Heart Mountain receives Traveler’s Choice award from Tripadvisor

Posted 8/15/23

The Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation is happy to receive a 2023 Traveler’s Choice award from Tripadvisor, the travel service and advice website.

The award goes to sites rated in the top …

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Heart Mountain receives Traveler’s Choice award from Tripadvisor

Posted

The Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation is happy to receive a 2023 Traveler’s Choice award from Tripadvisor, the travel service and advice website.

The award goes to sites rated in the top 10% of world travel destinations by Tripadvisor members. The award is the latest recognition of the historical value and quality presentation of the Heart Mountain Interpretive Center, which opened in August 2011.

Visitors to Heart Mountain can tour a museum that recounts the history of Japanese immigration and the ruinous World War II forced removal and incarceration of 125,000 Japanese Americans, including 14,000 at Heart Mountain. The museum also includes “All We Could Carry,” a documentary short film about Heart Mountain by Academy Award-winning director Steven Okazaki.

Tripadvisor members called Heart Mountain “amazing,” “thought provoking” and “informative.” One visitor said: “We spent HOURS in there, as the story and history is amazing. We had NO IDEA that these places existed. We were here for the national parks, but spent a day doing this instead. I highly recommend this.” 

 “Our work at Heart Mountain is a work of passion — for those like myself who are descendants of Heart Mountain incarcerees, as well as for our growing ‘family’ of people who are moved by this story and this site,” says Heart Mountain’s executive director, Aura Sunada Newlin. “We are grateful for the testimonials of our visitors, and for the boost that this recognition brings to Park County.”

The award comes as the Foundation is expanding its exhibits and other facilities, including a restored root cellar in which the camp’s farmers stored their crops, a new exhibit in an original barrack that once housed incarcerated Japanese Americans and the new Mineta-Simpson Institute dedicated to celebrating the careers, lives and values of Secretary Norman Mineta and Sen. Alan Simpson who met at Heart Mountain as Boy Scouts in 1943.

The Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation preserves the site where some 14,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated in Wyoming from 1942 through 1945. Their stories are told within the foundation’s museum, Heart Mountain Interpretive Center, located between Cody and Powell. For more information, call the center at (307) 754-8000 or email info@heartmountain.org.

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