods of time to enlistees who
wish to accept employment opportunities outside Relocation Areas, under
the following conditions :
1. Since the Army cannot provide protective services for groups or
communities of less than 5,000, each State and local community

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where enlistees are to work must give assurance that they are in a
position to maintain law and order.
2. Transportation to the place of private employment and return
must be arranged without cost to the Federal Government.
3. Employers must, of course, pay prevailing wages to enlistees
without displacing other labor and must provide suitable living
accommodations.
4. For the time enlistees are privately employed, they will pay the
Government for expenses incurred in behalf of their dependents
who may remain at Relocation Centers.

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Approved Relocation Areas
Manzanar
The Manzanar Relocation Area is located in the Owens River Valley in
East Central California. The Relocation Center at Manzanar will accom,
modate a total of 10,000 residents, more than half of whom are already there.
The area affords limited opportunities for agricultural development, with
three or four thousand acres suitable for irrigation. At present several small
work projects are under way on the land, such as the production of guayule
seedlings.
It is likely that this Center will depend largely on industrial opportunities
and public works to provide useful work for its population. The equable
climate is conducive to outdoor work, and an early project to be undertaken
is the garnishing of camouflage nets.

Parker
The Parker Relocation Area is situated on the Colorado River Indian
Reservation in southwestern Arizona, on a tract of land made available for
irrigation by the erection of the Parker Dam. The area has an excellent
potential agricultural base-some 80,000 acres of raw land that can be
developed for production of a variety of crops. There will be plenty .of
worthwhile work for everyone. The bringing of the land into cultivation
will require construction of laterals and ditches, clearing and leveling of
the land. Considerable acreage will be made ready immediately for cultiva,
tion and production of subsistence food crops. Then, as a public works
program, additional acreage will be prepared for cultivation.
The Parker Relocation Area is designed to take care of 20,000 evacuees.
This population will be divided among three Centers, for which the basic
housing is now practically completed. These three Centers are: No. 1, 17
miles south of Parker, with a capacity for 10,000; No. 2, 20 miles south of
Parker, with facilities for 5,000; and No. 3, 23 miles south of Parker,
capacity 5,000.

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Gila
The Gila River Relocation Area is situated on the Pima Indian Reserva,
tion in southern Arizona, about forty miles from Phoenix. The Relocation
Center now being constructed there will accommodate 10,000 evacueesdivided into two communities of 5,000 each. There will be plentiful oppor,
tunities for agricultural and public work on the area. There is also oppor,
tunity for private employment.
At present about 7,000 acres of the land on the area is in alfalfa and is
in excellent condition to be converted immediately to vegetables and other
specialty crops. An additional 8,000 acres of raw land can be developed for
agricultural production, involving the construction of canals and ditches,
and clearing and leveling the land.
The growing season is 270 days, and the climate and soil are generally
favorable for a wide variety of agricultural production.

Tulelake
The Tulelake Relocation Area in northern California comprises 30,000
acres of land owned by the Federal Bureau of Reclamation. A Relocation
Center is now being constructed there to house 10,000 evacuees.
Considerable work will have to be done to bring the land into intensive
cultivation. Water is available.
The climate and soil are favorable for production of potatoes, field peas,
small grains, and some other crops, as demonstrated by the type of agricul,
ture carried on adjacent to the Relocation Area. Other possible work
opportunities include the production of forest products, and the possible
establishment of canning or dehydrating plants.

Minidoka
The Minidoka Relocation Area in southern Idaho, near Eden, consists
of 17,000 acres owned by the Federal Bureau of Reclamation. Construction
of housing for 10,000 evacuees is now under way.
A constructive public works project will be the lining of the main canal
now serving the region. The canal now loses nearly half of its water
through seepage.

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The land is suitable for intensive production of sugar beets, potatoes,
beans, onions, and possibly some other crops. The full acreage can be irrigated once the leaky canal is repaired. Construction during the first year
of the necessary laterals and leveling of the land should bring about 5,000
acres into production by 1943.
Climatic conditions generally are favorable. There is a growing season
of 138 days and annual rainfall is 8 to 10 inches.

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