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Colonialism and Immigration

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Title: Colonialism and Immigration


1
Colonialism and Immigration
  • EWS 404
  • Week 2

2
US Global Expansion
  • 1808 U.S. purchased Louisiana from France.
  • 1819 U.S. took over Florida.
  • 1845 Texas became part of the country.
  • 1848 U.S.- Mexican War.
  • 1889 Spanish-American War -- Hawaii. Philippine,
    Cuba, Guam.

3
Imperialism
  • Gglobalization of capitalism through military
    means
  • To make natural resources, market, and labor
    supply available through out the world.

4
Immigration
  • Movements of labor, capital and technology
    across national boundaries.
  • Though expanding rapidly, US was still an
    agriculture country and in the process of capital
    accumulation cheap labor essential in the West
    coast.
  • American labor contractors and travel business
    were aggressively participated in recruiting and
    transporting Asian labor missionary helped built
    up a rosy picture of America in order to attract
    Asian laborers to come.

5
Immigration
  • Labor shortage in the American West was the
    powerful economic force to pull labor immigrants
    from Asia.
  • 1 million Asians v. 35 million Europeans during
    1850-1930.

6
Orientalism
  • In spite of the diversity within Asian people,
    they used to be referred as "Oriental."
  • From an Euro-centric perspective that views
    everything east of Suez Canal as Oriental. The
    term includes also Arabian countries.
  • Asia has been mistakenly referred as Far East in
    this country. But when you fly from California to
    Asia, you fly to west.

7
Orientalism
  • But in many history books, Japan or China are
    referred as the Far East.
  • Geographically speaking, these countries are east
    to Europe not America.
  • Yet previous historiography was dominated by
    Euro-centric perspective.
  • Difference between "Asian America" and
    "Oriental" is crucial.
  • "Orientalism" tends to blur culture differences
    within Asia.

8
Asian Migration and Western Expansion
  • For centuries, colonists, capitalists, soldiers,
    and missionaries from Europe roamed the earth in
    search of land, profits, power, and cultural
    domination.
  • British colonialism in China and India indirectly
    started the emigrant stream from these countries
    to North America.
  • American capitalists and missionaries directly
    promoted immigration in Japan, Korea, and the
    Philippines to Hawaii and California.
  • Political control, economical exploitation,
    cultural invasion, trade, imperialist wars,
    unequal treaties, privileges of Westerners were
    results of such expansion.
  • Trade follows the Flag God, Gold, Glory

9
Colonialism in Asia
10
China
  • Daniels During the Ming Dynasty in the 15th
    century, vast Chinese fleets probed the Indian
    Ocean.
  • One 1406 expedition included 62 vessels and a
    complement of 28,000 men. P. 11. Manchus, Qing
    1644-19111 million 10 of Chinese population.
  • Even in 1840s, most people materially better off
    than most Europeans, imports include silver,
    sweet potatoes, coren, peanuts, tobacco, Canton
    System in 1727, early 1600s one half silver mined
    in Spanish Americas shipped to China.
  • Social instability, population pressure, peasant
    rebellion, ethnic conflicts.

11
China- Trade follows the Flag
  • Opium War
  • From 1685-1769, Britain imported silk,
    porcelains, herb medicine and tea.
  • By 1800, tea became a national beverage and the
    average London worker spent 5 of his total
    household budget on tea.
  • Trade imbalance led British merchants export and
    sell opium to the Chinese, beginning to spread in
    1720s.
  • When opium was banned by the Chinese law, Britain
    started the Opium War of 1839-40 to 1842.

12
China
  • The Treaty of Nanjing
  • 1842
  • Treaty ports opened Canton, Xiamen, Fuzhou,
    Shanghai and Ningpo
  • Though emigration abroad was illegal in China
    mmissionary activities spread far and wide.
  • Importation custom duties sharply reduced and
    later on, taken over by the Westerners.

13
China
  • Indemnities
  • -21 million silver dollars paid out of Nanjing
    Treaty.
  • Treaty ports
  • -Open to foreigners for business in many
    places in China.
  • Territory Ceded
  • -Hong Kong and Marco were ceded became a
    major center of Chinese emigration within a
    decade.

14
China
  • Foreign Settlement (Qingdao)
  • - In many cities, Western countries would
    lease an area where the Chinese government could
    not have administration power.
  • Extraterritorial privileges
  • - Foreigners immune to Chinese laws,
    especially in the foreign concessions.

15
Coolie trade
  • Slave trade was banned in British Empire in 1833.
  • Indians went to Malaya, Singapore, Burma, Kenya,
    Uganda, Zanziba, Rhodesia, and South Africa,
    Trnidad nd jamaica in the Daribean, Aauritius,
    and Fiji
  • Chinese to Cuba and Peru.

16
Japan
  • Tokugawa Dynasty
  • 1600-1868, the emperor had no real power the
    most powerful man was the military ruler "shogun"
    who technically was the emperors military chief
    of staff, though virtually a ruler.
  • Shogun
  • Technically the emperors military chief of
    staff, though virtually a ruler.
  • Trade commerce important though merchants in low
    social position, 1560 banned trade with China,
    Portuguese as middle men based in Macao, imported
    silk, porcelain and exported silver.

17
Japan
  • Commodore Matthew Perry
  • 1853, 4 US steamed powered ships sailed into
    Tokyo Bay
  • Japanese called them "the black ships with evil
    appearance" delivered a letter from American
    president asking for navigation rights, trade and
    diplomatic relationship, and promised to return
    next year
  • Exchanged gifts swords, fans, silk robes,
    porcelain cups vs guns, telescope, a clock, and a
    telegraph

18
Japan
  • Treaty of Peace and Amity in 1854 provided
    privileges similar to those acquired by European
    nations in China.
  • In 1858 more treaties signed, 5 ports, Osaka and
    Edo were open for trade, the man who signed the
    treaty was assassinated in 1860.
  • 1867, the old emperor died, in 1869, the shogun
    handed over power to the new boy emporer Meiji,
    and 1869 moved from Kyoto to Tokyo (East
    Capital).

19
Japan
  • Meiji Restoration of 1868
  • In 1868, warriors overthrew "shogun," the 15 year
    old emperor became the authority.
  • Meiji Emperor made the local feudal lords give up
    their power and dismissed their private armies.
  • Japan set up a new and national army, a
    centralized government.
  • Farming commercialized.
  • Industrialization speeded up.

20
Japan
  • Meiji Restoration of 1868
  • Education modernized.
  • Military forces strengthened.
  • And Japan was rising rapidly as an imperialist
    country.
  • By 1890, the country had more than 200
    steam-powered factories and railways, steamships,
    and telegraph lines, and a powerful army and
    navy.

21
Japan
  • Education
  • Compulsory not only for boys but also for girls.
  • Foreign studies and English language were taught.
    Japanese leaders went to Europe and America to
    learn about Western ideas and technology.
  • Europeans and Americans were brought in to train
    Japanese engineers, scientists, manufacturers,
    soldiers, and sailors.

22
Japan
  • Land Policy
  • Land tax in 1873 based on 3 of the fixed
    assessment of the value of the land regardless of
    the harvest or the price of crop in that yearand
    paid in cash and in time.
  • Land tax made up 90 of all tax revenues and
    70 of all fiscal revenues in 1873.
  • By the end of the century, it was still more
    than half of the government's total income.
  • By 1880-90, some 40 of farmers became
    tenants 300,000 lost their land(Takaki).

23
Japan
  • Politics Military, police personnel, teachers,
    students, and others were not allowed to attend
    political meetings and join political
    organizations.
  • Conscription laws
  • 1837 required all males of 17-40 for military
    service except for the sole sons and grand sons,
    the adopted sons, heads of the family, and the
    rich who pay a substitute fee of 270 yen.
  • In 1889, every male had to serve until 1908
    those who wish to defer the service emigrate
    abroad as student-laborers.

24
Japan
  • Immigration Ban lifted in 1885.
  • About 149 Japanese arrived in Hawaii in
    1868-9 and treated so poorly that Japan banned
    immigration.
  • In 1882-3, Hawaii sent representatives to
    Japan to lift the ban 1885 that Japanese lifted
    the ban.

25
Japan
  • Robert Walker Irvin
  • A US consul general in Hawaii, a special agent of
    the Board of Immigration for the Kingdom of
    Hawaii in charge of recruiting and transportation
    of the laborers
  • Also acting as foreign adviser to the Japanese
    government
  • Two powerful friends in Japan -- Inoue Kaoru, the
    foreign minister, and Masuda Takashi, a
    businessman
  • Recruiting in Yamaguchi, (southwest) hometown of
    Kaoru and Takashi.

26
Japan- Irvin Convention 3-year contract
  • Sugar planters deposited 25 of all wages with
    the Japanese consulate in Honolulu to guarantee
    that the laborers could return
  • covered transportation cost, lodging, fuel,
    medical care and interpretation service though he
    often passed those cost on to the workers.
  • Initially men paid 9 women 6 later men 15,
    women 9 in the fields 10 hours a day or 12
    hours in the mills for 26 days a month.But
    monthly wages were twice the earnings of skilled
    artisans in Japan and six times what farmers
    made.
  • When Japanese government announced 600 immigrant
    slots for first shipment to Hawaii in 1885, it
    received 28,000 applications.
  • By 1894 about 30,000 government contracted
    laborers arrived in Hawaii.(T.45) 25 women 46
    returned.

27
Korea - Contact with China and Japan
  • The Yi Dynasty viewed themselves as vassals of
    the Qing dynasty emperors.
  • The "sadae" policy -- serving the great by
    regularly sending tribute missions to China
    China was obliged to assist when requested by
    Korea.
  • In 1592, a Japanese feudal lord Toyotomi
    Hideyoshi led a troop of 150,000 to invade Korea
    -- a two-year war between Japan and China.
  • Korea refused any outside contact in the next two
    and half centuries and was dubbed as "Hermit
    Kingdom" by the West.

28
Korea
  • Catholicism came to Korea vie China.
  • A Chinese Catholic missionary entered in 1795
    but was executed by the government.
  • French priests entered in 1830s and some of them
    were also executed. About 2,000 Catholics were
    persecuted in 1839 to 1866.
  • Contact with the West
  • 1860s, Western powers first approached the
    country with navy ships. In 1866, Korean shore
    batteries drove off seven French warships, in
    1871, five American ships, and in 1875, one
    Japanese ship.

29
Korea
  • Kanghwa Treaty 1876
  • -forced on
    Korea by Japan
  • Treaty ports 1876-1905 14 -- Pusan in the south,
    Inchon on the west coast and Wonsan on the east
    and set up privileged foreign settlements.
  • Extraterritorial privilege and monopoly control
    of the import and export trade.
  • China as a suzerainty to Korea, Japan required
    Korea o declare itself independent and
    established a permanent diplomatic mission in
    Korea.
  • Li Hongzhang as a broker, America signed a
    similar treaty with Korea in 1882 with Britain
    and Germany in 1883, Russia and Italy in 1884,
    and France in 1886.

30
Korea Court corruption
  • Under the Min Queen, corrupted and contracted
    numerous debts to foreign banks.
  • Korean peddlers faced with tough competition from
    the Chinese and Japanese.
  • Foreign merchants purchased crops such as rice or
    beans and sold them in Japan for greater profit
    and imported cotton goods, kerosene and matches
    which Korean peasants would buy with the cash
    they received through selling rice and bean.
  • As a result, self-sufficient economy became
    eroded.

31
Korea
  • Tonghak Rebellion(Eastern Learning)
  • 1860-90, a religious movement which expressed
    discontent of many poor farmers and eventually
    led to a massive peasant uprising asked China to
    help, then Sino-Japanese War in 1894.
  • Japanese soldiers broke into the royal palace,
    took King Kojong hostage, drove away Chinese
    soldiers, forced Korea to open all southern
    Korean ports to them and gave them many other
    rights.
  • Tonghak leaders led hundreds of thousands of
    farmers in yet another uprising, this time,
    against the Japanese.
  • But Japanese soldiers suppressed the uprising and
    killed many rebels.

32
Korea
  • Economic Concessions 1896-1900
  • Japan -- Seoul-Inchon railway, Seoul-Pusan
    railway, gold mine in N. Chungchong
  • Russia -- mining rights in Kyongwon, Chongsong,
    N. Hamgyong timber in Yalu River area by Russia
  • France -- Seoul-Uiju railway
  • Germany -- gold mine in Kangwon
  • Britain -- Gold mine in S. Pyongan

33
Korea
  • U.S. -- U.S. built first Korea's first electric
    facilities in the royal palace, its first gas
    plant, street cars, and the modern mines in
    Korea gold mines' operation in Unsan, N. Pyongan
    yielded 9 million tons of ore with a net profit
    of 15 million dollars.(Cheng,290)
  • Banks
  • Japanese Dai Ichi Bank proliferated throughout
    Korea since 1878.
  • By 1902, it issued 19 million yen in Korea and
    became the dominant bank there.

34
Korea
  • Horace Allen
  • A Presbyterian and doctor who entered Korea in
    1884 from China in a court conflict, Allen saved
    the life of a relative of Korean Queen Min and
    was given a royal title and visited the palace
    without prior summons.
  • Foreign secretary of Korean legation in
    Washington DC bet 1888-9
  • Secretary of the American legation in Seoul in
    1890-6 American minister in Korea bet 1897-1905.
  • Functioned as a middleman between the U.S. and
    Korea governments helped his friends get
    lucrative concessions the Unsan gold mines, the
    richest mines in Korea.

35
Korea
  • By 1904, Pyongyang had 15,000 Christians,
    one-fourth of its population set up Christian
    schools and hospitals as well.
  • Methodists and Presbyterian competed for
    influence while the former opened schools the
    later opened hospitals.

36
Immigration to Hawaii
  • In 1902, Allen stopped over Hawaii, met with the
    Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association and
    discussed possibilities of recruiting Korean
    labor then persuaded King Kojoung to set up an
    immigration bureau.
  • His friend David Deshler persuaded the McKinley
    government to appoint Allen minister to Korea in
    1896.
  • Allen helped Deshler open a bank in which the
    HSPA deposited 25,000 dollars and formed the
    East-West Development Company bank lent money to
    aspiring emigrants for their passage.
  • Allen described Hawaii in golden terms suggested
    that it would build up Korea's reputation through
    immigration because the Chinese were excluded as
    a way to win friendship and support from the
    United States.
  • Meanwhile, poverty, famine and drought also
    helped pushed some of the Koreans to leave.
  •  

37
Korea
  • Yumin won (or Suming won)
  • In November 1902, under the royal family rather
    than foreign ministry and 2 won passport fee
    went to the royal family.
  • Regulations sound health, good standing in their
  • communities, statements of destination and
    intended
  • occupation, passports not issued as contract
    laborers but for the purpose of education,
    observation and to engage in commerce, industry
    and agriculture.
  • After Japan annexed Korea in 1910, it also
    dissolved the Suminwon.
  • Director Min Yong-hwan committed suicide
    leaving an impassioned plea for independence
    addressed to the people of Korea.

38
Korea- Recruiting
  • In Deshler's immigration advertisements
  • Mild weather, both unmarried and family
    immigrants were welcome.
  • Employment opportunity in agriculture, 16
    dollars a month for a 60 hour work week (average
    wage in Korea was 1.5-3 a month).
  • Free education, protection of American law
    helped pay passport fees and lend loans to each
    immigrant in addition to transportation cost (to
    be paid back in 10 months.)
  • Recruiting offices set up in many treaty-port
    cities and the Chongdong district of Seoul, near
    to American legation. In 1901, a severe drought
    occurred in northwestern part of the country.
    Allen wrote in 1902, that the severe famine in
    the winter makes Hawaii more attractive to the
    Koreans.

39
Korea
  • George Heber Jones
  • A Methodist Reverend, persuaded 50 persons from
    his congregation to leave first 101 emigrants,
    sailed from Inchon on December 22, 1902, five
    weeks after the establishment of the Suminwon.
  • HSPA loaned 100 dollars to each immigrant
    including transportation cost, 50 dollars pocket
    money but later collected back and coached to
    pass immigration interview.

40
Filipinos - Americanization
  • 1521 Portuguese explorer Fernando Magellan
    landed
  • 1559 King Philip ordered Spanish occupation
  • 1565 discovered route to sail northward into the
    Japan current, easterly along the forth parallel
    and sourthward with the Alaska current, skirting
    the California coast to Acapulco.
  • Santiago and San Juan began the Manila galleon
    trade with 712 pieces of silk and 22,300
    porcelains.
  • Around 1600, over 1 million taels (about 37.5
    grams) of silver per year were exported from
    Manila to China.

41
Filipinos - Americanization
  • 16 licensed junks in 1589 to 50 in 1631 by
    Chinese government traveled from Ningpo, Canton,
    Xiamen, Quanzhou, Zhangzhou to Manila.
  • 1571 Miguel Lopez de Legazpi established
    permanent settlement in Manila with harbor and
    easy access to China trade.
  • The trade lasted until 1815 -- first major
    Western colony in Asia and the longest lasting
    one until 1946.
  • Manila galleon
  • annual shipments of Mexican and Peruvian silver
    from Acapulco to Manila, then to Fujian and
    Guangdong, China, returned with silk, porcelain,
    and other luxury goods crops like core, potato
    were introduced into China.

42
Filipinos
  • Colonial period
  • 3 centuries (1560s-1898) named after King Philip
    II of Spain.
  • 1782-1882 tobacco export was a major revenue
    source.
  • 1820s on indigo, rice, sugar and cotton.
  • 1870 dependent on import for rice and clothes.

43
Spanish-American War-1898
  • As a market and source of raw materials for US
    industry, and to secure the Philippines as a
    military strong-point for America to penetrate
    the market of China.
  • Senator Alfred BeveridgeThey have moved nearer
    to China by securing permanent bases on her
    borders, The Philippines give us a base at the
    door of all the East."
  • In the 1880s, Africa was swallowed up by Britain,
    Germany, and France. In the 1890s, these same
    powers, joined by Russia and Japan, began to
    carve up China.
  • US Navy destroyed Spanish fleet in Manila Bay --
    defeated the once-mighty Spain at small cost
    marked U.S. as powerful military force in the
    Pacific the war was over the future of the Cuban
    revolution, Spanish Empire gave away its
    dominance over Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, Hawaii
    and the Philippine Islands for 20 million dollars.

44
Filipinos in the Navy
  • Began to serve in 1901-3 -- 500 joined the Navy
    and 6,000 in WWI -- 4,000 in 1920-30s
  • A 1947 Philippine-United States defense agreement
    allowed an unspecified number of Filipinos to
    serve in the US Navy in 1983, the number was
    averaged 1,500 a year, and there were 19,733
    Filipino enlisted men and 379 officers in the
    Navy.
  •  
  • Prior to and during WWI, the Navy allowed
    Filipinos to serve in a range of occupational
    ratings. However, after the War, the new ruling
    only allowed them to the ratings of stewards,
    including the college graduates.
  •  
  • 1973, reduced from 2,000 to 500 per year, about
    200,000 applied -- the first year of new Navy
    policy granting occupational rating.

45
Filipinos
  • Resistance
  • The middle class, educated Filipinos campaigned
    for reforms and Filipino participation in the
    colonial government.
  • The Spanish harshly repressed the movement and
    executed the leader Jose Rizal in 1896.
  • From 1896-98, the leader was Emilio
    Aguinaldo(1869-1964) U.S. NAvy arranged to bring
    back Aguinaldo to the Philippines who led the
    Philippine troops to drive the Spanish
    colonialists out of the rural area in the island
    of Luzon, and declared independence in June 1898.

46
Philippine-American War
  • In August, U.S. army arranged the Spanish to
    surrender to them, took over Manila and did not
    allow the Philippines to enter the capital city.
  • Feb. 1899-1901, fighting between US and
    Philippine troops started. After firing
    500-pound shells into the Filipino trenches at
    close range, killing thousands of poorly equipped
    Filipino soldiers, the Filipino troops retreated
    and switched to guerrilla warfare.
  • In November 1899, it became US colony. Aguinaldo
    was captured in 1910.

47
Philippine-American War
  • An army of 76,000-126,000 was shipped to the
    islands a series of bloody, cruel guerrilla
    warfare that killed civilians, rounding up local
    people into concentration camps where the spread
    of disease like malaria, yellow fever killed many
    people.
  • In September 1901, an American general ordered
    his troops to king any one over ten. In another
    campaign, Major General Franklin Bell's troops
    killed over 100,000 people estimated by American
    General Bell in an interview that the death toll
    of disease and starvation range from 200,000 to
    600,000 or a million. 4,243 American soldiers
    were also killed.

48
Rudyard Kipling
  • the White Mans Burden written for Americans in
    1899 to govern your new caught sullen peoples,
    half devil and half child.
  • The White Mans Burden 
  • Take up the White Mans burden,
  • Send forth the best yet breed
  • Go bind your sons to exile
  • To serve your captives need,
  • To wait in heavy harness
  • On fluttered folk and wild,
  • You new-caught sullen peoples,
  • Half devil and half child.

49
Benevolent despotism
  • In 1901, the Philippine Commission, a civilian
    government, was set up. William Howard Taft(27th
    American President 1909-13) became the first
    leader of the Commission "little brown brothers"
    and began a policy of appeasement.
  • In 1902, a law to open the lower house of the
    Philippine congress to open to Philippine
    representation lower and middle level of
    government positions were offered to elite
    Philippines in 1907, the first election held
    based on a strict property qualification for
    voting.
  • I909, Payne-Aldrich law to open tariff-free US
    markets to Philippine land owners for raw
    products of sugar, hemp, tobacco, coconut oil
    until 1929.
  • From 1920-30, sugar import from the Philippines
    to America rose to 450.

50
Philippine -Education
  • A nation-wide program of free and universal
    public education conducted in English Fred
    Atkinson, a US citizen, was the first General
    Superintendent of Education.
  • Hundreds of idealistic American teachers taught
    the English language and Western civilization to
    the Filipino people
  • English as official language Washington and
    Lincoln as heroes in school textbooks.
  • US as a generous friend to free from the Spanish
    rule and spread democracy and literacy.

51
Philippine
  • Competition for labor
  • Initially, recruiting agents were even attacked
    by stones and clubs 1915, the Philippine
    legislature passed a law imposing a tax of 6,000
    pesos on any agent recruiting laborers for
    outside employment and an additional tax of 500
    pesos for each province which allowed such
    recruiting HSPA paid the tax in order to proceed
    with recruiting activities also agreed to
    provide for free return after a 3-year contract.
  •  
  • Legal status -nationals rather than aliens
  • Colonialism It was the Europeans who sought out
    the East, because Europe was poor, background
    the smell of Europeans compared with the daily
    bathing tradition of the Japanese and
    tooth-brushing of the Indians.

52
Asian Indians
  • About 8,000 East Indians arrived in America after
    1900 came on trans-Pacific ships, usually via
    Hong Kong to California.
  • East India Company
  • Beginning in 1600, the East India Company sent
    their ships in 1608 to set up trading ports.
  • India was then ruled by the Islamic Mughal
    dynasty, beginning to decline.
  • East India Company was a powerful business
    organization with private army.
  • In the middle of the 18th century, they
    successfully excluded the French influence in
    India and forced the Mughal emperor to turn over
    the revenue administration.
  • By the mid 18th century, after defeating various
    local feudal lords, the East India Company became
    the nations master.

53
Asian Indians
  • Government control
  • The British Parliament passed the India Act
    of 1784 which allowed the government to supervise
    the company's political operations, 1785 Calcutta
    made capital city, the 813 Charter Act finally
    proclaimed the "undoubted sovereignty of the
    Crown of the United Kingdom over British India."
  • 1835, English and Western learning became the
    main objects in education, English law,

54
Asian Indians
  • Colonial rule
  • transformed the area into a cash crop producing
    region in a 1793 Settlement Act -- pay land
    revenue on time and in cash small land owners
    had to register their property under larger
    landowners who could now transfer, purchase and
    sell land according to British land policies.
  • Many small farmers to be migrant workers or serve
    in the British army or police force. Global
    expansion of British Empire need Silk soldiers.
  • English was the official language in high
    education. Christianity was introduced.

55
Asian Indians
  • Military Service
  • Sikhs, Rajputs, and Gurkhas (Nepal) were defined
    as martial races
  • 1845-46 British defeated Sikhs, took over Pujab
    and Kashmir, Sikh population only constituted 1
    of the total Indian population, they formed
    one-fifth of the British Army in India
  • During WWI, over 65 Indian troops came from
    Punjab. also sent to China, Southeast Asia,
    East Africa, and other places. ICS Indian Civil
    Service, 900-1,200 British staff, stations as
    Himalayan foothills, fishing fleet, civil
    lines British Club, British raj moved to Delhi
    in 1911.

56
Asian Indians
  • From soldiers to immigrants
  • Stationed in Hong Kong, Canton, Rangoon, Burma,
    Singapore, Shanghai, Tianjin, Manila, and Canada.
  • Among the 8th Allied forces taken to Beijing
    during the Boxer Movement of Indian immigrants
    in Southern California two out of three Punjabis
    gave Hong Kong as their place of emigration1907,
    arrived in the United States.
  • In 1910, a gurdwara (Sikh temple) was
    established in Hong Kong as it had a large Sikh
    community made up of solders, policemen,
    watchmen, and businessmen.
  • An Indian immigrant said in 1924"I was born in
    the Punjab district of India and served on the
    police force in Hong Kong, China, for some years.
    While I was in China several Hindus returned and
    reported on the ease with which they could make
    money in America and so I decided to go.

57
Asian Indians
  • Transportation
  • Built roads, railways, and canalsBritish
    interest in Punjab stemmed from a conscious
    recognition of the agricultural wealth of the
    area and a fear of the expansionist motives of
    Imperial Russia.
  • To secure Punjab and Afghanistan, it improved
    transportation facilities in these places for
    troop movements and built by the end of the 19th
    century over 25,000 miles of rail network the
    largest of all Asia.
  • The fourth largest textile industry, the worlds
    largest irrigation system, delivering industrial
    crops like jute, cotton, indigo, or tea Suez
    Canal opened in 1869.
  • British colonists reached India in two weeks from
    England roads.
  • Railway construction also linked Punjab heartland
    to all major cities and ports. About 2,000 miles
    of railways was laid in the Punjab province
    itself.

58
Asian Indians
  • Route
  • The railways linked Amritsar, the religious
    center of the Sikhs, with new Delhi, India's
    capital after 1912.
  • From there take train to Calcuttak_at_l'k te, a
    port city in Bengalbbeg''g l, along the
    northeastern coast of India then board steamers
    for Hong Kong in 12 days, and a further secure
    passage to many parts of the world, Manila,
    Singapore, Shanghai, Yokohama, Vancouver and San
    Francisco without another 16 to 18 days journal.
    Because of the sufficient road and railway
    network, Punjabi immigrants could get to
    seaports, quickly, cheaply and safely.
  • It cost about 50 to take ships from Hong Kong to
    Vancouver or San Francisco. Sikhs traveled in
    groups of at least of five to ten in the initial
    period. Unlike other Asians, Punjabi were not
    from the coastal region.

59
Asian Indians
  • Route
  • Canada - Initial destination British Columbia in
    Canada. Census recorded that 43 in 1905 387 in
    1906 and then 2,693 in 1907 and 2632 in 1908 and
    by 1908, there were 5,179 Indians there located
    primarily in Vancouver.
  • Some recruited by labor-recruiting companies
    which mainly served the interest of railroad
    construction business and steamship companies.
  • Many came through chain-migration network among
    themselves.

60
Asian Indians - Global emigration
  • Emigration abroad was rare as Hinduism, the
    predominant religion in India, had certain taboos
    against sea travel.
  • In Indian agricultural system, the laborers were
    bound to the land. By the end of 18th century,
    however, because of increased overseas contact
    under British rule, Indian laborers could be
    found in most of the ports of southeast Asia.
  • With the abolition of slavery in the British
    Empire in 1834, and the refusal of freed slaves
    to work on the sugar plantations of Trinidad,
    Jamaica, British Guiana, and Mauritius, the sugar
    plantation owners became keenly interested in
    recruiting Indian laborers.
  • During the 19th century, 700,000 Indians were
    taken to the West Indies, British Guiana, and
    Mauritius as indentured laborers.
  • Before 1870, Calcutta, a city in Bengal, was the
    center of British power emigrants drawn from
    surrounding area of Calcutta.

61
Immigration and American myth
  • Individualism immigrants are mainly those people
    who seek political and religious freedom or
    economically motivated.
  • Exceptionalism America viewed as land of plenty
    social conflicts not as intense as in other
    places. Most immigrants succeed as middle class
    skilled workers, professionals or business
    people. Racial and social class gap would be
    narrowed down.
  • Assimilation. Immigrants assimilate into
    American society by getting rid of their ethnic
    heritage.

62
Asian Immigration to America theories
63
Push" and Pull" theory
  • "Push" factors, for example, consist of
    population pressure, economical crisis, natural
    disasters, social and political instability of
    the sending place.
  • "Pull" factors include social and political
    stability, job opportunities, economical boom,
    better living conditions, and education
    opportunities.
  • The assumptions of this theory is that the most
    disadvantaged members of poorer countries are the
    most likely to participate in labor migration
    and migrant flow arise out of the sheer existence
    of economic inequalities.

64
1. Push" and Pull" theory
  • On the surface, these assumptions appear
    self-evident laborers migrate from Mexico to the
    United States or from Turkey to Germany.
  • But this theory fails to answer, at the
    nation-state level, why migrants did not come
    from equally poor countries or areas and among
    the individual level, why some people left while
    others stayed behind.

65
2. International Relationship
  • Linking the sending and receiving countries
    together attributing to colonialism in sending
    countries views modern history in a global
    context. Capital expansion throughout the world
    was the major force responsible for modern
    immigration.
  • That means modern immigration is an international
    phenomenon a result of a series overlapping
    factors across the national boundary.
  • World capitalism demanded cheap raw materials and
    labor supply through out the world. From an
    international migration perspective, though Asian
    immigrants to America was pushed by various
    internal conditions and pulled by various
    international forces, capitalist expansion in
    Asia was the link between the "pull and push"
    factors.

66
2. International Relationship
  • For example, Asians not only left their home
    country by themselves but were also actively
    recruited and promoted by American labor contract
    agents and transportation companies.
  • Takaki Aaron Palmer recommended recruiting
    Chinese labor to work in Hawaii Converted to
    Christianity, many Koreans been encouraged to
    emigrate by American missionaries Filipinos as
    US nationals.

67
3. Chain migration
  • However, international labor migration is
    basically an outcome of individual decisions
    governed by the law of supply and demand. It
    fails to explain why some individuals decided to
    migrate and others do not.
  • Immigration is not only a result of economical
    forces but also a socially embedded movements.
    Social networks such as kinship, family or other
    social relationship are at the core of the
    movement and sustain migration over time.
  • Immigrants are not uprooted, isolated
    individuals moving from one place to another but
    socially related people who migrate in groups for
    social and economical reasons.
  • Study of early Asian American immigration will
    help us understand America as a country of
    immigrants and the similarities between early
    Asian American experience and the contemporary
    Asian immigrants experience.

68
Summary
  • When, why, and how did each Asian immigrant group
    come to America?
  • What are some of the push and pull factors? What
    are some of the differences and similarities
    between them?
  • How are the historical experience related to the
    contemporary Asian American experience?
  • It explains the geographical location of
    contemporary dominant AA communities,
    demographical characteristics of AA communities,
    and economical and cultural life influenced by
    the history.
  •  
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