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Watsonville riots

The Watsonville riots was a period of racial violence that took place in Watsonville, California, from January 19 to 23, 1930. Involving violent assaults on Filipino American farm workers by local white residents opposed to immigration, the riots highlighted the racial and socioeconomic tensions in California's agricultural communities.[1]

Background edit

Internal migration edit

As U.S. nationals, Filipinos had the legal right to work in the United States. As early as 1906 they were working on Hawaii's sugar and pineapple plantations as full-time laborers. Assuming the Filipino workers' unfamiliarity with their rights, employers paid the sakadas the lowest wages among all ethnic laborers. They often used Filipinos as strikebreakers as part of a divide and rule strategy to prevent cross-ethnic mobilization and thereby ensure smooth production processes .[2]

The Immigration Acts of 1917 and 1924, which targeted non-whites of Asian descent, still allowed Filipinos to answer the growing demand for labor on the U.S. mainland. From the 1920s on, "overwhelmingly young, single, and male"[3] Filipinos migrated to the Pacific Coast, [4]joining Mexicans in positions previously filled by Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, and Indians .[5] In California, Filipinos predominated within the ethnic Asian farm labor force during the next two decades.[6]

Farm life edit

Filipino laborers' resilience in harsh working conditions made them favorite recruits among farm operators. In California's Santa Clara and San Joaquin valleys, Filipinos were often assigned to the backbreaking work of cultivating and harvesting asparagus, celery, and lettuce. As in Hawaii, farmers used the industry and perceived passivity of these "little brown brothers" to counter the so-called "laziness" of working-class whites and other ethnic groups.[7]

Due to gender bias in immigration policy and hiring practices, of the 30,000 Filipino laborers following the cycle of seasonal farm work, only 1 in 14 were women.[8] Unable to meet Filipino women, Filipino farm workers sought the companionship of women outside their own ethnic community, which aggravated mounting racial discord based on economic competition.[9] Outside of field work, Filipino men were noted to dress stylishly and lived the bachelor lifestyle, which made them viable suitors to women outside their own race.[10]

Mounting tensions edit

During the later 1920s, white men decrying the takeover of jobs and white women by Filipinos resorted to vigilantism to deal with the "third Asiatic invasion." Filipino laborers frequenting pool halls or attending street fairs in Stockton, Dinuba, Exeter, and Fresno risked being attacked by nativists threatened by the swelling labor pool, as well as by the Filipino's presumed predatory sexual nature.[11]

In October 1929, Filipinos at a street carnival in Exeter were shot with rubber bands as they walked with their white female companions. In response to the knifing of a white heckler, a mob of 300 white men led by then Chief of Police C. E. Joyner burned the barn of a rancher known to hire Filipinos. Joyner ordered the shutdown of a nearby labor camp. According to local press, the riot was caused primarily by Filipinos' insistence on equal treatment by white women.[12] Firefighters worked to blunt the efforts of the mob, turning their firehoses on them, and stopping the mob from burning down the sleeping quarters of the Filipino workers at the Firebaugh ranch.[13]

Two months later, in the morning of December 2, 1929, in Watsonville, a coastal town 189 miles (304 km) away, police raided a boardinghouse and found two white girls, aged 16 and 11, sleeping in the same room with Perfecto Bandalan, a 25-year-old lettuce grower. The Watsonville community was outraged and remained so even after learning that Bandalan and 16-year-old Esther Schmick were engaged, and that they were caring for Esther's sister Bertha at her mother's request.[4]

Riots edit

Near midnight on January 18, 1930, 500 white men and youths gathered outside a Filipino taxi dance club in the Palm Beach section of Watsonville.[14][15] The club was owned by a Filipino man and offered dances with the nine white women who lived there. The mob came with clubs and weapons intending to take the women out and to burn the place down. The building owners threatened to shoot if the rioters persisted and, when the mob refused to leave, the owners opened fire. Police broke up the fight with tear gas.[16]

Two days later, on January 20, a group of Filipino men met with a group of white men near the Pajaro River bridge to settle the score. A group of Hispanic men arrived and took sides with the whites. The riot began and continued for five days.[17]

Hunting parties were organized; the white mob was run like a "military" operation with leaders giving orders to attack or withdraw. They dragged Filipinos from their homes and beat them. They threw Filipinos off the Pajaro River bridge. They ranged up the San Juan road to attack Filipinos at the Storm and Detlefsen ranches; at Riberal's labor camp, twenty-two Filipinos were dragged out and beaten almost to death. A Chinese-run apple-dryer that employed Filipinos was demolished; shots were fired into a Filipino home on Ford Street. Fermin Tobera died at age 22 after being shot in the heart when he was hiding in a closet with 11 others, trying to avoid the rounds of bullets fired at a bunkhouse in Murphy Ranch in San Juan Road on January 23.[18]

The police in Watsonville, led by Sheriff Nick Sinnott, gathered as many Filipinos as they could rescue and guarded them in the City Council's chamber while Monterey County Sheriff Carl Abbott secured the Pajaro side of the river against further riot.[19]

Aftermath edit

The violence spread to Stockton, San Francisco, San Jose, and other cities.[18] A Filipino club was blown up in Stockton, and the blast was blamed on the Filipinos themselves.[20]

Some Filipinos left the Continental United States. News of the riots spread to the Philippines, where there were protests in solidarity. The body of Fermin Tobera was sent home to the Philippines. He is considered a martyr, a symbol of the Filipinos' fight for independence and equality.[21]

The five days of the Watsonville riots had a profound effect on the attitude of California residents toward imported Asian labor. California's legislature explicitly outlawed Filipino-white intermarriage following 1933's Roldan v. Los Angeles County decision. By 1934, the federal Tydings–McDuffie Act restricted Filipino immigration to fifty people per year. As a result, Filipino immigration plummeted. While Filipinos continued to comprise a significant part of farm labor, Mexicans began to replace them.[22]

Yet, seven months after the Watsonville riots, Filipino lettuce pickers carried out a successful strike in Salinas for better treatment. Such labor actions were repeated in the Salinas Lettuce Strike of 1934 and in 1936. In addition, although their relationships were frowned upon, white women and Filipino men continued to meet and marry.[23]

On September 4, 2011, California formally apologized to Filipinos and Filipino Americans in an Assembly resolution authored by Assemblyman Luis Alejo, D-Salinas. "Filipino Americans have a proud history of hard work and perseverance," Alejo said in a statement. "California, however, does not have as proud a history regarding its treatment of Filipino Americans. For these past injustices, it's time that we recognize the pain and suffering this community has endured."[18]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ De Witt 1979, p. 290.
  2. ^ Filipino Migration to the United States, University of Hawaii
  3. ^ Lee and Yung 2011, p. 276.
  4. ^ a b Baldoz 2011, pp. 124-125.
  5. ^ Guerin-Gonzales 1994, p. 22.
  6. ^ Lee and Yung 2011, p. 278.
  7. ^ Baldoz 2011, p. 67.
  8. ^ San Juan, Jr. 2000, p. 125.
  9. ^ Joel S. Franks (2000). Crossing Sidelines, Crossing Cultures: Sport and Asian Pacific American Cultural Citizenship. University Press of America. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-7618-1592-1.
    "Depression Era: 1930s: Watsonville Riots". Picture This. Oakland Museum of California. Retrieved May 25, 2019.
  10. ^ Gershon, Livia (April 23, 2022). "1930s Filipinos Were Hip to American Style. There Was Backlash". JSTOR Daily. JSTOR. Retrieved September 26, 2023.
    Bote, Joshua (May 5, 2021). "Movie stars and anti-Filipino race riots: The secret history of San Francisco's Macintosh Studios". SFGate. San Francsico. Retrieved September 26, 2023.
  11. ^ Lee and Yung 2010, p. 280.
  12. ^ De Witt 1979, p. 294.
  13. ^ "Water slows mob". Visalia Times-Delta. Visalia, California. October 25, 1929. Retrieved September 29, 2023.
  14. ^ Juanita Tamayo Lott (2006). Common Destiny: Filipino American Generations. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-7425-4651-6.
  15. ^ Burns, Lucy Mae San Pablo (2012). Puro Arte: Filipinos on the Stages of Empire. New York City: New York University Press. pp. 61–62. ISBN 978-0-8147-4449-9.
  16. ^ Zhao, X. (1975). Asian Americans. Youth magazine. United Church of Christ. p. 2560. ISBN 979-8-216-05018-6. Retrieved September 26, 2023.
  17. ^ Jonathan H. X. Lee (January 16, 2015). History of Asian Americans: Exploring Diverse Roots: Exploring Diverse Roots. ABC-CLIO. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-313-38459-2.
  18. ^ a b c Jones, Donna (September 11, 2011). "Riots in 1930 revealed Watsonville racism: California apologizes to Filipino Americans". Santa Cruz Sentinel. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  19. ^ DeWitt, Howard A. (Fall 1979). "The Watsonville Anti-Filipino Riot of 1930: A Case Study of the Great Depression and Ethnic Conflict in California". Southern California Quarterly. 61 (3): 291–302. doi:10.2307/41170831. JSTOR 41170831.
  20. ^ Dawn B. Mabalon, Ph.D.; Rico Reyes; Filipino American National Historical So (2008). Filipinos in Stockton. Arcadia Publishing. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-7385-5624-6.
  21. ^ Okada, Taihei (2012). "Underside of Independence Politics Filipino Reactions to Anti-Filipino Riots in the United States". Philippine Studies: Historical & Ethnographic Viewpoints. 60 (3): 307–335. doi:10.1353/phs.2012.0027. JSTOR 42634724. S2CID 143604174.
  22. ^ Melendy, H. Brett (November 1974). "Filipinos in the United States". Pacific Historical Review. 43 (4): 520–574. doi:10.2307/3638431. JSTOR 3638431.
  23. ^ Sindel, Julie (2006). "Filipino Farm Labor Organization: A Lesson in Filipino Leadership" (PDF). Journal of the History Students at San Francisco State University (26): 161–178.

References edit

  • Baldoz, Rick (2011). The Third Asiatic Invasion: Migration and Empire in Filipino America, 1898–1946. New York and London: NYU Press.
  • De Witt, Howard A. (1979). "The Watsonville Anti-Filipino Riot of 1930: A Case Study of the Great Depression and Ethnic Conflict in California", Southern California Quarterly, 61(3).
  • Guerin-Gonzales, Camille (1994). Mexican Workers and American Dreams: Immigration, Repatriation, and California Farm Labor, 1900–1939. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
  • Lee, Erika and Judy Yung (2010). Angel Island: Immigrant Gateway to America. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Meynell, Richard (1998). "Little Brown Brothers, Little White Girls: The Anti-Filipino Hysteria of 1930 and the Watsonville Riots", Passports 22. Excerpts
  • San Juan, Jr., Epifanio (2000). After Postcolonialism: Remapping Philippines-United States Confrontations. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Showalter, Michael P. 1989. "The Watsonville Anti-filipino Riot of 1930: A Reconsideration of Fermin Tobera's Murder". Southern California Quarterly 71 (4). [University of California Press, Historical Society of Southern California]: 341–48. doi:10.2307/41171455.

watsonville, riots, period, racial, violence, that, took, place, watsonville, california, from, january, 1930, involving, violent, assaults, filipino, american, farm, workers, local, white, residents, opposed, immigration, riots, highlighted, racial, socioecon. The Watsonville riots was a period of racial violence that took place in Watsonville California from January 19 to 23 1930 Involving violent assaults on Filipino American farm workers by local white residents opposed to immigration the riots highlighted the racial and socioeconomic tensions in California s agricultural communities 1 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Internal migration 1 2 Farm life 2 Mounting tensions 3 Riots 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBackground editInternal migration edit See also History of Filipino Americans As U S nationals Filipinos had the legal right to work in the United States As early as 1906 they were working on Hawaii s sugar and pineapple plantations as full time laborers Assuming the Filipino workers unfamiliarity with their rights employers paid the sakadas the lowest wages among all ethnic laborers They often used Filipinos as strikebreakers as part of a divide and rule strategy to prevent cross ethnic mobilization and thereby ensure smooth production processes 2 The Immigration Acts of 1917 and 1924 which targeted non whites of Asian descent still allowed Filipinos to answer the growing demand for labor on the U S mainland From the 1920s on overwhelmingly young single and male 3 Filipinos migrated to the Pacific Coast 4 joining Mexicans in positions previously filled by Chinese Japanese Koreans and Indians 5 In California Filipinos predominated within the ethnic Asian farm labor force during the next two decades 6 Farm life edit Filipino laborers resilience in harsh working conditions made them favorite recruits among farm operators In California s Santa Clara and San Joaquin valleys Filipinos were often assigned to the backbreaking work of cultivating and harvesting asparagus celery and lettuce As in Hawaii farmers used the industry and perceived passivity of these little brown brothers to counter the so called laziness of working class whites and other ethnic groups 7 Due to gender bias in immigration policy and hiring practices of the 30 000 Filipino laborers following the cycle of seasonal farm work only 1 in 14 were women 8 Unable to meet Filipino women Filipino farm workers sought the companionship of women outside their own ethnic community which aggravated mounting racial discord based on economic competition 9 Outside of field work Filipino men were noted to dress stylishly and lived the bachelor lifestyle which made them viable suitors to women outside their own race 10 Mounting tensions editDuring the later 1920s white men decrying the takeover of jobs and white women by Filipinos resorted to vigilantism to deal with the third Asiatic invasion Filipino laborers frequenting pool halls or attending street fairs in Stockton Dinuba Exeter and Fresno risked being attacked by nativists threatened by the swelling labor pool as well as by the Filipino s presumed predatory sexual nature 11 In October 1929 Filipinos at a street carnival in Exeter were shot with rubber bands as they walked with their white female companions In response to the knifing of a white heckler a mob of 300 white men led by then Chief of Police C E Joyner burned the barn of a rancher known to hire Filipinos Joyner ordered the shutdown of a nearby labor camp According to local press the riot was caused primarily by Filipinos insistence on equal treatment by white women 12 Firefighters worked to blunt the efforts of the mob turning their firehoses on them and stopping the mob from burning down the sleeping quarters of the Filipino workers at the Firebaugh ranch 13 Two months later in the morning of December 2 1929 in Watsonville a coastal town 189 miles 304 km away police raided a boardinghouse and found two white girls aged 16 and 11 sleeping in the same room with Perfecto Bandalan a 25 year old lettuce grower The Watsonville community was outraged and remained so even after learning that Bandalan and 16 year old Esther Schmick were engaged and that they were caring for Esther s sister Bertha at her mother s request 4 Riots editNear midnight on January 18 1930 500 white men and youths gathered outside a Filipino taxi dance club in the Palm Beach section of Watsonville 14 15 The club was owned by a Filipino man and offered dances with the nine white women who lived there The mob came with clubs and weapons intending to take the women out and to burn the place down The building owners threatened to shoot if the rioters persisted and when the mob refused to leave the owners opened fire Police broke up the fight with tear gas 16 Two days later on January 20 a group of Filipino men met with a group of white men near the Pajaro River bridge to settle the score A group of Hispanic men arrived and took sides with the whites The riot began and continued for five days 17 Hunting parties were organized the white mob was run like a military operation with leaders giving orders to attack or withdraw They dragged Filipinos from their homes and beat them They threw Filipinos off the Pajaro River bridge They ranged up the San Juan road to attack Filipinos at the Storm and Detlefsen ranches at Riberal s labor camp twenty two Filipinos were dragged out and beaten almost to death A Chinese run apple dryer that employed Filipinos was demolished shots were fired into a Filipino home on Ford Street Fermin Tobera died at age 22 after being shot in the heart when he was hiding in a closet with 11 others trying to avoid the rounds of bullets fired at a bunkhouse in Murphy Ranch in San Juan Road on January 23 18 The police in Watsonville led by Sheriff Nick Sinnott gathered as many Filipinos as they could rescue and guarded them in the City Council s chamber while Monterey County Sheriff Carl Abbott secured the Pajaro side of the river against further riot 19 Aftermath editThe violence spread to Stockton San Francisco San Jose and other cities 18 A Filipino club was blown up in Stockton and the blast was blamed on the Filipinos themselves 20 Some Filipinos left the Continental United States News of the riots spread to the Philippines where there were protests in solidarity The body of Fermin Tobera was sent home to the Philippines He is considered a martyr a symbol of the Filipinos fight for independence and equality 21 The five days of the Watsonville riots had a profound effect on the attitude of California residents toward imported Asian labor California s legislature explicitly outlawed Filipino white intermarriage following 1933 s Roldan v Los Angeles County decision By 1934 the federal Tydings McDuffie Act restricted Filipino immigration to fifty people per year As a result Filipino immigration plummeted While Filipinos continued to comprise a significant part of farm labor Mexicans began to replace them 22 Yet seven months after the Watsonville riots Filipino lettuce pickers carried out a successful strike in Salinas for better treatment Such labor actions were repeated in the Salinas Lettuce Strike of 1934 and in 1936 In addition although their relationships were frowned upon white women and Filipino men continued to meet and marry 23 On September 4 2011 California formally apologized to Filipinos and Filipino Americans in an Assembly resolution authored by Assemblyman Luis Alejo D Salinas Filipino Americans have a proud history of hard work and perseverance Alejo said in a statement California however does not have as proud a history regarding its treatment of Filipino Americans For these past injustices it s time that we recognize the pain and suffering this community has endured 18 See also editList of incidents of civil unrest in the United StatesNotes edit De Witt 1979 p 290 Filipino Migration to the United States University of Hawaii Lee and Yung 2011 p 276 a b Baldoz 2011 pp 124 125 Guerin Gonzales 1994 p 22 Lee and Yung 2011 p 278 Baldoz 2011 p 67 San Juan Jr 2000 p 125 Joel S Franks 2000 Crossing Sidelines Crossing Cultures Sport and Asian Pacific American Cultural Citizenship University Press of America p 35 ISBN 978 0 7618 1592 1 Depression Era 1930s Watsonville Riots Picture This Oakland Museum of California Retrieved May 25 2019 Gershon Livia April 23 2022 1930s Filipinos Were Hip to American Style There Was Backlash JSTOR Daily JSTOR Retrieved September 26 2023 Bote Joshua May 5 2021 Movie stars and anti Filipino race riots The secret history of San Francisco s Macintosh Studios SFGate San Francsico Retrieved September 26 2023 Lee and Yung 2010 p 280 De Witt 1979 p 294 Water slows mob Visalia Times Delta Visalia California October 25 1929 Retrieved September 29 2023 Juanita Tamayo Lott 2006 Common Destiny Filipino American Generations Rowman amp Littlefield p 21 ISBN 978 0 7425 4651 6 Burns Lucy Mae San Pablo 2012 Puro Arte Filipinos on the Stages of Empire New York City New York University Press pp 61 62 ISBN 978 0 8147 4449 9 Zhao X 1975 Asian Americans Youth magazine United Church of Christ p 2560 ISBN 979 8 216 05018 6 Retrieved September 26 2023 Jonathan H X Lee January 16 2015 History of Asian Americans Exploring Diverse Roots Exploring Diverse Roots ABC CLIO p 103 ISBN 978 0 313 38459 2 a b c Jones Donna September 11 2011 Riots in 1930 revealed Watsonville racism California apologizes to Filipino Americans Santa Cruz Sentinel Retrieved February 9 2019 DeWitt Howard A Fall 1979 The Watsonville Anti Filipino Riot of 1930 A Case Study of the Great Depression and Ethnic Conflict in California Southern California Quarterly 61 3 291 302 doi 10 2307 41170831 JSTOR 41170831 Dawn B Mabalon Ph D Rico Reyes Filipino American National Historical So 2008 Filipinos in Stockton Arcadia Publishing p 25 ISBN 978 0 7385 5624 6 Okada Taihei 2012 Underside of Independence Politics Filipino Reactions to Anti Filipino Riots in the United States Philippine Studies Historical amp Ethnographic Viewpoints 60 3 307 335 doi 10 1353 phs 2012 0027 JSTOR 42634724 S2CID 143604174 Melendy H Brett November 1974 Filipinos in the United States Pacific Historical Review 43 4 520 574 doi 10 2307 3638431 JSTOR 3638431 Sindel Julie 2006 Filipino Farm Labor Organization A Lesson in Filipino Leadership PDF Journal of the History Students at San Francisco State University 26 161 178 References editBaldoz Rick 2011 The Third Asiatic Invasion Migration and Empire in Filipino America 1898 1946 New York and London NYU Press De Witt Howard A 1979 The Watsonville Anti Filipino Riot of 1930 A Case Study of the Great Depression and Ethnic Conflict in California Southern California Quarterly 61 3 Guerin Gonzales Camille 1994 Mexican Workers and American Dreams Immigration Repatriation and California Farm Labor 1900 1939 New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press Lee Erika and Judy Yung 2010 Angel Island Immigrant Gateway to America New York Oxford University Press Meynell Richard 1998 Little Brown Brothers Little White Girls The Anti Filipino Hysteria of 1930 and the Watsonville Riots Passports 22 Excerpts San Juan Jr Epifanio 2000 After Postcolonialism Remapping Philippines United States Confrontations New York Rowman amp Littlefield Showalter Michael P 1989 The Watsonville Anti filipino Riot of 1930 A Reconsideration of Fermin Tobera s Murder Southern California Quarterly 71 4 University of California Press Historical Society of Southern California 341 48 doi 10 2307 41171455 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Watsonville riots amp oldid 1205895432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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