Tags
Concentration Camps, Delta, Historic Markers, Millard County, National Historic Landmarks, NRHP, utah, World War II

Topaz 1942 – 1946
Central Utah WRA Relocation Center
Fifteen miles west at Abraham is the location of the bleak desert site of a concentration camp, one of ten in Western America, in which 110,000 persons of Japanese ancestry were interned against their will during World War II. They were the victims of wartime hysteria, racial animosity, and economic opportunism on the West Coast.
Confined behind barbed wire fence and guarded by armed sentries ad held for no justifiable reason, the internees, two-thirds of whom were American citizens, and the majority of whom were women and children, not only endured the bitter physical discomforts of the desert heat and cold, but sustained a shocking affront to their sense of justice and fair play and human dignity. May this grim episode of basic American principles gone astray remind us to work for understanding and goodwill and justice in an enlightened America today.
The former residents of Topaz remember with grateful appreciation the friendliness and understanding with which the people of Delta received us during the period of our trial and despair.
This historic marker is located at the city park in Delta, Utah







With a broken heart I learn about interment camps in Utah.
As a young child I was not taught about the fact that Utah had Japanese interment camps. The Government has many different names for the inhumane practices of taking Japanese Americans (Americans) from their families and Homes. Utah boasts about family.”This is the place”right! Together Forever! We as humans should not of let this happen! We need to learn from the mistakes of the past. We need to be taught about Japanese Interment Camps! In all school districts in Utah!
I voluntarily gave my life to protect and defend the
United States of America!
Sincerely,
Former Utah resident, Mother, Active
duty combat veteran, 100% disabled veteran