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The island was once home to 3,000 first- and second-generation Japanese Americans before many were taken to internment camps ...
It was February 25, 1942, two and a half months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the U.S. Navy had given the island’s ...
In the 1930s the tiny, man-made Terminal Island in San Pedro was home to 3,000 Japanese American fishermen and their families. The island bustled with activity. The men brought in hauls of ...
Protesters are gathering from dawn until dusk at the Japanese Fishing Village Memorial today, a San Pedro monument built to ...
Community groups and Terminal Islanders — descendants of the Japanese American community that once thrived there — say ICE is ...
Two buildings in San Pedro's Japanese American village have remained for decades. Former residents and supporters are mobilizing to protect the last vestiges of their history there.
Activists say they’ve seen agents in military vests marked with “ICE” driving Border Patrol vehicles and unmarked cars in and ...
Residents are fighting to preserve Terminal Island, a historic Japanese fishing village with only two remaining buildings.
As KTLA celebrates Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, Frank Buckley highlights the rich history of Terminal Island, where 3,000 Japanese Americans established America’s tuna ...
Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans alike who lived on Terminal Island were among the first to be incarcerated under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066.
Community groups and Terminal Islanders — descendants of the Japanese American community that once thrived there — say ICE is using the area for staging.
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