The Tashme Incarceration Camp (/ˈtæʒmɪ/ [Anglicized pronunciation] or /ˈtɑːʃɪmɪ/ [Japanese pronunciation]) was a purpose-built incarceration camp constructed...
23 KB (3,126 words) - 17:28, 2 October 2023
Canada's Human Rights History TASHME: Life in a Japanese Canadian Internment Camp, 1942–1946 Japanese Canadian Blue River Road Camp Collection — record held...
95 KB (12,470 words) - 21:12, 27 July 2024
War II. At the Tashme Incarceration Camp, near Hope, British Columbia, Nakamura continued to create artworks, such as the painting Tashme at Dusk, July/August...
10 KB (982 words) - 16:19, 4 January 2024
Internment camps, called "relocation centres", were at Greenwood, Kaslo, Lemon Creek, New Denver, Rosebery, Sandon, Slocan City, and Tashme. Some were...
202 KB (21,477 words) - 05:44, 19 August 2024
speculated that Nakamura's changed mood could stem from his time in Tashme Incarceration Camp during the Second World War. In Canada's conservative art world...
13 KB (1,490 words) - 17:47, 3 April 2024
in 1938–39. During World War II, Japanese Canadians from the Tashme Incarceration Camp formed a bridge and building maintenance gang. Having barely recovered...
42 KB (1,987 words) - 18:05, 26 July 2024
as the transfer point for Japanese Canadians being sent to the Tashme Incarceration Camp southeast of Hope or joining the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP)...
21 KB (1,704 words) - 01:18, 29 July 2024
end of the Second World War, Yoshida and her sister left the incarceration camp in Tashme, British Columbia. In the late 1940s, Yoshida got a job at the...
3 KB (305 words) - 02:52, 10 May 2024