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Mitsuye endo
Mitsuye endo












Having been forewarned about this decision, US President Franklin Roosevelt issued Public Proclamation No.

mitsuye endo

On, the US Supreme Court ruled in her favor in Ex parte Mitsuye Endo, declaring that the government could not detain her without charge even as the government itself conceded Endo was loyal to her country. The US War Relocation Authority, the agency in charge of the interment of Japanese-Americans, offered to release her in order for her to drop the court case, but she refused. Meanwhile, Endo was transferred to Central Utah War Relocation Center in Topaz, Utah, United States. In Apr 1944, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals deferred the case to the US Supreme Court.

mitsuye endo

The petition was dismissed by a judge in Jul 1943. Purcell had approached Endo as a suitable plaintiff against the government as she was a Methodist by religion, had a brother in the US Army, and had never been to Japan, qualities that would otherwise deem her a typical American should she be of a European ancestry. In Jul 1942, attorney James Purcell filed a habeas corpus petition seeking her release from Tule Lake, arguing that she was being held without trial. She was then deported to the Tule Lake War Relocation Center in Newell, California. She was fired from his job for being of Japanese descent. When the United States entered the war in 1941, she was a clerk at the state Department of Employment in Sacramento, California.

mitsuye endo

She attended Sacramento Senior High School. For the rest of her life Mitsuye Endo avoided the spotlight and rarely discussed her actions in helping to end the internment and died from cancer on April 14, 2006.Ww2dbaseMitsuye Endo was born in Sacramento, California, United States in May 1920 as the second of four children of Japanese immigrants. Eventually Mitsuye took a job as a secretary for the Mayor's Committee on Race Relations and married Kenneth Tsutsumi who she had met in the camp in 1947. After leaving the camp Mitsuye went to Chicago and lived with her sister and her husband. Soon after the army allowed the Japanese to leave the camps and come back to the west coast. Because of her petition against the legality of the internment led to the United States Supreme Court ruling in her favor in December 1944. While the internment was going on Purcell looked to challenge the legality of the forced relocation through habeas corpus Mitsuye was an ideal candidate to use as the basis for the case against the government due to the fact that she had never been to Japan had a brother in the army and was a Methodist. Purcell to help with her case.As the Japanese were forced to relocate to the camps Mitsuye was sent to Tule Lake Relocation Center and then to Topaz Relocation Center with her family. Going through the Japanese American Citizens League Mitsuye hired James C.

mitsuye endo

After the Bombing of Pearl Harbor many Japanese who worked for the state were laid off and Mitsuye was one of 63 state workers who proceeded to file charges against their unlawful dismissal. After graduation she attended a secretarial school which allowed her to get a job for the state working at the Department of Employment. Mitsuye Endo, was born on May 20th, 1920 in Sacramento and grew up going to Sacramento Senior High School.














Mitsuye endo