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Chinese Exclusion Act

The Chinese Exclusion Act was a United States federal law signed by President Chester A. Arthur on May 6, 1882, prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers for 10 years. The law excluded merchants, teachers, students, travelers, and diplomats.[1] Building on the earlier Page Act of 1875, which banned Chinese women from migrating to the United States, the Chinese Exclusion Act was the only law ever implemented to prevent all members of a specific ethnic or national group from immigrating to the United States.[citation needed]

Chinese Exclusion Act
NicknamesChinese Exclusion Act of 1882
Enacted bythe 47th United States Congress
EffectiveMay 6, 1882
Citations
Public lawPub. L. 47–126
Statutes at Large22 Stat. 58, Chap. 126
Legislative history
  • Introduced in the House as H.R. 5804 by Horace F. Page (RCA) on April 12, 1882
  • Committee consideration by House Foreign Relations
  • Passed the House on April 17, 1882 Votes 88R 102D Not Voting 52 (202–37)
  • Passed the Senate on April 28, 1882 Votes 9R 22D Not Voting 29 (32–15) with amendment
  • House agreed to Senate amendment on May 3, 1882 (Agreed)
  • Signed into law by President Chester A. Arthur on May 6, 1882
An 1886 advertisement for "Magic Washer" detergent: The Chinese Must Go
The first page of the Chinese Exclusion Act

Passage of the law was preceded by growing anti-Chinese sentiment and anti-Chinese violence, as well as various policies targeting Chinese migrants.[2] The act followed the Angell Treaty of 1880, a set of revisions to the U.S.–China Burlingame Treaty of 1868 that allowed the U.S. to suspend Chinese immigration. The act was initially intended to last for 10 years, but was renewed and strengthened in 1892 with the Geary Act and made permanent in 1902. These laws attempted to stop all Chinese immigration into the United States for ten years, with exceptions for diplomats, teachers, students, merchants, and travelers. They were widely evaded.[3]

The law remained in force until the passage of the Magnuson Act in 1943, which repealed the exclusion and allowed 105 Chinese immigrants to enter the United States each year. Chinese immigration later increased with the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, which abolished direct racial barriers, and later by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which abolished the National Origins Formula.[4]

Background

 
This "Official Map of Chinatown 1885" was published as part of an official report of a Special Committee established by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors "on the Condition of the Chinese Quarter".
 
Chinese immigrant workers building the first transcontinental railroad

The first significant Chinese immigration to North America began with the California Gold Rush of 1848–1855 and it continued with subsequent large labor projects, such as the building of the first transcontinental railroad. During the early stages of the gold rush, when surface gold was plentiful, the Chinese were tolerated by white people, if not well received.[5] However, as gold became harder to find and competition increased, animosity toward the Chinese and other foreigners increased. After being forcibly driven from mining by a mixture of state legislators and other miners (the Foreign Miner's Tax), the immigrant Chinese began to settle in enclaves in cities, mainly San Francisco, and took up low-wage labor, such as restaurant and laundry work.[6] With the post-Civil War economy in decline by the 1870s, anti-Chinese animosity became politicized by labor leader Denis Kearney and his Workingman's Party[7] as well as by California governor John Bigler, both of whom blamed Chinese "coolies" for depressed wage levels. Public opinion and law in California began to demonize Chinese workers and immigrants in any role, with the latter half of the 1800s seeing a series of ever more restrictive laws being placed on Chinese labor, behavior and even living conditions. While many of these legislative efforts were quickly overturned by the State Supreme Court,[8] many more anti-Chinese laws continued to be passed in both California and nationally.

In the early 1850s, there was resistance to the idea of excluding Chinese migrant workers from immigration because they provided essential tax revenue which helped fill the fiscal gap of California.[9] The Xianfeng Emperor, who ruled China at the time, was supportive of the exclusion, citing his concerns that Chinese immigration to America would lead to a loss of labor for China.[10] But toward the end of the decade, the financial situation improved and subsequently, attempts to legislate Chinese exclusion became successful on the state level.[9] In 1858, the California Legislature passed a law that made it illegal for any person "of the Chinese or Mongolian races" to enter the state; however, this law was struck down by an unpublished opinion of the State Supreme Court in 1862.[11]

The Chinese immigrant workers provided cheap labor and did not use any of the government infrastructure (schools, hospitals, etc.) because the Chinese migrant population was predominantly made up of healthy male adults.[9] In January 1868, the Senate ratified the Burlingame Treaty with China, allowing an unrestricted flow of Chinese into the country.[12] As time passed and more and more Chinese migrants arrived in the United States and California in particular, violence would often break out in cities such as Los Angeles. The North Adams strike of 1870, broken by the replacement of all workers by 75 Chinese men was the trigger that sparked widespread working-class protest across the country, shaped legislative debate in Congress, and helped make Chinese immigration a sustained national issue.[citation needed]

Subsequent numerous strikes ensued, notably Beaver Falls Cutlery Company in Pennsylvania and others[13][14] After the economy soured in the Panic of 1873, Chinese immigrants were blamed for depressing workmen's wages.[12] At one point, Chinese men represented nearly a quarter of all wage-earning workers in California,[15] and by 1878 Congress felt compelled to try to ban immigration from China in legislation that was later vetoed by President Rutherford B. Hayes. The title of the August 27, 1873, San Francisco Chronicle article, "The Chinese Invasion! They Are Coming, 900,000 Strong", was traced by The Atlantic as one of the roots of the 2019 anti-immigration "invasion" rhetoric.[16]

In 1879, however, California adopted a new Constitution which explicitly authorized the state government to determine which individuals were allowed to reside in the state, and banned the Chinese from employment by corporations and state, county or municipal governments.[17] Three years later, after China had agreed to treaty revisions, Congress tried again to exclude working class Chinese laborers; Senator John F. Miller of California introduced another Chinese Exclusion Act that blocked entry of Chinese laborers for a twenty-year period.[18] The bill passed the Senate and House by overwhelming margins, but this as well was vetoed by President Chester A. Arthur, who concluded the 20-year ban to be a breach of the renegotiated treaty of 1880. That treaty allowed only a "reasonable" suspension of immigration. Eastern newspapers praised the veto, while it was condemned in the Western states. Congress was unable to override the veto, but passed a new bill reducing the immigration ban to ten years.[18][19] The House of Representatives voted 201–37, with 51 abstentions, to pass the act.[20] Although he still objected to this denial of entry to Chinese laborers, President Arthur acceded to the compromise measure, signing the Chinese Exclusion Act into law on May 6, 1882.[18][19]

 
Anti-Chinese Wall cartoon in Puck

After the act was passed, most Chinese workers were faced with a dilemma: stay in the United States alone or return to China to reunite with their families.[21][3] Although widespread dislike for the Chinese persisted well after the law itself was passed, of note is that some capitalists and entrepreneurs resisted their exclusion because they accepted lower wages.[22]

Content

For the first time, federal law proscribed entry of an ethnic working group on the premise that it endangered the good order of certain localities. The earlier Page Act of 1875 had prohibited immigration of Asian forced laborers and sex workers, and the Naturalization Act of 1790 prohibited naturalization of non-white subjects. The Chinese Exclusion Act excluded Chinese laborers, meaning "skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining", from entering the country for ten years under penalty of imprisonment and deportation.[23][24]

 
Front page of The San Francisco Call from November 20, 1901, discussing the Chinese Exclusion Convention

The Chinese Exclusion Act required the few non-laborers who sought entry to obtain certification from the Chinese government that they were qualified to emigrate. However, this group found it increasingly difficult to prove that they were not laborers[24] because the 1882 Act defined excludables as "skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining". Thus very few Chinese could enter the country under the 1882 law. Diplomatic officials and other officers on business, along with their house servants, for the Chinese government were also allowed entry as long as they had the proper certification verifying their credentials.[25]

The Chinese Exclusion Act also affected the Chinese who had already settled in the United States. Any Chinese who left the United States had to obtain certifications for reentry, and the act made Chinese immigrants permanent aliens by excluding them from U.S. citizenship.[23][24] After the act's passage, Chinese men in the U.S. had little chance of ever reuniting with their wives, or of starting families in their new abodes.[23]

Amendments made in 1884 tightened the provisions that allowed previous immigrants to leave and return and clarified that the law applied to ethnic Chinese regardless of their country of origin.[26] The 1888 Scott Act expanded upon the Chinese Exclusion Act, prohibiting reentry into the U.S. after leaving.[27] Only teachers, students, government officials, tourists, and merchants were exempt.[20]

Constitutionality of the Chinese Exclusion Act and the Scott Act was upheld by the Supreme Court in Chae Chan Ping v. United States (1889); the Supreme Court declared that "the power of exclusion of foreigners [is] an incident of sovereignty belonging to the government of the United States as a part of those sovereign powers delegated by the constitution". The act was renewed for ten years by the 1892 Geary Act, and again with no terminal date in 1902.[24] When the act was extended in 1902, it required "each Chinese resident to register and obtain a certificate of residence. Without a certificate, he or she faced deportation."[24]

Between 1882 and 1905, about 10,000 Chinese appealed against negative immigration decisions to federal court, usually via a petition for habeas corpus.[28] In most of these cases, the courts ruled in favor of the petitioner.[28] Except in cases of bias or negligence, these petitions were barred by an act that passed Congress in 1894 and was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in U.S. vs Lem Moon Sing (1895). In United States v. Ju Toy (1905), the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed that the port inspectors and the Secretary of Commerce had final authority on who could be admitted. Ju Toy's petition was thus barred despite the fact that the district court found that he was an American citizen. The Supreme Court determined that refusing entry at a port does not require due process and is legally equivalent to refusing entry at a land crossing. All these developments, along with the extension of the act in 1902, triggered a boycott of U.S. goods in China between 1904 and 1906.[29] There was one 1885 case in San Francisco, however, in which Treasury Department officials in Washington overturned a decision to deny entry to two Chinese students.[30]

One of the critics of the Chinese Exclusion Act was the anti-slavery/anti-imperialist Republican senator George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts who described the act as "nothing less than the legalization of racial discrimination".[31]

 
A political cartoon from 1882, showing a Chinese man being barred entry to the "Golden Gate of Liberty". The caption reads, "We must draw the line somewhere, you know."

The laws were driven largely by racial concerns; immigration of persons of other races was not yet limited.[32] On the other hand, most people and unions strongly supported the Chinese Exclusion Act, including the American Federation of Labor and Knights of Labor, a labor union, who supported it because it believed that industrialists were using Chinese workers as a wedge to keep wages low.[33] Among labor and leftist organizations, the Industrial Workers of the World were the sole exception to this pattern. The IWW openly opposed the Chinese Exclusion Act from its inception in 1905.[34]

 
Certificate of identity issued to Yee Wee Thing certifying that he is the son of a US citizen, issued November 21, 1916. This was necessary for his immigration from China to the United States.

For all practical purposes, the Chinese Exclusion Act, along with the restrictions that followed it, froze the Chinese community in place in 1882. Limited immigration from China continued until the repeal of the act in 1943. From 1910 to 1940, the Angel Island Immigration Station on what is now Angel Island State Park in San Francisco Bay served as the processing center for most of the 56,113 Chinese immigrants who are recorded as immigrating or returning from China; upwards of 30% more who arrived there were returned to China.[35] The Chinese population in the U.S. declined from approximately 105,000 in 1880, to 89,000 in 1900, and to 61,000 in 1920.[20]

The act exempted merchants, and restaurant owners could apply for merchant visas beginning in 1915 after a federal court ruling. This led to the rapid growth of Chinese restaurants in the 1910s and 1920s as restaurant owners could leave and reenter along with family members from China.[36]

Later, the Immigration Act of 1924 restricted immigration even further, excluding all classes of Chinese immigrants and extending restrictions to other Asian immigrant groups.[23] Until these restrictions were relaxed in the middle of the twentieth century, Chinese immigrants were forced to live a life separated from their families, and to build ethnic enclaves in which they could survive on their own (Chinatown).[23] The Chinese Exclusion Act did not address the problems that whites were facing; in fact, the Chinese were quickly and eagerly replaced by the Japanese, who assumed the role of the Chinese in society. Unlike the Chinese, some Japanese were even able to climb the rungs of society by setting up businesses or becoming truck farmers.[37] However, the Japanese were later targeted in the National Origins Act of 1924, which banned immigration from east Asia entirely.

In 1891, the Chinese government refused to accept U.S. senator Henry W. Blair as U.S. minister to China due to his abusive remarks regarding China during negotiations of the Chinese Exclusion Act.[38]

The American Christian George F. Pentecost spoke out against Western imperialism in China, saying:[39]

I personally feel convinced that it would be a good thing for America if the embargo on Chinese immigration were removed. I think that the annual admission of 100,000 into this country would be a good thing for the country. And if the same thing were done in the Philippines those islands would be a veritable Garden of Eden in twenty-five years. The presence of Chinese workmen in this country would, in my opinion, do a very great deal toward solving our labor problems. There is no comparison between the Chinaman, even of the lowest coolie class, and the man who comes here from Southeastern Europe, from Russia, or from Southern Italy. The Chinese are thoroughly good workers. That is why the laborers here hate them. I think, too, that the emigration to America would help the Chinese. At least he would come into contact with some real Christian people in America. The Chinaman lives in squalor because he is poor. If he had some prosperity his squalor would cease.

The "Driving Out" period

Following the passing of the Chinese Exclusion Act, a period known as the "Driving Out" era was born. In this period, anti-Chinese Americans physically forced Chinese communities to flee to other areas. Large scale violence in Western states included the Rock Springs massacre (1885) and the Hells Canyon massacre (1887).[40]

Rock Springs massacre of 1885

The massacre was named for the town where it took place, Rock Springs, Wyoming, in Sweetwater County, where white miners were jealous of the Chinese for their employment. White miners expressed their jealous frustration by robbing, bullying, shooting, and stabbing the Chinese in Chinatown. The Chinese tried to flee but many were burned alive in their homes, starved to death in hidden refuge, or exposed to carnivorous animal predators in the mountains. Some were rescued by a passing train, but by the end of the event at least twenty-eight lives had been taken.[41] In an attempt to appease the situation, the government intervened by sending federal troops to protect the Chinese. However, only compensations for destroyed property were paid. No one was arrested nor held accountable for the atrocities committed during the riot.[41]

Hells Canyon massacre of 1887

The massacre was named for the location where it took place, along the Snake River in Hells Canyon near the mouth of Deep Creek. The area contained many rocky cliffs and white rapids that together posed significant danger to human safety. 34 Chinese miners were killed at the site. The miners were employed by the Sam Yup company, one of the six largest Chinese companies at the time, which worked in this area since October 1886. The actual events are still unclear due to unreliable law enforcement at the time, biased news reporting, and lack of serious official investigations. However, it is speculated that the dead Chinese miners were not victims of natural causes, but rather victims of gun shot wounds during a robbery committed by a gang of seven armed horse thieves.[42] Gold worth $4,000–$5,000 was thought to have been stolen from the miners. The gold was never recovered nor further investigated.

The aftermath

Shortly following the incident, the Sam Yup company of San Francisco hired Lee Loi who later hired Joseph K. Vincent, then U.S. Commissioner, to lead an investigation. Vincent submitted his investigative report to the Chinese consulate who tried unsuccessfully to obtain justice for the Chinese miners. At around the same time, other compensation reports were also unsuccessfully filed for earlier crimes inflicted on the Chinese. In the end, on October 19, 1888, Congress agreed to greatly under-compensate for the massacre and ignore the claims for the earlier crimes. Even though the amount was greatly underpaid, it was still a small victory to the Chinese who had low expectations for relief or acknowledgement.[42]

Issues of the act

The Chinese Exclusion Act lasted for about thirty years,[43] and it caused the American economy to suffer a great loss.[43] Some sources cite the act as a sign of injustice and unfair treatment to the Chinese workers because their jobs were mostly menial.[44]

Impact on education in the U.S.

Recruitment of foreign students to U.S. colleges and universities was an important component in the expansion of American influence. International education programs allowed students to learn from the examples provided at elite universities and to bring their newfound skill sets back to their home countries. As such, international education has historically been seen as a vehicle for improving diplomatic relations and promoting trade. The US Exclusion Act, however, forced Chinese students attempting to enter the country to provide proof that they were not trying to bypass regulations.[45] Laws and regulations that stemmed from the act made for less than ideal situations for Chinese students, leading to criticisms of American society.[45] Policies and attitudes toward Chinese Americans in the US worked against foreign policy interests by limiting the ability of the U.S. to participate in international education initiatives.[46]

Repeal and status

The Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed by the 1943 Magnuson Act when China had become an ally of the U.S. against Japan in World War II, as the US needed to embody an image of fairness and justice. The Magnuson Act permitted Chinese nationals already residing in the country to become naturalized citizens and stop hiding from the threat of deportation. The act also allowed Chinese people to send remittances to people of Chinese descent living in mainland China, Macao, Hong Kong, and Taiwan and other countries or territories, especially if the funding is not tied to criminal activity. However, the Magnuson Act only allowed a national quota of 105 Chinese immigrants per year and did not repeal the restrictions on immigration from the other Asian countries. The crackdown on Chinese immigrants reached a new level in its last decade, from 1956 to 1965, with the Chinese Confession Program launched by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, that encouraged Chinese who had committed immigration fraud to confess, so as to be eligible for some leniency in treatment.[citation needed] Large-scale Chinese immigration did not occur until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965.

The first Chinese immigrants who entered the United States under the Magnuson Act were college students who sought to escape the warfare in China during World War II and study in the U.S. The establishment of the People's Republic of China and its entry into the Korean War against the U.S., however, created a new threat in the minds of some American politicians: American-educated Chinese students bringing American knowledge back to "Red China". Many Chinese college students were almost forcibly naturalized, even though they continued to face significant prejudice, discrimination, and bullying. One of the most prolific of these students was Tsou Tang, who would go on to become the leading expert on China and Sino-American relations during the Cold War.[47]

Although the exclusion act was repealed in 1943, the law in California prohibiting non-whites from marrying whites was not struck down until 1948, in which the California Supreme Court ruled the ban of interracial marriage within the state unconstitutional in Perez v. Sharp.[48][49] Some other states had such laws until 1967, when the United States Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Loving v. Virginia that anti-miscegenation laws across the nation are unconstitutional.

Even today,[when?] although all its constituent sections have long been repealed, Chapter 7 of Title 8 of the United States Code is headed "Exclusion of Chinese".[50] It is the only chapter of the 15 chapters in Title 8 (Aliens and Nationality) that is completely focused on a specific nationality or ethnic group. Like the following Chapter 8, "The Cooly Trade", it consists entirely of statutes that are noted as "Repealed" or "Omitted".

On June 18, 2012, the United States House of Representatives passed H.Res. 683, a resolution introduced by Congresswoman Judy Chu which formally expresses the regret of the House of Representatives for the Chinese Exclusion Act.[51] S.Res. 201, a similar resolution, had been approved by the U.S. Senate in October 2011.[52]

In 2014, the California Legislature took formal action to pass measures that formally recognize the accomplishments of Chinese Americans in California and to call upon Congress to formally apologize for the 1882 adoption of the Chinese Exclusion Act. Senate Republican leader Bob Huff (R-Diamond Bar) and incoming Senate president pro-Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) served as joint authors for Senate Joint Resolution (SJR) 23[53] and Senate Concurrent Resolution (SCR) 122,[54] respectively.[55]

Both SJR 23 and SCR 122 acknowledge and celebrate the history and contributions of Chinese Americans in California. The resolutions also formally call on Congress to apologize for laws that resulted in the persecution of Chinese Americans, such as the Chinese Exclusion Act.[53][54]

Perhaps most important are the sociological implications for understanding ethnic/race relations in the context of American history; minorities tend to be punished in times of economic, political, and/or geopolitical crises. Times of social and systemic stability, however, tend to mute any underlying tensions between different groups. In times of societal crisis—whether perceived or real—patterns of retractability of American identities have erupted to the forefront of America's political landscape, often generating institutional and civil society backlash against workers from other nations, a pattern documented by Fong's research into how crises drastically alter social relationships.[56]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Anderson, David L. (1978). "The Diplomacy of Discrimination: Chinese Exclusion, 1876-1882". California History. 57 (1): 32–45. doi:10.2307/25157814. JSTOR 25157814.
  • Chan, Sucheng, ed. (1991). Entry Denied: Exclusion and the Chinese Community in America, 1882–1943. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 978-0877227984.
  • Doenecke, Justus D. (1981). The Presidencies of James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0208-7.
  • Gold, Martin (2012). Forbidden Citizens: Chinese Exclusion and the U.S. Congress: A Legislative History. TheCapitol.Net. ISBN 978-1-58733-235-7. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  • Gyory, Andrew (1998). Closing the Gate: Race, politics, and the Chinese Exclusion Act. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4739-8. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  • Hong, Jane H. (2019). Opening the Gates to Asia: A Transpacific History of How America Repealed Asian Exclusion (online review). University of North Carolina Press.
  • Hsu, Madeline Y. (2015). The Good Immigrants: How the Yellow Peril Became the Model Minority. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691176215. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  • Kil, Sang Hea (2012). "Fearing yellow, imagining white: media analysis of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882". Social Identities. 18 (6): 663–677. doi:10.1080/13504630.2012.708995. S2CID 143449924.
  • Lee, Erika (2007). "The 'Yellow Peril' and Asian Exclusion in the Americas" (PDF). Pacific Historical Review. 76 (4): 537–562. doi:10.1525/phr.2007.76.4.537. JSTOR 10.1525/phr.2007.76.4.537.
  • Lew-Williams, Beth (2014). "Before restriction became exclusion: America's experiment in diplomatic immigration control". Pacific Historical Review. 83 (1): 24–56. doi:10.1525/phr.2014.83.1.24.
  • Pfaelzer, Jean (2007). Driven Out: The Forgotten War against Chinese Americans. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1400061341.
  • Perry, Jay (2014). . The Chinese Question: California, British Columbia, and the making of transnational immigration policy, 1847–1885 (Thesis). Bowling Green State University. pp. 242–76. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  • Rhodes, James Ford (1919). "VIII: The Chinese". History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850. Vol. 8: From Hayes to McKinley, 1877–1896. New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. 180–96. Retrieved 25 June 2018. alternative link at Hathitrust
  • Hoogenboom, Ari (1995). Rutherford Hayes: Warrior and President. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0641-2.
  • Reeves, Thomas C. (1975). Gentleman Boss: The Life of Chester A. Arthur. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-46095-6.
  • Takaki, Ronald (1998) [1989]. Strangers from a Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans (2nd ed.). New York: Back Bay Books. ISBN 978-0-316-83130-7. OCLC 1074009567.

Primary sources

  • Adrienne Wilmoth Lerner; et al., eds. (2006). "Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)". Human and Civil Rights: Essential Primary Sources. Gale. pp. 378–382.
  • Chinese Immigration Pamphlets in the California State Library. Vol. 1 | Vol. 2 | Vol. 3 | Vol. 4,
  • How residents of Locke, California, the last rural Chinese town in America, lived in the Sacramento Delta under the Chinese Exclusion Act

External links

  • George Frederick Seward and the Chinese Exclusion Act | "From the Stacks" at New-York Historical Society
  • George Frederick Seward Papers, MS 557, The New-York Historical Society
  • Chinese Exclusion Act from the Library of Congress
  • Chinese Exclusion Act – Menlo School
  • Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) – Our Documents
  • The Yung Wing Project hosts the memoir of one of the earliest naturalized Chinese whose citizenship was revoked forty-six years after having received it as a result of the Chinese Exclusion Act.
  • An Alleged Wife One Immigrant in the Chinese Exclusion Era
  • Primary source documents and images from the University of California 2021-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Primary source documents and images related to the documentary "Separate Lives, Broken Dreams", a saga of the Chinese Exclusion Act era, e.g. political cartoons, immigrant case files and government correspondence from the National Archives.
  • Risse, Guenter B. (2012). Plague, Fear, and Politics in San Francisco's Chinatown. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9781421405100. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  • Li Bo. Beyond the Heavenly Kingdom is a historical novel that focuses on the politics of the Chinese Exclusion Act ISBN 1541232216
  • Lost Years: A People's Struggle for Justice (2011)

Chinese Exclusion Act - American Experience PBS playlist on YouTube

  • Frederick A. Bee History Project

chinese, exclusion, canada, chinese, immigration, 1923, united, states, federal, signed, president, chester, arthur, 1882, prohibiting, immigration, chinese, laborers, years, excluded, merchants, teachers, students, travelers, diplomats, building, earlier, pag. For Chinese Exclusion Act in Canada see Chinese Immigration Act 1923 The Chinese Exclusion Act was a United States federal law signed by President Chester A Arthur on May 6 1882 prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers for 10 years The law excluded merchants teachers students travelers and diplomats 1 Building on the earlier Page Act of 1875 which banned Chinese women from migrating to the United States the Chinese Exclusion Act was the only law ever implemented to prevent all members of a specific ethnic or national group from immigrating to the United States citation needed Chinese Exclusion ActNicknamesChinese Exclusion Act of 1882Enacted bythe 47th United States CongressEffectiveMay 6 1882CitationsPublic lawPub L 47 126Statutes at Large22 Stat 58 Chap 126Legislative historyIntroduced in the House as H R 5804 by Horace F Page R CA on April 12 1882Committee consideration by House Foreign RelationsPassed the House on April 17 1882 Votes 88R 102D Not Voting 52 202 37 Passed the Senate on April 28 1882 Votes 9R 22D Not Voting 29 32 15 with amendmentHouse agreed to Senate amendment on May 3 1882 Agreed Signed into law by President Chester A Arthur on May 6 1882Not to be confused with Immigration Act of 1924 An 1886 advertisement for Magic Washer detergent The Chinese Must Go The first page of the Chinese Exclusion Act Passage of the law was preceded by growing anti Chinese sentiment and anti Chinese violence as well as various policies targeting Chinese migrants 2 The act followed the Angell Treaty of 1880 a set of revisions to the U S China Burlingame Treaty of 1868 that allowed the U S to suspend Chinese immigration The act was initially intended to last for 10 years but was renewed and strengthened in 1892 with the Geary Act and made permanent in 1902 These laws attempted to stop all Chinese immigration into the United States for ten years with exceptions for diplomats teachers students merchants and travelers They were widely evaded 3 The law remained in force until the passage of the Magnuson Act in 1943 which repealed the exclusion and allowed 105 Chinese immigrants to enter the United States each year Chinese immigration later increased with the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 which abolished direct racial barriers and later by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 which abolished the National Origins Formula 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Content 3 The Driving Out period 3 1 Rock Springs massacre of 1885 3 2 Hells Canyon massacre of 1887 3 2 1 The aftermath 3 2 2 Issues of the act 4 Impact on education in the U S 5 Repeal and status 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksBackground EditMain article History of Chinese Americans This Official Map of Chinatown 1885 was published as part of an official report of a Special Committee established by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors on the Condition of the Chinese Quarter Chinese immigrant workers building the first transcontinental railroad The first significant Chinese immigration to North America began with the California Gold Rush of 1848 1855 and it continued with subsequent large labor projects such as the building of the first transcontinental railroad During the early stages of the gold rush when surface gold was plentiful the Chinese were tolerated by white people if not well received 5 However as gold became harder to find and competition increased animosity toward the Chinese and other foreigners increased After being forcibly driven from mining by a mixture of state legislators and other miners the Foreign Miner s Tax the immigrant Chinese began to settle in enclaves in cities mainly San Francisco and took up low wage labor such as restaurant and laundry work 6 With the post Civil War economy in decline by the 1870s anti Chinese animosity became politicized by labor leader Denis Kearney and his Workingman s Party 7 as well as by California governor John Bigler both of whom blamed Chinese coolies for depressed wage levels Public opinion and law in California began to demonize Chinese workers and immigrants in any role with the latter half of the 1800s seeing a series of ever more restrictive laws being placed on Chinese labor behavior and even living conditions While many of these legislative efforts were quickly overturned by the State Supreme Court 8 many more anti Chinese laws continued to be passed in both California and nationally In the early 1850s there was resistance to the idea of excluding Chinese migrant workers from immigration because they provided essential tax revenue which helped fill the fiscal gap of California 9 The Xianfeng Emperor who ruled China at the time was supportive of the exclusion citing his concerns that Chinese immigration to America would lead to a loss of labor for China 10 But toward the end of the decade the financial situation improved and subsequently attempts to legislate Chinese exclusion became successful on the state level 9 In 1858 the California Legislature passed a law that made it illegal for any person of the Chinese or Mongolian races to enter the state however this law was struck down by an unpublished opinion of the State Supreme Court in 1862 11 The Chinese immigrant workers provided cheap labor and did not use any of the government infrastructure schools hospitals etc because the Chinese migrant population was predominantly made up of healthy male adults 9 In January 1868 the Senate ratified the Burlingame Treaty with China allowing an unrestricted flow of Chinese into the country 12 As time passed and more and more Chinese migrants arrived in the United States and California in particular violence would often break out in cities such as Los Angeles The North Adams strike of 1870 broken by the replacement of all workers by 75 Chinese men was the trigger that sparked widespread working class protest across the country shaped legislative debate in Congress and helped make Chinese immigration a sustained national issue citation needed Subsequent numerous strikes ensued notably Beaver Falls Cutlery Company in Pennsylvania and others 13 14 After the economy soured in the Panic of 1873 Chinese immigrants were blamed for depressing workmen s wages 12 At one point Chinese men represented nearly a quarter of all wage earning workers in California 15 and by 1878 Congress felt compelled to try to ban immigration from China in legislation that was later vetoed by President Rutherford B Hayes The title of the August 27 1873 San Francisco Chronicle article The Chinese Invasion They Are Coming 900 000 Strong was traced by The Atlantic as one of the roots of the 2019 anti immigration invasion rhetoric 16 In 1879 however California adopted a new Constitution which explicitly authorized the state government to determine which individuals were allowed to reside in the state and banned the Chinese from employment by corporations and state county or municipal governments 17 Three years later after China had agreed to treaty revisions Congress tried again to exclude working class Chinese laborers Senator John F Miller of California introduced another Chinese Exclusion Act that blocked entry of Chinese laborers for a twenty year period 18 The bill passed the Senate and House by overwhelming margins but this as well was vetoed by President Chester A Arthur who concluded the 20 year ban to be a breach of the renegotiated treaty of 1880 That treaty allowed only a reasonable suspension of immigration Eastern newspapers praised the veto while it was condemned in the Western states Congress was unable to override the veto but passed a new bill reducing the immigration ban to ten years 18 19 The House of Representatives voted 201 37 with 51 abstentions to pass the act 20 Although he still objected to this denial of entry to Chinese laborers President Arthur acceded to the compromise measure signing the Chinese Exclusion Act into law on May 6 1882 18 19 Anti Chinese Wall cartoon in Puck After the act was passed most Chinese workers were faced with a dilemma stay in the United States alone or return to China to reunite with their families 21 3 Although widespread dislike for the Chinese persisted well after the law itself was passed of note is that some capitalists and entrepreneurs resisted their exclusion because they accepted lower wages 22 Content EditFor the first time federal law proscribed entry of an ethnic working group on the premise that it endangered the good order of certain localities The earlier Page Act of 1875 had prohibited immigration of Asian forced laborers and sex workers and the Naturalization Act of 1790 prohibited naturalization of non white subjects The Chinese Exclusion Act excluded Chinese laborers meaning skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining from entering the country for ten years under penalty of imprisonment and deportation 23 24 Front page of The San Francisco Call from November 20 1901 discussing the Chinese Exclusion Convention The Chinese Exclusion Act required the few non laborers who sought entry to obtain certification from the Chinese government that they were qualified to emigrate However this group found it increasingly difficult to prove that they were not laborers 24 because the 1882 Act defined excludables as skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining Thus very few Chinese could enter the country under the 1882 law Diplomatic officials and other officers on business along with their house servants for the Chinese government were also allowed entry as long as they had the proper certification verifying their credentials 25 The Chinese Exclusion Act also affected the Chinese who had already settled in the United States Any Chinese who left the United States had to obtain certifications for reentry and the act made Chinese immigrants permanent aliens by excluding them from U S citizenship 23 24 After the act s passage Chinese men in the U S had little chance of ever reuniting with their wives or of starting families in their new abodes 23 Amendments made in 1884 tightened the provisions that allowed previous immigrants to leave and return and clarified that the law applied to ethnic Chinese regardless of their country of origin 26 The 1888 Scott Act expanded upon the Chinese Exclusion Act prohibiting reentry into the U S after leaving 27 Only teachers students government officials tourists and merchants were exempt 20 Constitutionality of the Chinese Exclusion Act and the Scott Act was upheld by the Supreme Court in Chae Chan Ping v United States 1889 the Supreme Court declared that the power of exclusion of foreigners is an incident of sovereignty belonging to the government of the United States as a part of those sovereign powers delegated by the constitution The act was renewed for ten years by the 1892 Geary Act and again with no terminal date in 1902 24 When the act was extended in 1902 it required each Chinese resident to register and obtain a certificate of residence Without a certificate he or she faced deportation 24 Between 1882 and 1905 about 10 000 Chinese appealed against negative immigration decisions to federal court usually via a petition for habeas corpus 28 In most of these cases the courts ruled in favor of the petitioner 28 Except in cases of bias or negligence these petitions were barred by an act that passed Congress in 1894 and was upheld by the U S Supreme Court in U S vs Lem Moon Sing 1895 In United States v Ju Toy 1905 the U S Supreme Court reaffirmed that the port inspectors and the Secretary of Commerce had final authority on who could be admitted Ju Toy s petition was thus barred despite the fact that the district court found that he was an American citizen The Supreme Court determined that refusing entry at a port does not require due process and is legally equivalent to refusing entry at a land crossing All these developments along with the extension of the act in 1902 triggered a boycott of U S goods in China between 1904 and 1906 29 There was one 1885 case in San Francisco however in which Treasury Department officials in Washington overturned a decision to deny entry to two Chinese students 30 One of the critics of the Chinese Exclusion Act was the anti slavery anti imperialist Republican senator George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts who described the act as nothing less than the legalization of racial discrimination 31 A political cartoon from 1882 showing a Chinese man being barred entry to the Golden Gate of Liberty The caption reads We must draw the line somewhere you know The laws were driven largely by racial concerns immigration of persons of other races was not yet limited 32 On the other hand most people and unions strongly supported the Chinese Exclusion Act including the American Federation of Labor and Knights of Labor a labor union who supported it because it believed that industrialists were using Chinese workers as a wedge to keep wages low 33 Among labor and leftist organizations the Industrial Workers of the World were the sole exception to this pattern The IWW openly opposed the Chinese Exclusion Act from its inception in 1905 34 Certificate of identity issued to Yee Wee Thing certifying that he is the son of a US citizen issued November 21 1916 This was necessary for his immigration from China to the United States For all practical purposes the Chinese Exclusion Act along with the restrictions that followed it froze the Chinese community in place in 1882 Limited immigration from China continued until the repeal of the act in 1943 From 1910 to 1940 the Angel Island Immigration Station on what is now Angel Island State Park in San Francisco Bay served as the processing center for most of the 56 113 Chinese immigrants who are recorded as immigrating or returning from China upwards of 30 more who arrived there were returned to China 35 The Chinese population in the U S declined from approximately 105 000 in 1880 to 89 000 in 1900 and to 61 000 in 1920 20 The act exempted merchants and restaurant owners could apply for merchant visas beginning in 1915 after a federal court ruling This led to the rapid growth of Chinese restaurants in the 1910s and 1920s as restaurant owners could leave and reenter along with family members from China 36 Later the Immigration Act of 1924 restricted immigration even further excluding all classes of Chinese immigrants and extending restrictions to other Asian immigrant groups 23 Until these restrictions were relaxed in the middle of the twentieth century Chinese immigrants were forced to live a life separated from their families and to build ethnic enclaves in which they could survive on their own Chinatown 23 The Chinese Exclusion Act did not address the problems that whites were facing in fact the Chinese were quickly and eagerly replaced by the Japanese who assumed the role of the Chinese in society Unlike the Chinese some Japanese were even able to climb the rungs of society by setting up businesses or becoming truck farmers 37 However the Japanese were later targeted in the National Origins Act of 1924 which banned immigration from east Asia entirely In 1891 the Chinese government refused to accept U S senator Henry W Blair as U S minister to China due to his abusive remarks regarding China during negotiations of the Chinese Exclusion Act 38 The American Christian George F Pentecost spoke out against Western imperialism in China saying 39 I personally feel convinced that it would be a good thing for America if the embargo on Chinese immigration were removed I think that the annual admission of 100 000 into this country would be a good thing for the country And if the same thing were done in the Philippines those islands would be a veritable Garden of Eden in twenty five years The presence of Chinese workmen in this country would in my opinion do a very great deal toward solving our labor problems There is no comparison between the Chinaman even of the lowest coolie class and the man who comes here from Southeastern Europe from Russia or from Southern Italy The Chinese are thoroughly good workers That is why the laborers here hate them I think too that the emigration to America would help the Chinese At least he would come into contact with some real Christian people in America The Chinaman lives in squalor because he is poor If he had some prosperity his squalor would cease The Driving Out period EditFollowing the passing of the Chinese Exclusion Act a period known as the Driving Out era was born In this period anti Chinese Americans physically forced Chinese communities to flee to other areas Large scale violence in Western states included the Rock Springs massacre 1885 and the Hells Canyon massacre 1887 40 Rock Springs massacre of 1885 Edit Main article Rock Springs massacre The massacre was named for the town where it took place Rock Springs Wyoming in Sweetwater County where white miners were jealous of the Chinese for their employment White miners expressed their jealous frustration by robbing bullying shooting and stabbing the Chinese in Chinatown The Chinese tried to flee but many were burned alive in their homes starved to death in hidden refuge or exposed to carnivorous animal predators in the mountains Some were rescued by a passing train but by the end of the event at least twenty eight lives had been taken 41 In an attempt to appease the situation the government intervened by sending federal troops to protect the Chinese However only compensations for destroyed property were paid No one was arrested nor held accountable for the atrocities committed during the riot 41 Hells Canyon massacre of 1887 Edit Main article Hells Canyon Massacre The massacre was named for the location where it took place along the Snake River in Hells Canyon near the mouth of Deep Creek The area contained many rocky cliffs and white rapids that together posed significant danger to human safety 34 Chinese miners were killed at the site The miners were employed by the Sam Yup company one of the six largest Chinese companies at the time which worked in this area since October 1886 The actual events are still unclear due to unreliable law enforcement at the time biased news reporting and lack of serious official investigations However it is speculated that the dead Chinese miners were not victims of natural causes but rather victims of gun shot wounds during a robbery committed by a gang of seven armed horse thieves 42 Gold worth 4 000 5 000 was thought to have been stolen from the miners The gold was never recovered nor further investigated The aftermath Edit Shortly following the incident the Sam Yup company of San Francisco hired Lee Loi who later hired Joseph K Vincent then U S Commissioner to lead an investigation Vincent submitted his investigative report to the Chinese consulate who tried unsuccessfully to obtain justice for the Chinese miners At around the same time other compensation reports were also unsuccessfully filed for earlier crimes inflicted on the Chinese In the end on October 19 1888 Congress agreed to greatly under compensate for the massacre and ignore the claims for the earlier crimes Even though the amount was greatly underpaid it was still a small victory to the Chinese who had low expectations for relief or acknowledgement 42 Issues of the act Edit The Chinese Exclusion Act lasted for about thirty years 43 and it caused the American economy to suffer a great loss 43 Some sources cite the act as a sign of injustice and unfair treatment to the Chinese workers because their jobs were mostly menial 44 Impact on education in the U S EditRecruitment of foreign students to U S colleges and universities was an important component in the expansion of American influence International education programs allowed students to learn from the examples provided at elite universities and to bring their newfound skill sets back to their home countries As such international education has historically been seen as a vehicle for improving diplomatic relations and promoting trade The US Exclusion Act however forced Chinese students attempting to enter the country to provide proof that they were not trying to bypass regulations 45 Laws and regulations that stemmed from the act made for less than ideal situations for Chinese students leading to criticisms of American society 45 Policies and attitudes toward Chinese Americans in the US worked against foreign policy interests by limiting the ability of the U S to participate in international education initiatives 46 Repeal and status EditThe Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed by the 1943 Magnuson Act when China had become an ally of the U S against Japan in World War II as the US needed to embody an image of fairness and justice The Magnuson Act permitted Chinese nationals already residing in the country to become naturalized citizens and stop hiding from the threat of deportation The act also allowed Chinese people to send remittances to people of Chinese descent living in mainland China Macao Hong Kong and Taiwan and other countries or territories especially if the funding is not tied to criminal activity However the Magnuson Act only allowed a national quota of 105 Chinese immigrants per year and did not repeal the restrictions on immigration from the other Asian countries The crackdown on Chinese immigrants reached a new level in its last decade from 1956 to 1965 with the Chinese Confession Program launched by the Immigration and Naturalization Service that encouraged Chinese who had committed immigration fraud to confess so as to be eligible for some leniency in treatment citation needed Large scale Chinese immigration did not occur until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 The first Chinese immigrants who entered the United States under the Magnuson Act were college students who sought to escape the warfare in China during World War II and study in the U S The establishment of the People s Republic of China and its entry into the Korean War against the U S however created a new threat in the minds of some American politicians American educated Chinese students bringing American knowledge back to Red China Many Chinese college students were almost forcibly naturalized even though they continued to face significant prejudice discrimination and bullying One of the most prolific of these students was Tsou Tang who would go on to become the leading expert on China and Sino American relations during the Cold War 47 Although the exclusion act was repealed in 1943 the law in California prohibiting non whites from marrying whites was not struck down until 1948 in which the California Supreme Court ruled the ban of interracial marriage within the state unconstitutional in Perez v Sharp 48 49 Some other states had such laws until 1967 when the United States Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Loving v Virginia that anti miscegenation laws across the nation are unconstitutional Even today when although all its constituent sections have long been repealed Chapter 7 of Title 8 of the United States Code is headed Exclusion of Chinese 50 It is the only chapter of the 15 chapters in Title 8 Aliens and Nationality that is completely focused on a specific nationality or ethnic group Like the following Chapter 8 The Cooly Trade it consists entirely of statutes that are noted as Repealed or Omitted On June 18 2012 the United States House of Representatives passed H Res 683 a resolution introduced by Congresswoman Judy Chu which formally expresses the regret of the House of Representatives for the Chinese Exclusion Act 51 S Res 201 a similar resolution had been approved by the U S Senate in October 2011 52 In 2014 the California Legislature took formal action to pass measures that formally recognize the accomplishments of Chinese Americans in California and to call upon Congress to formally apologize for the 1882 adoption of the Chinese Exclusion Act Senate Republican leader Bob Huff R Diamond Bar and incoming Senate president pro Tem Kevin de Leon D Los Angeles served as joint authors for Senate Joint Resolution SJR 23 53 and Senate Concurrent Resolution SCR 122 54 respectively 55 Both SJR 23 and SCR 122 acknowledge and celebrate the history and contributions of Chinese Americans in California The resolutions also formally call on Congress to apologize for laws that resulted in the persecution of Chinese Americans such as the Chinese Exclusion Act 53 54 Perhaps most important are the sociological implications for understanding ethnic race relations in the context of American history minorities tend to be punished in times of economic political and or geopolitical crises Times of social and systemic stability however tend to mute any underlying tensions between different groups In times of societal crisis whether perceived or real patterns of retractability of American identities have erupted to the forefront of America s political landscape often generating institutional and civil society backlash against workers from other nations a pattern documented by Fong s research into how crises drastically alter social relationships 56 See also EditAnti Chinese legislation in the United States Chinese Confession Program The Chinese Exclusion Act a 2018 television documentary film from PBS Anti Chinese sentiment Chinese massacre of 1871 Lau Ow Bew v United States which held that returning merchants did not need paperwork from China List of United States immigration laws Naturalization Act of 1798 Paper sons Rock Springs massacre United States v Wong Kim Ark which held that the Chinese Exclusion Act could not overrule the citizenship of those born in the U S to Chinese parents Yellow Peril Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 Canada Chinese AmericansReferences Edit Lee Erika 2002 The Chinese Exclusion Example Race Immigration and American Gatekeeping 1882 1924 Journal of American Ethnic History 21 3 36 62 doi 10 2307 27502847 ISSN 0278 5927 JSTOR 27502847 S2CID 157999472 Lew Williams Beth 2018 The Chinese Must Go Violence Exclusion and the Making of the Alien in America Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 97601 6 a b Erika Lee 2003 At America s Gates Chinese Immigration During the Exclusion Era 1882 1943 University of North Carolina Press Wei William The Chinese American Experience An Introduction HarpWeek Archived from the original on 2014 01 26 Retrieved 2014 02 05 Norton Henry K 1924 The Story of California From the Earliest Days to the Present Chicago A C McClurg amp Co pp 283 296 Archived from the original on 2008 05 09 Pioneer Laundry Workers Assembly K of L Washington D C China s menace to the world from the forum to the public The Library of Congress American Memory The Library of Congress Retrieved 11 November 2017 Kearney Denis 28 February 1878 Appeal from California The Chinese Invasion Workingmen s Address Indianapolis Times Retrieved 5 May 2014 1855 Cal Stat 194 Capitation Tax PDF UC Hastings College of the Law Library Summer 2001 UC Hastings College of the Law Retrieved 30 November 2017 a b c Kanazawa Mark September 2005 Immigration Exclusion and Taxation Anti Chinese Legislation in Gold Rush California The Journal of Economic History Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Economic History Association 65 3 779 805 doi 10 1017 s0022050705000288 JSTOR 3875017 S2CID 154316126 Wellborn Mildred 1913 THE EVENTS LEADING TO THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACTS p 56 Text of the Chinese Exclusion Act PDF University of California Hastings College of the Law Archived from the original PDF on 2014 05 05 Retrieved 2014 05 05 a b Reeves 1975 pp 277 278 Hoogenboom pp 387 389 Rhoads Edward J M 2002 White Labor vs Coolie Labor the Chinese Question in Pennsylvania in the 1870s Journal of American Ethnic History University of Illinois Press 21 2 3 32 doi 10 2307 27502811 JSTOR 27502811 S2CID 254494076 Rhoads Edward J M June 1999 Asian Pioneers in the Eastern United States Chinese Cutlery Workers in Beaver Falls Pennsylvania in the 1870s Journal of Asian American Studies Johns Hopkins University Press 2 2 119 155 doi 10 1353 jaas 1999 0019 S2CID 144303641 Salyer L 1995 Law Harsh as Tigers Chinese Immigrants and the Shaping of Modern Immigration Law Chapell Hill The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807845301 Zimmer Ben 2019 08 06 Where Does Trump s Invasion Rhetoric Come From The Atlantic Retrieved 2019 08 12 Constitution of the State of California 1879 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 16 a b c Reeves 1975 pp 278 279 Doenecke pp 81 84 a b David L Anderson 1978 The Diplomacy of Discrimination Chinese Exclusion 1876 1882 California History 57 1 32 45 doi 10 2307 25157814 JSTOR 25157814 a b c Takaki 1998 p 111 112 Chew Kenneth Liu John March 2004 Hidden in Plain Sight Global Labor Force Exchange in the Chinese American Population 1880 1940 Population and Development Review Population Council 30 1 57 78 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4457 2004 00003 x JSTOR 3401498 Miller Joaquin December 1901 The Chinese and the Exclusion Act The North American Review University of Northern Iowa 173 541 782 789 JSTOR 25105257 a b c d e Exclusion Library of Congress 2003 09 01 Retrieved 2010 01 25 a b c d e The People s Vote Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on 28 March 2007 Retrieved 5 May 2014 Welcome to OurDocuments gov www ourdocuments gov 9 April 2021 Chinese Exclusion Act 1884 Amendments HarpWeek Archived from the original on September 30 2000 Retrieved July 13 2021 Chinese Immigration and the Chinese Exclusion Acts U S Department of State Retrieved July 13 2021 a b Daniels Roger Spring 1999 Book Review Laws Harsh as Tigers Chinese Immigrants and the Shaping of Modern Immigration Law Lucy E Salyer Law and History Review 17 1 Archived from the original on September 25 2012 Lee Jonathan H X 2015 Chinese Americans The History and Culture of a People ABC CLIO p 26 ISBN 978 1610695497 Lee Erika 2003 At America s Gates Chinese Immigration during the Exclusion Era 1882 1943 University of North Carolina Press p 51 ISBN 978 0807827758 Daniels Roger 2002 Coming to America A History of Immigration and Ethnicity in American Life Harper Perennial p 271 ISBN 978 0060505776 Chin Gabriel J 1998 Segregation s Last Stronghold Race Discrimination and the Constitutional Law of Immigration UCLA Law Review 46 1 SSRN 1121119 Kennedy David M Cohen Lizabeth Bailey Thomas A 2002 The American Pageant 12th ed New York Houghton Mifflin Company Choi Jennifer Jung Hee 1999 The Rhetoric of Inclusion The I W W and Asian Workers PDF Ex Post Facto Journal of the History Students at San Francisco State University 8 9 Dunigan Grace January 1 2017 The Chinese Exclusion Act Why It Matters Today Susquehanna University Political Review 8 82 89 Godoy Maria 22 February 2016 Lo Mein Loophole How U S Immigration Law Fueled A Chinese Restaurant Boom NPR org Retrieved 2020 12 01 Brinkley Alan 2005 12 23 American History A Survey 12th ed ISBN 978 0073280479 Denza Eileen 2008 Commentary to the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations Third ed Oxford University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0199216857 America Not A Christian Nation Says Dr Pentecost PDF The New York Times February 11 1912 Archived from the original on 25 March 2014 Pfaelzer 2007 a b Iris Chang 2004 2003 The Chinese in America a narrative history New York Penguin ISBN 0142004170 OCLC 55136302 a b Nokes R Gregory Fall 2006 A Most Daring Outrage Murders at Chinese Massacre Cove 1887 PDF Oregon Historical Quarterly 107 3 326 353 doi 10 1353 ohq 2006 0081 S2CID 159862696 Archived from the original on 28 January 2007 Retrieved 20 March 2007 a b Tian Kelly 19 December 2010 The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and Its Impact on North American Society Undergraduate Research Journal for the Human Sciences 9 1 Bodenner Chris February 6 2013 Chinese Exclusion Act Issues and Controversies in American History PDF 5 Archived from the original PDF on December 8 2017 Retrieved December 7 2017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Moon Krystyn R May 2018 Immigration Restrictions and International Education Early Tensions in the Pacific Northwest 1890s 1910s History of Education Quarterly 58 2 261 294 doi 10 1017 heq 2018 2 ISSN 0018 2680 S2CID 150233388 Leong K J 2003 Foreign Policy National Identity and Citizenship The Roosevelt White House and the Expediency of Repeal Journal of American Ethic History 22 3 30 doi 10 2307 27501347 JSTOR 27501347 Liu Qing May 2020 To Be an Apolitical Political Scientist A Chinese Immigrant Scholar and Geo politicized American Higher Education History of Education Quarterly 60 2 138 139 doi 10 1017 heq 2020 10 Chin Gabriel Karthikeyan Hrishi 2002 Preserving Racial Identity Population Patterns and the Application of Anti Miscegenation Statutes to Asian Americans 1910 1950 Asian Law Journal Social Science Research Network 9 SSRN 283998 See Perez v Sharp 32 Cal 2d 711 1948 United States Code Title 8 Chapter 7 Office of the Law Revision Counsel Retrieved 1 January 2021 112th Congress 2012 June 8 2012 H Res 683 112th Legislation GovTrack us Retrieved August 9 2012 Expressing the regret of the House of Representatives for the passage of laws that adversely affected the Chinese in the United States including the Chinese Exclusion Act US apologizes for Chinese Exclusion Act China Daily 19 June 2012 a b California State Assembly Senate Joint Resolution No 23 Relative to Chinese Americans in California Session of the Legislature Statutes of California Resolution State of California Ch 134 Direct URL a b California State Assembly Senate Concurrent Resolution No 122 Relative to Chinese Americans in California Session of the Legislature Statutes of California Resolution State of California Ch 132 Direct URL Legislature Recognizes the Contributions of Chinese Americans amp Apologizes for Past Discriminatory Laws California State Senate Republican Caucus August 19 2014 Archived from the original on 2016 07 26 Fong Jack April 2008 American Social Reminders of Citizenship after September 11 2001 Nativisms in the Ethnocratic Retractability of American Identity PDF Qualitative Sociology Review 4 1 69 91 doi 10 18778 1733 8077 4 1 04 S2CID 142233949 Further reading EditAnderson David L 1978 The Diplomacy of Discrimination Chinese Exclusion 1876 1882 California History 57 1 32 45 doi 10 2307 25157814 JSTOR 25157814 Chan Sucheng ed 1991 Entry Denied Exclusion and the Chinese Community in America 1882 1943 Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 978 0877227984 Doenecke Justus D 1981 The Presidencies of James A Garfield and Chester A Arthur Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0208 7 Gold Martin 2012 Forbidden Citizens Chinese Exclusion and the U S Congress A Legislative History TheCapitol Net ISBN 978 1 58733 235 7 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Gyory Andrew 1998 Closing the Gate Race politics and the Chinese Exclusion Act Chapel Hill North Carolina The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4739 8 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Hong Jane H 2019 Opening the Gates to Asia A Transpacific History of How America Repealed Asian Exclusion online review University of North Carolina Press Hsu Madeline Y 2015 The Good Immigrants How the Yellow Peril Became the Model Minority Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691176215 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Kil Sang Hea 2012 Fearing yellow imagining white media analysis of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 Social Identities 18 6 663 677 doi 10 1080 13504630 2012 708995 S2CID 143449924 Lee Erika 2007 The Yellow Peril and Asian Exclusion in the Americas PDF Pacific Historical Review 76 4 537 562 doi 10 1525 phr 2007 76 4 537 JSTOR 10 1525 phr 2007 76 4 537 Lew Williams Beth 2014 Before restriction became exclusion America s experiment in diplomatic immigration control Pacific Historical Review 83 1 24 56 doi 10 1525 phr 2014 83 1 24 Pfaelzer Jean 2007 Driven Out The Forgotten War against Chinese Americans New York Random House ISBN 978 1400061341 Perry Jay 2014 bibliography The Chinese Question California British Columbia and the making of transnational immigration policy 1847 1885 Thesis Bowling Green State University pp 242 76 Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Rhodes James Ford 1919 VIII The Chinese History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 Vol 8 From Hayes to McKinley 1877 1896 New York The Macmillan Company pp 180 96 Retrieved 25 June 2018 alternative link at Hathitrust Hoogenboom Ari 1995 Rutherford Hayes Warrior and President Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0641 2 Reeves Thomas C 1975 Gentleman Boss The Life of Chester A Arthur New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 46095 6 Takaki Ronald 1998 1989 Strangers from a Different Shore A History of Asian Americans 2nd ed New York Back Bay Books ISBN 978 0 316 83130 7 OCLC 1074009567 Primary sources Edit Adrienne Wilmoth Lerner et al eds 2006 Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 Human and Civil Rights Essential Primary Sources Gale pp 378 382 Chinese Immigration Pamphlets in the California State Library Vol 1 Vol 2 Vol 3 Vol 4 Bitter Melon Inside America s Last Rural Chinese Town How residents of Locke California the last rural Chinese town in America lived in the Sacramento Delta under the Chinese Exclusion ActExternal links Edit Wikisource has several original texts related to Chinese Exclusion Act Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chinese Exclusion Act George Frederick Seward and the Chinese Exclusion Act From the Stacks at New York Historical Society George Frederick Seward Papers MS 557 The New York Historical Society Chinese Exclusion Act from the Library of Congress Chinese Exclusion Act Menlo School Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 Our Documents Exclusion Act Case Files of Yee Wee Thing and Yee Bing Quai two Paper Sons The Yung Wing Project hosts the memoir of one of the earliest naturalized Chinese whose citizenship was revoked forty six years after having received it as a result of the Chinese Exclusion Act An Alleged Wife One Immigrant in the Chinese Exclusion Era Collection of primary source documents relating to the Chinese Exclusion Act from Harvard University Primary source documents and images from the University of California Archived 2021 02 16 at the Wayback Machine The Rocky Road to Liberty A Documented History of Chinese American Immigration and Exclusion Primary source documents and images related to the documentary Separate Lives Broken Dreams a saga of the Chinese Exclusion Act era e g political cartoons immigrant case files and government correspondence from the National Archives Risse Guenter B 2012 Plague Fear and Politics in San Francisco s Chinatown Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9781421405100 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Li Bo Beyond the Heavenly Kingdom is a historical novel that focuses on the politics of the Chinese Exclusion Act ISBN 1541232216 Lost Years A People s Struggle for Justice 2011 Chinese Exclusion Act American Experience PBS playlist on YouTube Frederick A Bee History Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese Exclusion Act amp oldid 1134751808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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