{"url_title":"Cow Creek (detention facility)","title_sort":"cowcreekdetentionfacility","links":{"json":"http://encyclopedia.densho.org/api/0.1/articles/Cow%20Creek%20(detention%20facility)/","html":"http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Cow%20Creek%20(detention%20facility)"},"modified":"2025-05-25T15:37:10","title":"Cow Creek (detention facility)","body":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\">\n <div id=\"databox-CampsDisplay\">\n  <table class=\"infobox\" width=\"200px;\">\n   <tbody>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      US Gov Name\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Cow Creek Camp\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Sites_of_incarceration/\" title=\"Sites of incarceration\">\n       Facility Type\n      </a>\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Sites_of_incarceration#Additional_Facility/\" title=\"Sites of incarceration\">\n       Additional Facility\n      </a>\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Administrative Agency\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      War Relocation Authority\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Location\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Cow Creek, California (36.5000 lat, -117.0000 lng)\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Date Opened\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      December 10, 1942\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Date Closed\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      February 15, 1943\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Population Description\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Held forty men and their families from the Manzanar concentration camp.\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      General Description\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Located in the desert of California near the Death Valley National Monument, one of the hottest places on Earth. Summer temperatures stay well over 100 degrees. Death Valley encompasses the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere at 282 feet below sea level and is the driest place in North America with an average rainfall of only 1.96 inches a year.\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Peak Population\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      150\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <th scope=\"row\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Exit Destination\n     </th>\n     <td style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      Resettled outside camps\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n    <tr>\n     <td colspan=\"2\" style=\"text-align:left;\">\n      <a class=\"external text offsite\" href=\"http://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/anthropology74/ce15b.htm\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n       National Park Service Info\n      </a>\n     </td>\n    </tr>\n   </tbody>\n  </table>\n </div>\n <div id=\"databox-Camps\" style=\"display:none;\">\n  <p>\n   SoSUID:f-cowc;\nDenshoName:Cow Creek;\nUSGName:Cow Creek Camp;\nType:\n   <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Sites_of_incarceration#Additional_Facility/\" title=\"Sites of incarceration\">\n    Additional Facility\n   </a>\n   ;\nAdminAgency:War Relocation Authority;\nDateOpened:December 10, 1942;\nDateClosed:February 15, 1943;\nLocationName:Cow Creek, California;\nCityName:Cow Creek;\nStateName:CA;\nDescription:Located in the desert of California near the Death Valley National Monument, one of the hottest places on Earth. Summer temperatures stay well over 100 degrees. Death Valley encompasses the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere at 282 feet below sea level and is the driest place in North America with an average rainfall of only 1.96 inches a year.;\nGISLat:36.5000;\nGISLng:-117.0000;\nGISTGNId:7019393;\nCurrentDisposition:;\nPopulationDescription:Held forty men and their families from the Manzanar concentration camp.;\nExitDestination:Resettled outside camps;\nPeakPopulation:150;\nPeakDate:;\nNPSMoreInfoResourceLink:\n   <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/anthropology74/ce15b.htm\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n    http://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/anthropology74/ce15b.htm\n   </a>\n   ;\nOfficialResourceLink:;\n  </p>\n </div>\n <div class=\"floatright\">\n </div>\n <p>\n  A former CCC camp in Death Valley National Monument that was used to segregate sixty-six\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Manzanar/\" title=\"Manzanar\">\n   Manzanar\n  </a>\n  inmates removed for their own protection from that camp after the\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Manzanar_riot/uprising/\" title=\"Manzanar riot/uprising\">\n   riot/uprising\n  </a>\n  of December 6, 1942. The camp remained open a little more than two months, with the inmates released to points east once they had secured jobs and housing.\n </p>\n <p>\n  In the aftermath of the disturbance, dozens of inmates—including\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Fred_Tayama/\" title=\"Fred Tayama\">\n   Fred Tayama\n  </a>\n  , whose beating precipitated it—sought shelter from the camp administration, fearful that they would be targeted for physical attacks by dissidents. The group stayed in MP barracks or an infirmary by day and slept in administration buildings under armed guard while the authorities debated what to do with them. At a meeting convened by Manzanar Director\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Ralph_Merritt/\" title=\"Ralph Merritt\">\n   Ralph Merritt\n  </a>\n  on December 9 attended by WRA Regional Director E. R. Fryer and WRA Assistant Solicitor Lewis Sigler in addition to key Manzanar staffers, the group decided to send them to an abandoned CCC camp called Cow Creek, located in Death Valley National Monument about a hundred miles away. The following morning, Fryer told WRA Director\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Dillon_Myer/\" title=\"Dillon Myer\">\n   Dillon Myer\n  </a>\n  and shadow Western Defense Command head\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Karl_Bendetsen/\" title=\"Karl Bendetsen\">\n   Karl Bendetsen\n  </a>\n  of the plan and both disapproved, citing concerns that such a move was tantamount to declaring the dissidents victorious. Nonetheless, neither blocked the move, and Manzanar Assistant Director Ned Campbell told the assembled \"refugees\" about the plan after breakfast. After getting approval to use the camp, Campbell led a caravan of cars carrying the sixty-six inmates—thirty-four of whom had themselves been targeted and thirty-two who were relatives—along with ten WRA staffers and twelve guards that left for Cow Creek at about 1:20 pm.\n  <sup class=\"reference\" id=\"cite_ref-1\">\n   <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_note-1\">\n    [1]\n   </a>\n  </sup>\n </p>\n <p>\n  The Cow Creek camp operated as a CCC camp from 1933 to 1938 and included thirty-five buildings, of which ten were used by the WRA. \"It was even more primitive than when we went to Manzanar,\" recalled journalist\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Togo_Tanaka/\" title=\"Togo Tanaka\">\n   Togo Tanaka\n  </a>\n  , and the inmates set to work renovating the camp, organizing groups to do carpentry work, fix utilities, and take care of day-to-day tasks such as cooking. Inmates lived in six barracks, each divided into two sections. There was only one shower room, so women took showers from morning to 3 pm and men took showers in the afternoon and evenings. Though inmates later built a partition to divide the showers into men's and women's sections, Ruth Kurata Yamazaki recalled nail holes that invited peeping toms. The ten or so MPs slept in a former tool house, while the WRA staffer in charge of the camp, Albert Chamberlain, and other WRA staff stayed in a house located across the dry creek along with their families. WRA staff, MPs and inmates initially ate together, but Chamberlain later made sure they ate separately to prevent any stories about fraternization between inmates and guards getting out. Showers and toilets continued to be shared by all. Despite the primitive conditions, Tanaka described a sense of relief at getting out of Manzanar and described the time at Cow Creek as \"the last step before something good was to happen, just to get out.\"\n  <sup class=\"reference\" id=\"cite_ref-2\">\n   <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_note-2\">\n    [2]\n   </a>\n  </sup>\n </p>\n <p>\n  National Park Service (NPS) personnel—who managed the Death Valley National Monument of which the camp was a small part—were also part of the camp community, throwing a Christmas party for the inmates. Later, many of the inmates volunteered to assist the NPS staff with maintenance tasks throughout Death Valley. Tad Uyeno recalled that NPS staff would show the inmates scenic sites at the park on the way back from work. \"We led a life of Riley at Death Valley.... we were really pampered if any group of evacuees could claim that distinction,\" recalled George Kurata. Kurata noted that their \"ideal life\" didn't last long as quarrels broke out between the two main factions of the inmate group, those associated with the\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Japanese_American_Citizens_League/\" title=\"Japanese American Citizens League\">\n   Japanese American Citizens League\n  </a>\n  and an anti-JACL leftist group, many of whom had been associated with the\n  <i>\n   <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Manzanar_Free_Press_(newspaper)/\" title=\"Manzanar Free Press (newspaper)\">\n    Manzanar Free Press\n   </a>\n  </i>\n  . Tanaka wrote of the two groups that \"there seems to exist mutual distrust and suspicion—and dislike personally.\" Aside from the volunteer labor, there was little to do at the camp, so boredom set in for many while they waited for clearance to leave.\n  <sup class=\"reference\" id=\"cite_ref-3\">\n   <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_note-3\">\n    [3]\n   </a>\n  </sup>\n </p>\n <p>\n  After about a month, inmates at Cow Creek began to receive clearances to leave for jobs in other parts of the country, often with the help of the\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/American_Friends_Service_Committee/\" title=\"American Friends Service Committee\">\n   American Friends Service Committee\n  </a>\n  . Several ended up going to\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Resettlement_in_Chicago/\" title=\"Resettlement in Chicago\">\n   Chicago\n  </a>\n  , and half a dozen became Japanese language instructors at the\n  <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Navy_Japanese_Language_School/\" title=\"Navy Japanese Language School\">\n   Navy Language School\n  </a>\n  in Boulder Colorado. The last inmates left Cow Creek by February 16, 1943, and the camp was returned to the park service by the end of the month.\n  <sup class=\"reference\" id=\"cite_ref-4\">\n   <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_note-4\">\n    [4]\n   </a>\n  </sup>\n </p>\n <p>\n  Cow Creek remains a part of what is now Death Valley National Park. Two buildings believed to have been used by the WRA still stand.\n  <sup class=\"reference\" id=\"cite_ref-5\">\n   <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_note-5\">\n    [5]\n   </a>\n  </sup>\n </p>\n <div id=\"authorByline\">\n  <b>\n   Authored by\n   <a class=\"encyc notrg\" href=\"/Brian_Niiya/\" title=\"Brian Niiya\">\n    Brian Niiya\n   </a>\n   , Densho\n  </b>\n </div>\n <div id=\"citationAuthor\" style=\"display:none;\">\n  Niiya, Brian\n </div>\n <div class=\"section\" id=\"For_More_Information\">\n  <h2>\n   <span class=\"mw-headline\" id=\"For_More_Information\">\n    For More Information\n   </span>\n  </h2>\n  <div class=\"section_content\">\n   <p>\n    Kashima, Tetsuden.\n    <i>\n     Judgment Without Trial: Japanese American Imprisonment during World War II\n    </i>\n    . Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2002.\n   </p>\n   <p>\n    Oda, James.\n    <i>\n     Heroic Struggles of Japanese Americans: Partisan Fighters from America's Concentration Camps\n    </i>\n    .  Los Angeles: Privately printed, 1980. [Includes excerpts from Tad Uyeno's \"Point of No Return\" and Ruth Kurata Yamazaki's \"Death Valley Daze.\"]\n   </p>\n   <p>\n    Uyeno, Tad. \"Point of No Return.\"\n    <i>\n     Rafu Shimpo\n    </i>\n    , Aug. 22 to Oct. 20, 1973.\n   </p>\n  </div>\n </div>\n <div class=\"section\" id=\"Footnotes\">\n  <h2>\n   <span class=\"mw-headline\" id=\"Footnotes\">\n    Footnotes\n   </span>\n  </h2>\n  <div class=\"section_content\">\n   <div class=\"reflist\" style=\"list-style-type: decimal;\">\n    <div class=\"mw-references-wrap\">\n     <ol class=\"references\">\n      <li id=\"cite_note-1\">\n       <span class=\"mw-cite-backlink\">\n        <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_ref-1\">\n         ↑\n        </a>\n       </span>\n       <span class=\"reference-text\">\n        Tetsuden Kashima,\n        <i>\n         Judgment Without Trial: Japanese American Imprisonment during World War II\n        </i>\n        (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2002), 143; E. R. Fryer, [Notes on Manzanar incident], pp. 1–6, Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement Records (JAERR), Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O7.00,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b210o07_0000.pdf\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b210o07_0000.pdf\n        </a>\n        ; Lucy Adams, Notes on Manzanar Disturbances, 1942, pp. 12–13, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O10.00,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b210o10_0000.pdf\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b210o10_0000.pdf\n        </a>\n        ; Memo, Karl Bendetsen to Acting Regional Director, WRA, Dec. 10, 1942, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O1.27,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"https://oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/k6542vqv/?brand=oac4\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         https://oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/k6542vqv/?brand=oac4\n        </a>\n       </span>\n      </li>\n      <li id=\"cite_note-2\">\n       <span class=\"mw-cite-backlink\">\n        <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_ref-2\">\n         ↑\n        </a>\n       </span>\n       <span class=\"reference-text\">\n        Barbara Wyatt, ed.,\n        <i>\n         Japanese Americans in World War II: National Historic Landmarks Theme Study\n        </i>\n        (Washington, D.C.: National Historic Landmarks Program, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 2012), 182; \"An Oral History with Togo Tanaka,\" interviewed by Betty Mitson and David Hacker, May 19, 1973, p. 33, California State University, Fullerton. Center for Oral and Public History, California State University Japanese American Digitization Project,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"https://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16855coll4/id/12064\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         https://cdm16855.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16855coll4/id/12064\n        </a>\n        ; Ruth Kurata Yamazaki, \"Death Valley Daze\" in James Oda,\n        <i>\n         Heroic Struggles of Japanese Americans: Partisan Fighters from America's Concentration Camps\n        </i>\n        (Los Angeles: Privately printed, 1980), 86–87; Kashima,\n        <i>\n         Judgment Without Trial\n        </i>\n        , 144; Tad Uyeno, \"Point of No Return,\" Parts 17–20,\n        <i>\n         Rafu Shimpo\n        </i>\n        , Sept. 11–14, 1973.\n       </span>\n      </li>\n      <li id=\"cite_note-3\">\n       <span class=\"mw-cite-backlink\">\n        <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_ref-3\">\n         ↑\n        </a>\n       </span>\n       <span class=\"reference-text\">\n        Tad Uyeno, \"Point of No Return,\" Parts 25–26, 30–37,\n        <i>\n         Rafu Shimpo\n        </i>\n        , Sept. 20–21 and Sept. 26 to Oct. 4, 1973; Tadao George (Cracker) Kurata, interview by Charles Kikuchi, July 17, 1944, pp. 105–06, Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement: A Digital Archive, Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley, BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder T1.973,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b282t01_0973.pdf\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b282t01_0973.pdf\n        </a>\n        ; Togo Tanaka, \"A Report on the Manzanar Riot of Sunday December 6 1942,\" p. 94, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O10.12 (2/2),\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b211o10_0012_2.pdf\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b211o10_0012_2.pdf\n        </a>\n        ; Letters, Togo Tanaka to Morton Grodzins, Jan. 7, 11, 12, 16, and 31, 1943, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder W 1.38:1,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b298w01_0038_1.pdf\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b298w01_0038_1.pdf\n        </a>\n        ; Ned Campbell interview by Arthur A. Hansen, Aug. 15, 1974, Carmel, California, p. 166, in\n        <i>\n         Japanese American World War II Evacuation Oral History Project, Part II: Administrators\n        </i>\n        , edited by Arthur A. Hansen,\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://content.cdlib.org/view?query=death&amp;docId=ft7199p03k&amp;chunk.id=d0e10309&amp;toc.depth=1&amp;toc.id=0&amp;brand=calisphere&amp;x=0&amp;y=0\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://content.cdlib.org/view?query=death&amp;docId=ft7199p03k&amp;chunk.id=d0e10309&amp;toc.depth=1&amp;toc.id=0&amp;brand=calisphere&amp;x=0&amp;y=0\n        </a>\n        .\n       </span>\n      </li>\n      <li id=\"cite_note-4\">\n       <span class=\"mw-cite-backlink\">\n        <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_ref-4\">\n         ↑\n        </a>\n       </span>\n       <span class=\"reference-text\">\n        Tad Uyeno, \"Point of No Return,\" Part 38,\n        <i>\n         Rafu Shimpo\n        </i>\n        , Oct. 5, 1973; Kashima,\n        <i>\n         Judgment Without Trial\n        </i>\n        , 144; Togo Tanaka, \"A Report on the Manzanar Riot of Sunday December 6 1942,\" pp. 14, 74–75, JAERR BANC MSS 67/14 c, folder O10.12 (2/2),\n        <a class=\"external free offsite\" href=\"http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b211o10_0012_2.pdf\" rel=\"nofollow\">\n         http://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/jarda/ucb/text/cubanc6714_b211o10_0012_2.pdf\n        </a>\n        .\n       </span>\n      </li>\n      <li id=\"cite_note-5\">\n       <span class=\"mw-cite-backlink\">\n        <a class=\"\" href=\"#cite_ref-5\">\n         ↑\n        </a>\n       </span>\n       <span class=\"reference-text\">\n        Wyatt, ed.,\n        <i>\n         Japanese Americans in World War II\n        </i>\n        , 158–59; Tad Uyeno, \"Point of No Return, Part 48,\"\n        <i>\n         Rafu Shimpo\n        </i>\n        , Oct. 18, 1973, 3.\n       </span>\n      </li>\n     </ol>\n    </div>\n   </div>\n   <!-- \nNewPP limit report\nCached time: 20250626170424\nCache expiry: 86400\nDynamic content: false\nComplications: []\nCPU time usage: 0.026 seconds\nReal time usage: 0.032 seconds\nPreprocessor visited node count: 239/1000000\nPost‐expand include size: 4020/2097152 bytes\nTemplate argument size: 1586/2097152 bytes\nHighest expansion depth: 5/40\nExpensive parser function count: 0/100\nUnstrip recursion depth: 0/20\nUnstrip post‐expand size: 5758/5000000 bytes\nExtLoops count: 0\n-->\n   <!--\nTransclusion expansion time report (%,ms,calls,template)\n100.00%   21.838      1 -total\n 19.02%    4.154      1 Template:Reflist\n 11.66%    2.547      1 Template:Databox-Camps\n  9.54%    2.083      1 Template:AuthorByline\n  9.34%    2.040      1 Template:Published\n-->\n   <!-- Saved in parser cache with key encycmw:pcache:idhash:62-0!canonical and timestamp 20250626170424 and revision id 37599\n -->\n  </div>\n </div>\n</div>\n<div class=\"toplink\">\n <a href=\"#top\">\n  <i class=\"icon-chevron-up\">\n  </i>\n  Top\n </a>\n</div>","categories":["http://encyclopedia.densho.org/api/0.1/categories/Camps/"],"sources":["http://encyclopedia.densho.org/api/0.1/sources/en-ddr-densho-343-6-1/"],"coordinates":{},"authors":["http://encyclopedia.densho.org/api/0.1/authors/Brian%20Niiya/"],"ddr_topic_terms":[],"prev_page":"http://encyclopedia.densho.org/api/0.1/articles/Coram%20nobis%20cases/","next_page":"http://encyclopedia.densho.org/api/0.1/articles/Crafting%20History:%20Arts%20and%20Crafts%20from%20America's%20Concentration%20Camps%20(exhibition)/"}