Saturday, September 13, 2014

Tule Lake Segregation Center, Modoc County, CA

Threat: Inappropriate development; Insensitive public policy
Owner: City of Tulelake owns the Tulelake Airport at the Tule Lake Segregation Center site 


Tule Lake stockade gate. Photo courtesy of Tule Lake Committee.
Tule Lake aerial panorama. Photo courtesy of Tule Lake Committee.


Tule Lake Concentration Camp and Segregation Center was a Japanese American concentration camp operated by the US government from 1942-1946 in Modoc County, Northern California. During WWII, the US government suspended the rule of law and the Constitution and forcibly removed and imprisoned 120,000 Japanese Americans in ten concentration camps located in desolate regions of the nation. Those who spoke out or resisted the government’s violation of their human and civil rights were smeared as disloyal pro-Japan extremists. Absent hearings or trials, these dissidents were segregated to the maximum security Tule Lake concentration camp and subjected to abuse and an unprecedented, little-known, denationalization program. This is the only time in our nation’s history when more than 5,500 American citizens were stripped of their U.S. citizenship so the government could legally deport them to Japan after the war. The wartime protest and segregation of dissenters at Tule Lake has been buried for nearly 70 years, marginalized as a story of disloyalty.

Tule Lake Concentration Camp and Segregation Center is threatened by Modoc County’s plans to construct an enormous, 3-mile long 8-foot perimeter fence around the Tulelake Airport, which it says will prevent wildlife strikes, even though no such strikes have been recorded during the entire existence of the airport beginning in the 1950s. Such a fence would destroy portions of the historic site and close off access to a place of remembrance, a place of mourning, a place where thousands of lives were destroyed.

In January 2014, the County approved a 5-year, $3.5 million plan to refurbish and develop airport. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has the power to stop the destruction of this unique civil and human rights site.  We ask that the FAA stop granting funds that will destroy the integrity of the site's historic resources, and that the FAA assist in removal of the airport to a non-historically significant site.  

Contact:
Barbara Takei, CFO

Tule Lake Committee

c/o 7227 Bayview Way

Sacramento, CA 95831


Website: www.tulelake.org

Friday, September 12, 2014

Chinatown House, Rancho Cucamonga, CA

Threat: Demolition; Neglect; Insensitive public policy
Owner: Cucamonga Valley Water District

Rear facade, view northeast. Photo courtesy of O.C. Lee.
Front facade, view southwest. Photo courtesy of O.C. Lee.


































The Chinatown House in Rancho Cucamonga, California was built in 1919 by and for Chinese workers. These men represented the remaining population of a Cucamonga community, which developed well before 1900 as veterans of railroad building of earlier decades worked their way south into the orchards, vineyards, and citrus groves of Southern California. Of the 15-20 Chinatown settlements scattered across Southern California during the 19th and early 20th centuries, this is the last intact remaining building outside of Los Angeles’ Old Chinatown that can help tell the story about the contributions of Chinese workers to the regional agricultural economy. Built on ranch land owned by William Araiza, the two-story building housed a general store with rooms and a dormitory for perhaps 50. It functioned also as a rooming house for workers who lived in outlying farms and came into town to socialize.

Chinatown House is constructed of walls with unreinforced hollow clay tile and clay brick, multicolored center around shades of brown and sand giving a stirring effect in the afternoon sun. After Mah Wong, the last Chinese resident who passed in 1944, the property was sold to a local family, the Navarettes, and subsequently to the Cucamonga Valley Water District in 1988.  For the past 26 years, the building has been vacant. In 2013, cracks in the 90+ year old mortar, sagging walls, and deteriorated roof led the City of Rancho Cucamonga to issue an order to the Water District to correct structural problems or demolish.


Chinatown House was added to the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 11 Most Endangered Places List in 2013. Thanks to vigorous community action, the City Planning Commission concurred with preservation advocates that the threatened demolition represented “demolition by neglect,” and that a full environmental impact report should be required prior to issuance of any demolition permit. The City has allowed for a structural evaluation of the building both in the interior and exterior, to plan next steps toward repair and reuse. 

For more information:
Eugene W. Moy
Co-Chair, Chinatown House Preservation Coalition
President, Chinese American Citizens Alliance, Los Angeles
415 Bamboo Lane
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Email: ewmoy49@gmail.com
Websites: www.savechinatownhouse.org and facebook.com/savechinatownhouse