THE DEPRESSION
WORLD WAR II AT HOME
POST-WAR PROJECTS
EARLY WORK / PERSONAL WORK
Winters, CA, August 1943
Dorothea Lange
Gelatin silver print
Gift of Paul S. Taylor
9.9375 in x 7.75 in
A67.137.42044.7
© The Dorothea Lange Collection, the Oakland Museum of California.
Entering Town, More than a Year After Evacuation of Japanese. — Dorothea Lange
War Department Evacuation Poster | 1942
Untitled, War Department letter granting Dorothea Lange access to Assembly Centers | April 4, 1942
Outcasts! The Story of America’s Treatment of Her Japanese-American Minority | 1943
War Department Technical Manual of Basic Photography | 1941
Survey Graphic magazine page spread with internment article by Paul Taylor | September 1942
Survey Graphic magazine with article on internment by Paul Taylor | September 1942
Stockton Assembly Center, WRA | May 19, 1942
Manzanar Relocation Center, Manzanar, California | July 3, 1942
Centerville, California | May 19, 1942
Two children of the Mochida family who, with their parents, are awaiting evacuation bus | May 8, 1942
Turlock, California. Families of Japanese ancestry arrive at Turlock Assembly Center. | May 2, 1942
Manzanar Relocation Center, Manzanar, California | June 29, 1942
Nisei Grill, San Francisco, California | April 7, 1942
Centerville, California | May 9, 1942
WRA negative envelope for "One Nation Indivisible" | 1942
Born Free and Equal: The Story of Loyal Japanese-Americans (copy owned by Dorothea Lange) | 1944
One Nation Indivisible, San Francisco (Pledge of Allegiance at Rafael Weill Elementary School a Few Weeks Prior to Evacuation) | April 20, 1942
Just About to Step into the Bus for the Assembly Center | April 6, 1942
Headlines: "Ouster of all Japs in California Near!" | February 1942
Winters, August 1943, New Sign Posts | August 1943
Winters, (California). New Sign Posts, Entering Town, More Than a Year after Evacuation of Japanese | August 1943
Signs, Metropolitan Oakland Wartime - Do You Remember | 1945
Japanese Owned Grocery Store, Oakland | March 30, 1942