by Susan Zehnder, Director of Education
Recently, I presented the topic of immigration to second
graders, and asked “who is an immigrant?” Ever since, I’ve been thinking about
one response I heard.
Required to
study immigration by New York State, second-graders learn who came to the
United States during the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, and some of the reasons why. Students easily identify the Statue of
Liberty. They
understand it was a gift to America from France, and was dedicated in 1886 as a
sign of friendship between the two countries. Well over a hundred years old, the
statue has been carefully restored three times. She is an important symbol of
what America stands for, and continues to hold her torch high over New York's harbor.
Statue of Liberty's recently restored torch. |
Nearby, other buildings of a similar age used to process newly arrived immigrants,
now house the Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration run by the National
Park Service. Operating as a gateway to America and the possibility of a better
life, Ellis Island processed over 12 million hopeful people from 1892 until it
closed in 1954. Immigration is nothing new.
Immigration is in the news a lot these days. In the United
States, the first restrictive federal immigration law was passed 144 years ago in
1875. Called the Page Act after Representative Horace F. Page, a Republican
from California, it aimed to prohibit Chinese women entry to the United States.
Up until then, immigrants from China were mostly men. Lured by the financial possibilities
surrounding the 1848 California Gold Rush, the majority of these men borrowed
money to make the trip. Working, they paid back that money plus interest.
However, what they earned was often not enough to bring over their wives or
girlfriends. Lacking family life, prostitution, nothing new to the west, grew
in this immigrant population. Congressman Page created The Page Act, saying he
wanted to address the issue of prostitution and to focus on the plight of poor
Chinese girls brought over as prostitutes or slaves. Today, speculation is the
restrictions were to keep Chinese laborers from taking jobs that could go to
white men, by depriving them of the chance to start families.
To implement the Page Act, potential immigrant women were
subjected to rigorous questioning first by the American consul in Hong Kong. Passing
that, they would have to again answer the same questions just before sailing.
These answers were carefully compared to their previous ones. Those that were approved,
were then asked the same questions by Hong Kong’s harbor master of the British
colonial government. Once on board the ship, the women were questioned again,
and upon arriving, the women presented their photographs, health records and
answered the same questions again. If anyone changed any answer or didn’t match
their photo from before, they were returned to Hong Kong and seen as
duplicitous.
In 1882, the Chinese Exclusion Act was adopted. This second
immigration law suspended immigration of Chinese laborers to America for ten
years; permitted those already in the US to remain in the country only after a
temporary absence; and barred Chinese from naturalization, among other things.
There weren’t many Chinese in Chemung County at this time. In
Elmira there were two Chinese launderers listed in the 1885 City Directory, with
an additional three listed in 1896. Notes in our files indicate the number was “stable
up to the 1920s.”
In the immigration unit, the second graders read over copies
of original documents to find clues about different characters who lived in our
area. We use an advertisement from one of the laundry businesses listed in the Star-Gazette from September 2, 1914.
Star-Gazette, September 2, 1914 |
This shows one business that was a successor to another, was open every day, and worked to provide the very best work. Through discussion, the
students learn a little more of why hardworking people might have left their
home countries and ventured to America. We look at documents on different
immigrants who make up the complexity of our area.
Just like in the early days as a nation, today America is a country
of immigrants from countries all over the world.
The answer that I heard when I asked the students “Who is
an immigrant?” didn’t make sense until I thought about it. While I suspect he
wouldn’t agree, it’s who the kids hear always talking about immigrants.
The puzzling answer I heard to who is an immigrant? The President.
Note: For
more information on Chinese immigrants in Chemung County, see Rachel’s blogfrom August 13, 2012. It includes the story of Mr. Yee Lee, owner of the first Chinese
laundry business in Elmira.
No comments:
Post a Comment