There was no sign here and I need to do some research (not hard) but this is either a warehouse or a office.
Finally, last one I'll share so I don't take up too much space. This is my son standing on the slab that was one of two elementary schools.
Almost 9000 Japanese Americans were housed here (some were from Japan and had immigrated) during WWII and most in Topaz came from the Bay Area (San Francisco for non-natives). Imagine living in the Bay Area and then being moved to Tran Fran Race Track and housed in stalls and then to be put on a train to Delta, Utah and bused out to Topaz Internment Camp. The temperature range out there is around 0 in the winter (can get down to -30 below) and up to 106 F in the summer, but usually in the 90's. Good news, its a dry heat and not a humid heat.
Many young men went in and signed up to serve in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team that served in the European Theater and was one of the most highly decorated units in WWII.
This describes what the barracks were built of:
Furniture for the apartments included only army cots, mattresses, and blankets. Some residents constructed rough tables and shelves out of scrap lumber left lying around the camp. The barracks, crudely constructed of pine planks covered with tarpaper as the only insulation, and sheetrock on the inside, provided little protection against the extreme weather of the semi-arid climate.
A few links if your interested in learning more:
Topaz Official Site
Look around and look at the images, you'll see more and at the museum you can see a colored picture of a restored barrack.
In this case Wikipedia offers some solid info and is a starting point:
WikiTopaz
YouTubeQuickMovieonTopaz.
Turn your sound off, I didn't like the song but the images from mainly Topaz and some of the other camps is striking and haunting. I find it tragic how American they are.
I'm not one to bear my beliefs on the wall, and as a trained historian first and foremost, I had an excellent understanding of the situation and knowledge of why this happened. Going there made me connect and feel on a human level with this gross violation of civil rights. The country has formally apologized and $20,000 was offered to each survivor back in 1990 or so, but I hope we all remember the sacrifices that these citizens and their parents and grand-parents made during a time of crisis. More importantly I think we should all commit to honor them by vowing not to let the civil rights of any group go on being violated. Just my two cents. A very moving experience. [/url]
The world is indeed full of peril, and in it, there are many dark places; but still, there is much that is fair, and though in all lands, love is now mingled with grief, it grows perhaps the greater.