Camp  life at Topaz settled down and residents continued the routine of  cultivating gardens, attending classes at schools or the recreation  halls, and working. In 1943 residents with sponsors were encouraged to  leave the camps and move farther inland. But the camp didn't close until  October 1945. The buildings were then dismantled; some were moved to  other locations, leaving cindered roads, foundations for latrines and  mess halls, and an episode that sullied the history of American  democracy and its Constitution.
                    In 1976 the Japanese-American Citizen League erected a monument near the site of the camp. On 10 August 1988  President Ronald Reagan signed a redress bill into law, issuing an  apology to those interned and calling on Congress to budget compensation  for the survivors.
                    See:  Leonard J. Arrington, The Price of Prejudice: The Japanese-American  Relocation Center in Utah during World War II (1962); Allan Bosworth,  American Concentration Camps (1967); Roger Daniels, Concentration Camps  of North America, Japanese in the United States and Canada During World  War II (1981); Yoshiko Uchida, Desert Exile (1982); Michi Weglyn, Years  of Infamy: The Untold Story of America's Concentration Camps (1976).
                    Jane Beckwith