1840'S
HISTORY OVERVIEW OF THE CHINESE COMMUNITIES
1840-60
/ 1846: First American flag in California is raised in Portsmouth
Square. It eventually becomes the city's canter for the next several decades.
As a result, large numbers of Chinese Americans open up businesses nearby
Portsmouth Square, laying down the foundations for the eventual formation
of Chinatown.
1848:
The Gold Rush of 1849. When gold is discovered at Sutter's Mill
in 1848, the lure of economic prosperity aboard encourages tens of thousands
of Chinese to emigrate to the U.S., most of them coming through San Francisco,
but also settling in Sacramento and Marysville.
1849-54:
Chinatown Benevolent Associations (Six Companies) are established
in Chinatown. These family and district associations are founded to faciliate
organization within the local communities. In 1901, Benevolent Association.
1850-1864:
Taiping Rebellion leaves 20,000,000 Chinese dead and spurs mass
immigration out of China.
1852:
Foreign Miner's Tax levied against Chinese and Mexican miners
to protect white miners' interests. Chinese masons hold first labor strike
in San Francisco history. Hong Fook Tong theater company of China ships
over and build a theatre for Chinatown, reflecting that a permanent community
is developing in the nascent neighborhood.
1857:
Kong Chow Temple becomes the first Buddhist temple in S.F.
1864-1869:
Central Pacific Railroad Company, which is 90% Chinese laborers,
helps build and complete the Transcontinental Railway. Thousands of Chinese
lives are lost in the dangerous working conditions. In 1867, Chinese railway
laborers stage an unsuccessful, but massive two-week strike.
1870:
Anti-Chinese ordinances are passed in S.F. to curtail their housing
and employment options. Queues are banned.
1877:
Angry white workers riot in Chinatown in protest of a perceived
labor threat by Chinese workers. This is only one among many cases of
anti-Chinese violence around the West. Cases like this further forced
Chinese Americans into ethnic enclaves like Chinatown for their protection.
1906:
The Great Earthquakes of 1906 is a watershed event for Chinatown.
Meanwhile, the destruction of municipal records allows for the forging
of birth certificates that promptly the influx of thousands of more Chinese,
who became known as paper sons.
1907:
First Canton Bank opens.
1908:
Chinese Chamber of Commerce formed.
1910-11:
Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat Sen comes and lives in Chinatown.
1910-1940:
Angel Island, in SF Bay, operates as a detention and processing
center for Chinese
immigration. Thousands of Chinese immigrants spend weeks and months
detained, undergoing rigorous interrogations by U.S. immigration officials.
1911:
Chinatown YMCA founded its headquarters, on Sacramento St., is
completed in 1926.
1915:
The segregated Oriental School is opened in Chinatown. This is
SF's attempt to provide for the educational needs of Chinatown youth,
but though a segregated system in order to prevent them from accessing
white schools.
1916:
Chinatown YMCA founded.
1921:
Chinatown Public Library opens.
1927:
The Chinese Playground, on Sacramento St., is built.
1950s:
The prosperous economy of the 1950s allows all an emerging middle-class
Chinese Americans to leave Chinatown in large numbers for suburban neighborhoods.
In S.F., the Sunset and Richmond districts are the neighborhoods of choice.
Chinatown remained as low- income neighborhoods, often for newly arrived
immigrants.
1965-present:
Congress passes the Immigration Act of 1965, heralding a new
era in Asian immigration. Among its significant changes, the Act dramatically
increase the quota set for Asian immigration, but it also favors middle
class immigrants, thus influenced the changing demographics of Chinese
Americans over the next 30 years. The new influx of low-skilled Chinese
immigrants repopulates Chinatown with a new generation of Chinese Americans.
1847
ARRIVAL OF FIRST CHINESE STUDENTS & GRADUATES
April 12, 1847: First Asians arrive in the United States A group of three Chinese students arrived in New York City, becoming the first Asians officially entering the United States. However, Chinese records show that Chinese Buddhist priests traveled along the West Coast from present-day Brtish Columbia down to Baja California in 450 A.D. Spanish records show the existence of Chinese shipbuilders in present-day southern California between 1541 and 1746. Chinese shopkeepers were already in Los Angeles when the first Anglo Americans arrived.
The discovery of gold at Sutter's Creek, California on January 24, 1848 would bring the first significant influx of Chinese to the United States. That wave was led by two men and a woman arriving in San Francisco on February 2, 1948 on the brig Eagle. The next significant wave of Chinese immigrants were laborers recruited from Amoy by 94 Hawaiian sugar companies in January of 1852.
Yung Wing was one of three Chinese students that arrive in New York for school. In 1854, his graduation from Yale marked the first such event for Chinese Americans
1847
CHINATOWN IN CUBA
Although
Chinese
may have arrived in Cuba earlier, the first large group of Chinese arrived
on the Spanish frigate Oquendo in 1847 to work on sugar plantations. When
the ship dropped anchor in Havana harbor, only 206 of the original 300
contract laborers from Guangdong
province had survived to work the sugar fields. These indentured
workers and those who followed were recruited to fill the gap created
by the termination of African slave trade. Estimates of this immigration
over the next quarter century range from 50,000 to 130,000. About 13 percent
died during the voyage or shortly after arrival. Between 1860 and 1875,
a second wave of Chinese
immigrants arrived: about 5,000 who fled anti-Chinese sentiment and
legislation in California. “The Californians,” as these relatively
wealthy newcomers came to be called, laid the economic foundation of Havana’s
Chinatown. Havana’s Chinatown
became the largest Chinese enclave in Latin America. A third wave of Chinese
immigrants to Cuba resulted from the political and economic upheavals
between the establishment of Sun Yat Sen’s republic in 1912 through
the early years of the Chinese revolution. At its height, the ethnic Chinese
population in Cuba was about 40,000.
1848
CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA
Gold discovered in California and the Chinese
begin to arrive. Gold is discovered at Sutter's Mill, California. Chinese
in the Canton area were lured by pamphlets distributed by opportunistic
ship owners who hoped to fill their passenger vessels. Chinese
eager to escape overpopulation, famine, and poverty that resulted from
the Taiping rebellion came to California to make their fortunes in California's
"Gam Saan" - Gold Mountain.
1848
FIRST CHINESE SERVANTS IN THE UNITED STATES
Charles
Gillespie's female
Chinese servant stepped off the brig Eagle from Hong Kong at the
San Francisco wharf and became the first Chinese servant on the West
Coast of North America. Many of the Chinese
servants who followed her on the West Coastwere almost entirely
men, unlike the case on the East Coast where most servants were women.
Domestic
service involved cooking, cleaning, waiting table, laundry, child
care, and the hundreds of other asks that the primary caregiver in each
home provided.
(In
an 1868
statistical report approximately 7 per cent of the Chinese immigrants
in California were domestic servants; cited in Tsai, Shih-shan. China
and the Overseas Chinese in the United States, 1868-1911. Fayetteville,
University of Arkansas Press, 1983. 21.)
They
acquired a good reputation of providing good service as seen in the
following comments - "The Chinese
barbarians have captured Boise and will soon rule the whites. I
would like to know if this is a free and independent country? If so,
why should the Chinamen carry on their bull-dosing [sic] operations?
I went to Boise city to try and get employment but the answer at each
house was, "We've got a Chinaman."
I inquired the amount of wages paid. The answer usually was $8 a week.
I asked several of them what they would give a good cook and house keeper
if they could get a white woman. The reply was about $4 a week. I left
them disgusted. . "
Many
cities had employment agencies, often run by entrepreneurial Chinese,
that brokered opportunities and vacancies.("Idaho Recorder on April
18 of 1894, further noted that a Chinese
company called Fong Kee & Co. had opened an employment agency
for Chinese cooks and laborers. [p.2,c.3],"
As
James Robinson Jewell noted, "The resentment demonstrated against
the Chinese
domestics was in part a bitterness towards the lifestyle it took
to employ them."
Anti-Chinese
agitation, common throughout the West, made a complicated mistress-servant
relationship even more difficult. As
a result, the language used to refer to the Chinese
servants in contemporary newspaper accounts, magazines, books, even
private letters, was, as was common at the time, emotionally charged
and negative in tone. Frequent
terms were "Chinaboy," "John," "Chinaman,"
"Celestials." While these terms are rightly
avoided today, because of the connotations which have accreted to
them over the years, they do not necessarily reflect the whole of the
relationship. Some, in spite of using the same racist terminology at
times, defended them from such stereotyping. Ironically,
even one writer, who widely and commonly used such terms in a single
article about Chinese
servants, could conclude "yet, as has so often been said, in
many respects they are the best servants that we ever have had."
Employer
suspicion and employee theft were translated into a racial characteristic:
all Chinese
or blacks or Irish were thieves. Unlike
other immigrant groups, Chinese
laborers, by law and custom, generally could not bring wives here
to establish families. Thus, they were unable to participate in what
has been called one of the great "defining themes" of western
history, that of "underclass exploitation followed by accommodation
and finally assimilation."
Entrepreneurship
is the ability to see value where others do not. It is also the ability
to "make lemonade when life hands you lemons." Living on the
margins of the culture attunes one to the imbalance of goods and services.
Domestic service provided the Chinese
with an experience at the heart of the culture, within the Caucasian
home, in the bosom of the family; an experience that offered glimpses
of needs that could be fulfilled from the margin. Many seized the entrepreneurial
moment and made a successful life for themselves in a strange land
among a strange people.
1848
1ST ASIAN WOMEN IN US
The American ship Eagle arrived at San Francisco on April 1, 1848. Among
the passengers were 3 Chinese, two men and one woman. When the news of the
discovery of gold came, the men left for the hill. A passenger of Eagle,
named Charles V. Gillespie hired the Chinese woman as a servant of his household.
It is believed that she was the first known Asian woman arrived in the San
Francisco.
The first recorded of these women, Marie
Seise, stepped off a ship named The Eagle in San Francisco in 1848
as the servant of a family of traders, the Gillespies of New York. Before
she
worked with the Gillespies, she ran away from her parents in China to
avoid being sold, worked as a servant in Macao, married a Portuguese sailor,
and moved as a servant with another family to the Sandwich Islands after
the sailor deserted her. Marie
Seise was obviously determined, at whatever expense, to chart her
own course.
Nor was Seise alone. Another "China
Mary" - a generic name ascribed to many Chinese immigrant women by
their new frontier neighbors-ran away from her home in China when she
was nine, had made her way to Canada at age 13, outlived two husbands
and moved to Sitka, Alaska - where she
survived as a fisherwoman, hunter and prospector, restaurant keeper, nurse,
laundress, and official matron of the Sitka jail.
Yet another, Yuen,
similarly outlived three husbands and was said to have been "the toast
of her countrymen" in the Wyoming mining and railroad camps where she
cooked during Pony Express days. Another notable woman was Mary
Tape, who sailed from Shanghai with missionaries at age 11, then married
and lived in California. Mary
Tape worked as an interpreter and contractor of labor, taught herself
photography and telegraphy. When they tried to bar her daughter from public
schools, she
won a case against the San Francisco Board of Education in court.
During this time there was a brief period of free
competition where Chinese women had the opportunity to be a free agent
and entrepeneurs (as oppose to prostitutes/sexual slaves) before the (sex)
trade became totally controlled by males. This is seen in books/articles
describing the life story of the heroine (Ah Toy)
in this initial brief period depicted as a twenty-year-old prostitute
from Hong Kong who landed in San Francisco late in 1848. A free agent
serving a predominantly non-Chinese clientele during a period of affluence,
she accumulated enough money to buy a brothel within two years and retired
the widow of a wealthy Chinese man.
For additional information, click HERE
1848
AH TOY - INDEPENDENT CHINESE MADAM
Just like other noteworthy prostitutes of the West such as Sarah Bowman
or Dona "La Tules" Gertrudis Barcelo, Ah
Toy succeeded by adapting to the changing conditions of her environment.
Many historians hypothesize that she
was the first Chinese prostitute in America. She
arrived in San Francisco in late 1848.
Ah Toy maintained her independence
and freedom from perils of most Chinese
prostitutes brought to the US. She became the most popular
and successful courtesan in San Francisco who set up her own brothel
of Chinese women.