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The Crystal City camp, which opened in December 1942, grew out of a former Department of Agriculture migrant worker camp and at its peak in 1944, was home for about 3,300 detainees, mostly Germans and Japanese. They lived on some 500 acres that included small homes, schools, a hospital and stores and recreation fields. While believing his family's civil liberties were trampled, Fuhr said he has some fond memories:
his mother cooking meals in their tiny "family unit"; the German detainees from Peru who excelled at soccer. "They cleaned our clock," he said. "They had speed. They also knew the game." Also, a German man from Panama taught him how to drive a truck while he was part of a crew delivering ice, earning 10 cents an hour
-- "always under guard," he adds -- and it's where he met his wife of 56 years. There was also a 10- or 12-foot-high fence ringing the place and guard towers. Outside the camp, was Crystal City itself, an agricultural town of less than 7,000. "I never heard anybody in town talk nasty about Germans and Japanese," said Reed Harp, a retiree in Crystal City who said his grandfather worked there as a guard with a .45-caliber sidearm. The town's people just called it "the camp." An inscription on a historical marker at the site now calls it "a reminder that the injustices and humiliations suffered here as a result of hysteria, racism and discrimination never happen again." Shortly before the camp closed in 1947, Fuhr went on to Ohio University and retired after a career with a national plastics company. Previously, he didn't talk much about the camp. "It was always there, like the elephant in the room," he said. "I didn't really go public about this until I retired. I was afraid of the ramifications of my employment and stuff like that." Fuhr is among the handful who has shared with historians his story of life at the camp. Texas Historical Commission officials are hoping more will come forward, but
they say finding former detainees has been difficult. "We would love to hear from some of these people," said spokeswoman Debbi Head. "We feel certain they are there. But they don't know we want to hear from them and tell their story." ___ Online: Texas Historical Commission:
http://www.thc.state.tx.us/
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