Our Foreigners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 178 pages of information about Our Foreigners.

Our Foreigners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 178 pages of information about Our Foreigners.

Alarm was spreading among Americans concerning the organizations of the Chinese in the United States.  Of these, the Six Companies were the most famous.  Mary Roberts Coolidge, after long and careful research, characterized these societies as “the substitute for village and patriarchal association, and although purely voluntary and benevolent in their purpose, they became, because of American ignorance and prejudice, the supposed instruments of tyranny over their countrymen."[45] They each had a club house, where members were registered and where lodgings and other accommodations were provided.  The largest in 1877 had a membership of seventy-five thousand; the smallest, forty-three thousand.  The Chinese also maintained trade guilds similar in purpose to the American trade union.  Private or secret societies also flourished among them, some for good purposes, others for illicit purposes.  Of the latter the Highbinders or Hatchet Men became the most notorious, for they facilitated the importation of Chinese prostitutes.  Many of these secret societies thrived on blackmail, and the popular antagonism to the Six Companies was due to the outrages committed by these criminal associations.

When the American labor unions accumulated partisan power, the Chinese became a political issue.  This was the greatest evil that could befall them, for now racial persecution received official sanction and passed out of the hands of mere ruffians into the custody of powerful political agitators.  Under the lurid leadership of Dennis Kearney, the Workingman’s party was organized for the purpose of influencing legislation and “ridding the country of Chinese cheap labor.”  Their goal was “Four dollars a day and roast beef”; and their battle cry, “The Chinese must go.”  Under the excitement of sand-lot meetings, the Chinese were driven under cover.  In the riots of July, 1877, in San Francisco, twenty-five Chinese laundries were burned.  “For months afterward,” says Mary Roberts Coolidge, “no Chinaman was safe from personal outrage even on the main thoroughfares, and the perpetrators of the abuses were almost never interfered with so long as they did not molest white men’s property."[46]

This anti-Chinese epidemic soon spread to other Western States.  Legislatures and city councils vied with each other in passing laws and ordinances to satisfy the demands of the labor vote.  All manner of ingenious devices were incorporated into tax laws in an endeavor to drive the Chinese out of certain occupations and to exclude them from the State.  License and occupation taxes multiplied.  The Chinaman was denied the privilege of citizenship, was excluded from the public schools, and was not allowed to give testimony in proceedings relating to white persons.  Manifold ordinances were passed intended to harass and humiliate him:  for instance, a San Francisco ordinance required the hair of all prisoners to be cut within three inches of the scalp.  Most extreme and unreasonable discriminations

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Our Foreigners from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.