Granada War Relocation Center: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Granada WRC Store Counter.jpg|thumb|lright|250px|Granada WRC Co-op Store Counter.]] | [[File:Granada WRC Store Counter.jpg|thumb|lright|250px|Granada WRC Co-op Store Counter.]] | ||
Other facilities at the center included most of the infrastructure that would be required for any town of 10,000. The administrative area included admin buildings, a town hall, post office, mess hall, police station, and staff housing. There was a warehouse group and motor pool group. Other groups included a Hospital and Orphanage Group, schools, and fire protection. A Co-op store was financed and operated by the internees who provided $2,500 to fund the enterprise in January 1943. | Other facilities at the center included most of the infrastructure that would be required for any town of 10,000. The administrative area included admin buildings, a town hall, post office, mess hall, police station, and staff housing. There was a warehouse group and motor pool group. Other groups included a Hospital and Orphanage Group, schools, and fire protection. A Co-op store was financed and operated by the internees who provided $2,500 to fund the enterprise in January 1943. | ||
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[[File:Granada WRC HS Graduation 23 Jan 1945.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Granada WRC High School Graduation on 23 Jan 1945.]] | |||
Agricultural facilities included a hog farm and chicken ranch as well as crop fields. The military police provided external security while an internee police force took care of internal police activities. | Agricultural facilities included a hog farm and chicken ranch as well as crop fields. The military police provided external security while an internee police force took care of internal police activities. | ||
Revision as of 09:13, 23 August 2019
History![]() ![]() Construction began on 12 Jun 1942 with 1,000 hired workers and 50 evacuee volunteers, the Center general contractor was Lambie, Moss, Little, and James of Amarillo, Texas. The center was operational by the end of August 1942 as the Granada War Relocation Center (WRC) run by the civilian War Relocation Authority (WRA). ![]()
Residential Areas![]() ![]() Facilities at the center included 30 residential blocks with each block having twelve, 20' by 120' barracks structures and five service buildings. The service buildings included a 40' by 100' mess hall, a 20' by 50' laundry, two latrines and an ironing room. These buildings were all temporary military-style Theater of Operations (TO) structures of wood frame construction but had fibreboard or asbestos shingle siding, rather than the tarpaper common at most of the other relocation centers. The foundations of the barracks were a slab or concrete perimeter construction with brick floors rather than the post-and-pier foundations of other centers.
Other Facilities![]() ![]() Other facilities at the center included most of the infrastructure that would be required for any town of 10,000. The administrative area included admin buildings, a town hall, post office, mess hall, police station, and staff housing. There was a warehouse group and motor pool group. Other groups included a Hospital and Orphanage Group, schools, and fire protection. A Co-op store was financed and operated by the internees who provided $2,500 to fund the enterprise in January 1943.
![]() Agricultural facilities included a hog farm and chicken ranch as well as crop fields. The military police provided external security while an internee police force took care of internal police activities.
Closure![]() ![]() Officially closed on 15 Oct 1945 when the last group of 128 evacuees departed on two special coaches for Sacramento and nearby towns. At the peak of its population, the Granada WRC had 7,567 residents. The Center recorded 412 births and 107 deaths during the three years of its operation.
Current StatusNow part of Granada National Historic Landmark. Placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994 and designated a National Historic Landmark on 10 Feb 2006.
See Also: Sources:
Links: Visited: 20 Aug 2019
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