Festival centers on children held at relocation center

Posted 5/10/22

Fish will fly at the upcoming innaugural Heart Mountain Interpretive Center Children’s Day Festival.  

No Children’s Day celebration at the center would be complete without the …

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Festival centers on children held at relocation center

Posted

Fish will fly at the upcoming innaugural Heart Mountain Interpretive Center Children’s Day Festival. 

No Children’s Day celebration at the center would be complete without the flying of brightly colored koinobori, or carp-shaped flags. Japanese and Japanese American families typically fly a carp flag for each member of their family on the holiday. Koinobori will be fluttering all around the Heart Mountain Interpretive Center during the event.

The Children’s Day Festival is planned for Saturday, May 14 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. This community centered event is open to the public with an admission fee of $15 per car.

Attendees can purchase their own koinobori flag to take home. Sweet treats will also be available for purchase from Andy’s Donuts.

Heart Mountain Interpretive Center tells the story of Japanese Americans unjustly incarcerated in Wyoming from 1942 to 1945. The center is located between Cody and Powell on U.S. Highway 14A and is currently open Wednesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Out of the nearly 14,000 Japanese Americans who were incarcerated at Heart Mountain during WWII, nearly one third were children. Children’s Day, or Kodomo no Hi, is a traditional Japanese holiday and has been celebrated in Japan in some form since the seventh century. The holiday celebrates the growth, happiness and personalities of children. 

In this spirit, Heart Mountain Interpretive Center invites the local community to attend their first Children’s Day Festival. The event will feature crafts and games that would have been familiar to children at the camp in the 1940s.

Nora James, the VISTA museum educator, emphasized the community nature of the event.

“We planned Children’s Day with the community in mind,” said James. “Each of our partners receives a portion of the admission fee, so it’s a great way to have fun and support a lot of local organizations at once.”

Five community partners will host different activities at the event. Science Kids will host a planting and gardening activity, the Wyoming Episcopal Service Corps will have a kite-making and flying station, and staff from the Homesteader Museum will lead attendees in playing popular games from the 1940s. Storytime and crafts will be provided by the Park County Library, and Meeteetse Museums will have a station about animals of the Big Horn Basin. 

At each station, visitors will learn something about what life was like for children who grew up inside the Heart Mountain camp. Attendees completing each activity will receive a special prize. Heart Mountain staff and volunteers will be hosting even more activities and fun.

For more information about this event, call the interpretive center at (307) 754-8000 or email info@heartmountain.org.

Heart Mountain Interpretive Center

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