It was the month of April 1942. I was busy at my store in Richmond, when one of my father’s friends brought the news of our evacuation. All Japanese, naturalized citizens or Canadian-born, were to be moved 100 miles from the coast. I was 16 years old at the time and was asking a great deal of questions. Why us? What did we do to deserve such punishment? I am a Canadian-born citizen!(Tamiko Haraga, internee in Greenwood – Yesaki, 2003)
In 1942, close to 21,500 Nikkei were dispersed from the protected zone to various locations across Canada, but primarily to remote areas in B.C. Internment Sites The B.C. Security Commission (BCSC) chose six internment sites and some surrounding towns in B.C. to intern the Nikkei. The ten destinations were located in small communities or on vacant lands. By April 1, 1943, the population of the internees reached a high of 12,177. Slocan Valley Area (sites: Slocan City, Lemon Creek, Bay Farm, Popoff Farm) 4,764 Tashme (largest and last site to be built) 2,624 New Denver (sites: New Denver, Rosebery) 1,701 Greenwood 1,203 Kaslo 965 Sandon 920 Self-supporting Sites In addition to the internment sites, there were seven self-supporting settlements or independent schemes authorized by the B.C. Security Commission (BCSC). These locations, also referred to by the Nikkei as kanemochi mura, were the destinations of wealthier Japanese Canadians from Vancouver and Steveston who chose to pay for all of their expenses including housing, education, and transportation. There were 1,161 Nikkei in these voluntary sites by October 31, 1942. Christina Lake 109 Bridge River 269 Minto City 322 East Lillooet 309 McGillivray Falls 70 Swing Crew (Okangan) 63 Assiniboia 19 The BCSC also issued special permits to several hundred Japanese individuals and families from Vancouver. They were sent to farms in B.C., such as Grand Forks and areas north of Kamloops, where permanent employment was guaranteed. Road Camps During the March-June 1942 period, 2,161 Japanese nationals and physically fit men were sent to four key road building projects in B.C., Alberta, and Ontario. While the criteria was those aged between 18 and 45 years old, some of them were 17 and others over 70. As of October 31, 1942, the number of men decreased to 945 as many were permitted to join their families living in internment camps. The highest number of men working on the Blue River-Yellowhead highway project, for instance was 1,561 in April 1942. Six months later the population decreased by over 80%. Blue River-Yellowhead project (17 camps) 271 Revelstoke-Sicamous project (5 camps) 346 Hope-Princeton Highway project (6 camps) 296 Schreiber-Jackfish project (Northern Ontario, 4 camps) 32
Workers from Road Camp on Hope-Princeton Highway Project, 1942
Photo credit UBC Library, Japanese Canadian Photograph Collection, Access Identifier: JCPC_ 03_007
Due to the Alberta sugar beet farmers’ severe labour shortage, the B.C. Security Commission (BCSC), the Government of Alberta, and sugar beet associations negotiated to relocate almost 2,600 Nikkei from B.C. to southern Alberta. Shortly afterwards, the same arrangement was made in Manitoba. Despite the harsh living and working conditions on these farms, the move represented an opportunity for the Nikkei to ensure that their families remained together and to be reunited with men who had been sent to road camps. By November 1942, 3,991 Japanese Canadians had left B.C. to move east. With their farming knowledge and experience from working in the Fraser Valley and Delta, the contribution of the Nikkei to the sugar beet industry was invaluable. According to the BCSC, there was “little doubt that unless Japanese labour had been recruited … the great bulk of the crop would not have been seeded, with the consequent loss to Canada of many thousands of tons of beet sugar.” Alberta 2,588 Manitoba 1,053 Ontario (men only) 350 Ontario Prisoner-of-War Camps There were approximately 800 Nikkei men detained by the RCMP in Vancouver for their opposition to the measures taken by the federal government against those of Japanese ancestry. By October 1942, 412 and 287 men were sent to Angler Camp and Petawawa Camp respectively, while 111 remained in detention. Other Work Sites The BCSC approved the movement of 439 Nikkei to work on three significant industrial projects: the sawmill in Westwold (77), the sawmill and logging operation in Taylor Lake (180), and the Ontario Industries logging business (85). There were an additional 97 Nikkei employed in other industrial projects. The BCSC also granted special work permits to 1,359 Japanese Canadians to fill approved jobs in Canada and the Yukon Territory.
Adachi, K. (1976). The enemy that never was: A history of Japanese Canadians. Canada. British Columbia Security Commission. (1942, March 4 – October 31). Removal of Japanese from protected areas. Fukuma, M. (2017, Holiday). Making Japanese Canadian wartime history more visible. Kawamoto Reid, L., & Carter, B. (2012). Karizumai: A guide to Japanese Canadian internment sites. Sunflower Inn Bed and Breakfast. (2017/2018). History. Takata, T. (1983). Nikkei legacy: The story of Japanese Canadians from settlement to today. Yesaki, M. & Steves, H. & K. (2005). Steveston cannery row: An illustrated history (2nd edition).