Milbooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More »
Listing Upload Hot Changes Help

Search

  • Help
rating:q
rating:e

Factions

  • ? united states of america 460
  • ? world war 2 250

Character

  • ? chuck ferguson 1

General

  • ? 6+children 2
  • ? building 129
  • ? child 17
  • ? civillian focus 12
  • ? civillians 53
  • ? home front 2
  • ? infant 1
  • ? manzanar children's village 1
  • ? no weapons 530
  • ? orphanage 1
  • ? overalls 3
  • ? pants 75
  • ? shirt 59
  • ? short hair 57
  • ? suspenders 2

Meta

  • ? 20th century 795
  • ? ↳ 1940s 296
  • ? ↳ 1942 72
  • ? black and white 551
  • ? ↳ greyscale 423
  • ? commentary 163
  • ? highres 803
  • ? november 14

Information

  • ID: 1783
  • Uploader: Eastman »
  • Date: 4 days ago
  • Size: 334 KB .jpg (1549x2048) »
  • Source: eacc.janm.org/identity/orphans/ »
  • Rating: General
  • Score: 0
  • Favorites: 0
  • Status: Active

Options

  • Resize to window
  • View smaller
  • View original
  • Find similar
  • Download

History

  • Tags
  • Pools
  • Notes
  • Moderation
  • Commentary
Resized to 54% of original (view original)
chuck ferguson (united states of america and 1 more)

Artist's commentary

  • Original
  • Chuck Ferguson at "Children's Village" (for orphans) with some of the children. Manzanar, Nov, 1942

    At the time World War II broke out, there were three orphanages within California to care for children of Japanese descent (including mixed-race Japanese children) and to serve the needs of the Japanese American community. Two of these orphanages, the Shonien and the Maryknoll Catholic Home, were in Los Angeles; the Salvation Army Children’s Home was in San Francisco.

    The children in these orphanages were there for various reasons. Sometimes their parents died or were too ill to care for the children because of mental illness or contagious diseases like tuberculosis. Other children were there temporarily while their parents could get back on their feet again financially

    When the Japanese Americans were removed from the West Coast, Japanese American children in these three orphanages were removed and placed in the Manzanar Children’s Village. The children ranged in age from infants and toddlers to 18-year-olds, and their experiences at Manzanar varied greatly. Nearly 20 percent of the Japanese American children were of mixed race.

    • ‹ prev Search: pants next ›
  • Comments
  • There are no comments.

    Leave a comment

    Terms / Privacy / Upgrade / Contact /