Bayocean: Difference between revisions
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Extending north from Cape Meares, the Bayocean Peninsula<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.bayocean.net/p/the-bayocean-story-in-brief.html |title=The Bayocean Story in Brief}}</ref> is a long, sandy spit that separates Tillamook Bay from the Pacific Ocean. In the first | Extending north from Cape Meares, the Bayocean Peninsula<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.bayocean.net/p/the-bayocean-story-in-brief.html |title=The Bayocean Story in Brief}}</ref> is a long, sandy spit that separates Tillamook Bay from the Pacific Ocean. In the first half of the 20th Century, the peninsula was home to the thriving resort town of Bayocean. | ||
Bayocean Peninsula was also home to a number of Japanese specialists who came to Tillamook Bay in the late 1920s to manage oyster beds seeded with Pacific oysters from Japan. Several of these oyster farmers would remain until March 1942 when, with the onset of World War II and the rise of anti-Japanese sentiment, the FBI gave them permits to move inland. Soon thereafter, the internment of the Japanese residents of the entire west coast, both U.S. citizens and foreign nationals alike, would begin<ref>{{cite web|url=https://densho.org |title=Densho: A grassroots organization dedicated to preserving, educating, and sharing the story of World War II-era incarceration of Japanese Americans in order to deepen understandings of American history and inspire action for equity}}</ref>. | |||
==Appearances== | ==Appearances== |
Revision as of 16:18, 19 August 2021
Bayocean is a location in the Eden Pond Series.
Details
Extending north from Cape Meares, the Bayocean Peninsula[1] is a long, sandy spit that separates Tillamook Bay from the Pacific Ocean. In the first half of the 20th Century, the peninsula was home to the thriving resort town of Bayocean.
Bayocean Peninsula was also home to a number of Japanese specialists who came to Tillamook Bay in the late 1920s to manage oyster beds seeded with Pacific oysters from Japan. Several of these oyster farmers would remain until March 1942 when, with the onset of World War II and the rise of anti-Japanese sentiment, the FBI gave them permits to move inland. Soon thereafter, the internment of the Japanese residents of the entire west coast, both U.S. citizens and foreign nationals alike, would begin[2].