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CHINESE IMMIGRATION

GOLD RUSH AND THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT. CHINESE IMMIGRATION. GOLD!!. On January 24, 1848, gold was discovered in California at Sutter’s Mill. By 1849, people were coming to California from all over the world to look for gold. These migrants were known as “forty-niners”. CHINESE IMMIGRANTS.

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CHINESE IMMIGRATION

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  1. GOLD RUSH AND THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT CHINESE IMMIGRATION

  2. GOLD!! • On January 24, 1848, gold was discovered in California at Sutter’s Mill. • By 1849, people were coming to California from all over the world to look for gold. • These migrants were known as “forty-niners”

  3. CHINESE IMMIGRANTS • In 1848, Chinese immigrants began coming to America. • Reasons: • War • Famine • A poor economy in southeastern China • Between 1848-1853, about 24,000 young Chinese men immigrated to California.

  4. CHINESE IMMIGRANTS • Americans did not welcome the Chinese. • California placed a high monthly tax on all foreign miners • Chinese workers were targets of violent attacks in the mining camps • The legal system offered little protection

  5. CHINESE IMMIGRANTS • Year after year, more immigrants came from China to America. Some still hoped to find gold. • Others just wanted a job: • Many opened their own businesses • Restaurants • Laundries • Central Pacific Railroad Company

  6. CHINATOWN • The largest and oldest Chinese community in the United States is the Chinatown area of San Francisco • San Francisco grew rapidly • Population jumped from 800 in March of 1848 to more than 25,000 by 1850.

  7. RESENTMENT • Workers of other nationalities who could not find jobs that paid well began to resent the Chinese workers. • Blamed Chinese for taking jobs • Blamed Chinese for keeping the pay rate low • Some states began to pass laws that discriminated against Chinese and Asian immigrants

  8. EMPLOYMENT • After the gold rush ended, many Chinese immigrants found work elsewhere: • Farm laborers • Low-paying industrial jobs • Railroad construction

  9. PACIFIC RAILWAY ACTS • As more Americans moved west, the need to send goods and information from the East to the West increased. • The federal government passed the Pacific Railway Acts of 1862 and 1864. • Gave railroad companies loans and land grants • Railroads hired many immigrants, many of them Chinese

  10. DISCRIMINATION • Chinese workers who worked on the railroad were treated differently: • Were paid less • Were given the most dangerous jobs • Were given the longest working hours However, they could earn much more money working for the railroads than back in China.

  11. THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT • In 1882, President Chester A. Arthur signed the Chinese Exclusion Act. • It restricted immigration from China into the United States for the next ten years. • Banned Chinese laborers, both skilled and unskilled • Banned miners

  12. THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT • Other restrictions: • Chinese immigrants already in the United States were not allowed to leave and re-enter the country. • Chinese immigrants already living in the United States were not allowed to become citizens.

  13. EFFECTS • The law had devastating effects on Chinese communities in America: • Chinese men who had come to America to work could not go home to visit their families • They could not bring their wives to America • Since they were not citizens, they could not own their own land or register mining claims.

  14. REAUTHORIZATION • The Chinese Exclusion Act had broad support from labor unions and other groups. • Other people criticized the act, calling it legalized discrimination • In 1892, it was reauthorized for another ten years by the passage of the Geary Act. • In 1902, it was again reauthorized – this time with no ending date.

  15. END OF EXCLUSION • It was only when our country became involved in World War II that the Chinese Exclusion Act was finally repealed. • China was an ally of ours in the war • The Magnuson Act was passed in 1943 to finally repeal the Chinese Exclusion Act, but there were still limits on immigration • Finally in the 1960’s, the exclusion of Chinese immigration was completely ended

  16. QUESTIONS! 1. What event sent people from all over the world to California in 1848-1849? • THE GOLD RUSH • What was happening in China that caused many people to emigrate from there? • WAR, FAMINE, POOR ECONOMY

  17. What did California do to discourage foreigners from mining for gold? • TAXED THEM • Why did the Chinese stay in America even though conditions were not the best? • THEY COULD EARN MORE MONEY THAN IN CHINA

  18. What was the Chinese Exclusion Act? • A LAW THAT RESTRICTED IMMIGRATION FROM CHINA TO THE UNITED STATES • How did World War II affect the immigration of people from China to America? • IT LED TO THE REPEAL OF THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT SINCE CHINA WAS AN ALLY OF THE UNITED STATES IN THE WAR

  19. EXIT TICKET! • Do you think that a law like the Chinese Exclusion Act could be passed today? Why or why not? • Write your answer on a sheet of paper • Must be at least 4 sentences

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