強制収容所の場所

Arrested: December 1941


Sand Island Internment Camp, Honolulu, Oahu Island


This internee was among 166 men (mostly Issei) who were sent on the second transfer ship for internment in U.S. Army and Justice Department camps on the Mainland. These men were sent together from camp to camp, with some paroled to War Relocation Authority camps to reunite with family or transferred for repatriation to Japan. This internee was in a sub-group of Second Transfer Group internees who were sent from Livingston to Missoula before being transferred to Santa Fe.


Angel Island Detention Facility, California

3月 1942 - 4月 1942


Fort Sill Internment Camp, Oklahoma

4月 1942 - 5月 1942


Camp Livingston Internment Camp, Louisiana

6月 1942 - 6月 1943


Fort Missoula Internment Camp, Montana

6月 1943 - 4月 1944


Santa Fe Internment Camp, New Mexico

4月 1944 - 6月 1944


Paroled to Lakewood, Ohio

6月 1944 - 7月 1945


Returned to Hawaii: July 1945

In the summer of 1945, the U.S. Army allowed ten of Hawaii's 160 internees with sons serving in the military to return to the islands.


As an assistant to the prominent Honolulu pastor Takie Okumura, Kametaro Maeda aided in the establishment of the Makiki Christian Church at the turn of the 20th century and preached to early Japanese immigrants of the Ewa Sugar Plantation on Oahu Island in the decades before the war.

While Maeda remained under incarceration on the mainland, son Wallace Michio Maeda was serving in the U.S. military as a sergeant with the 100th Infantry Battalion. Other internees with soldier sons who returned in the summer of 1945 were Ryosei Aka, Ryozo Izutsu, Kichitaro Kawauchi, Teiichiro Maehara, Tamehachi Makihira, Nobuichi Miura, Kyoichi Miyata, Hanzo Shimoda, and Nekketsu Takei.