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  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8777.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8770.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8786.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8784.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8767.jpg
  • Grave of Robert F. Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery04.jpg
  • Grave of Robert F. Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery03.jpg
  • The John F Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis grave located at Arlington National Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery01.jpg
  • Grave of Senator Ed Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery07.jpg
  • Grave of Senator Ed Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery06.jpg
  • Grave of Senator Ed Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery05.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp15.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp13.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp06.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp14.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp08.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The cemetery at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, stands as the most preserved part of Manzanar. Fifteen of the 150 people who died at Manzanar were buried there with six burial sites remaining. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp07.jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • US 395 is a main highway connecting Northern California with Southern California along the Eastern Sierras. The southern end begins in the Mojave Desert and extends all the way to Canada. The primary destination for many travelers from Southern California is the region around Mammoth Lakes where the outdoor lifestyle dictates life. <br />
<br />
It's a slice of Americana along what is also known as the Blue Star Memorial Highway in honor of the United States Armed Services. Ironically, the highway is also home to the Manzanar War Relocation Camp where Japanese Americans were interred during World War II.
    Outdoor Lifestyle Eastern Sierras-92...jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4904.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4942.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4917.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4891.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4858.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4855.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4808.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4783.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4824.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4937.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4913.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4896.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4876.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4872.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4844.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4837.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4742.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4748.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4732.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4725.jpg
  • Migrants:..Every year hundreds of migrants die attempting to cross into the United States illegally, the majority from heat stroke and drownings. Over a hundred migrants are buried at a nondescript cemetery located in a undisclosed dirt section of a cemetery in Holtville, Ca near the major crossing point of El Centro, Ca. Most of the bodies were never identified. John Hunter spends weekends shuttling water into remote border regions and often stops by the cemetery to pay respect. Please contact Todd Bigelow directly with your licensing requests. PLEASE CONTACT TODD BIGELOW DIRECTLY WITH YOUR LICENSING REQUEST. THANK YOU!
    US Mexico border213.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-5392.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-5374.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-5382.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-5375.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-5366.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-5364.jpg
  • Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for many of the nation’s most famous people who’ve served America including presidents, military personnel, astronauts and Supreme Court justices.
    Washington DC Travel-4818.jpg
  • Brother of a murder victim visits his grave. Photographed for Southern Poverty Law Center.
    Race Murders18.JPG
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8750.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8802.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8800.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8798.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8774.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8758.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8772.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8759.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8751.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8748.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8740.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8804.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8761.jpg
  • An architectural wonder, The Pantheon with no visible arches or other means holding up the dome, is Rome's only fully intact ancient building. It also is where the grave of Renaissance artist Raphael is located.
    Italy Travel Photography-8745.jpg
  • PALM DESERT, CA, OCTOBER 21, 2006: Louisa Prudhomme, mother of Anthony Prudhomme who was the murder victim in a hate crime by Latino gang members in Highland Park, CA, regularly visits the site where she buried her son's ashes. Anthony's brother brought a BB gun with him on a recent visit to the grave site. Located about 150 miles from her home, Anthony's ashes lay buried beneath a cross high atop a hill overlooking the Coachella Nature Preserve. This was a favorite spot for Anthony. (Photograph by Todd Bigelow/Aurora).
    Race Murders09.JPG
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: A guard tower at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp11.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Visitors in the Interpretive Center at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp01.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The entrance to Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, is off U.S. 395 in Independence, California. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp16.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp12.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: The sentry posts Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II, were built by a internee at the camp. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp10.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp09.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp05.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp04.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Signs mark the site of buildings that once stood at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp03.jpg
  • INDEPENDENCE, CA, March 19, 2008: Visitors in the Interpretive Center at Manzanar, one of ten remote War Relocation Centers in the United States where 11,000 Japanese were sent beginning in early 1942 during World War II. Not trusting those with cultural ties to Japan who had bombed Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Government enclosed a  one square mile, remote area in the Eastern Sierra mountains with barbed wire and erected a mini city complete with churches, barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even baseball fields. A cemetery and graves still adorn the property which is now a National Historic Site.
    Manzanar Camp02.jpg

Todd Bigelow Photography

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