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Volume 033-1 - January 1979 (6 pages)

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Page: of 6

shacks and tents, and lived on such
oddities as dried fish, bamboo, sweet
rice and seaweed.
But the amusement was short lived
and the curiosity soon sated. The
clothes, the foods, the strange religions
observed by these foreigners became
anathema to the miners and merchants
who worked the mountain and river
towns where gold lay thick. The white
miners resented any encroachment
upon the richest mining claims and
soon the Chinese were left to work only
the tailings. Even here they were
assessed a whopping $3 a month
foreign miner’s tax, (a tax levied only
against the Chinese). This grew to $4,
then $6, when often $6 a month was all
that was realized from working over
leavings that fell to the Chinese miner.
Few, if any, Chinese returned to
their native land enriched from their
mining efforts. Poverty and unpaid
passage commitments held them
captive in a hostile climate where they
became the butt ofjokes, target ofscorn
and frequently the victims of cruel
violence.
Despite the unpleasant atmosphere in which they scratched out a
bare existence, the Chinese built for
themselves a reputation for industry
and diligence. The decision makers
who wielded the power recognized a
tremendous asset in the working habits
displayed by the Chinese and, more
important, saw in them a source of
cheap labor. Mining companies
encouraged them to come; railroad
magnates encouraged them to stay;
though encouraged is scarcely the
word. Where does a man go when he is
penniless, without friends and in a
country whose language he knows not?
Does one have to encourage a squirrel to
run himself silly on a wheel in a cage?
When mining hit a recession, as it
did in the 1860s, the construction gangs
for the Central Pacific Railroad were
being formed. ‘‘Hire the Chinese,” the
chief superintendent of the CP
instructed. But his construction
supervisor, Irish to his boot tips,
refused. “I’ll not boss Chinese,” he
said. The workers he would boss,
however, proved to be so inept and
troublesome that he was forced to turn
to the Chinese and by the Fall of 1865
there were 3000 on the payroll. This
doubled, then tripled and eventually
depleted the entire supply of local
Chinese. The railroad began recruiting
from the Far East, bringing in
hundreds more of the people who
already were being shunned and
maltreated for having come in the first
place.
Work gangs of from 12 to 20
Chinese were formed with a cook
allotted to each gang. The working
hours were sunup to sun set. The pay?
$1 a day. Conditions for white workers
were not good. For Celestials, as they
were called, they were deplorable. No
allowance was made for those days
when no sun came up and no sun went
down. The Chinese worked right
through what has been labelled as the
most severe winter ever recorded. That
year the Chinese tunneled through
Donner Summit, living in shacks buried
Commercial Street in Nevada City,
which was part of the Chinese Quarter.
in snow and never seeing sky. Snow
slides were frequent. The Dutch Flat
Enquirer reported in 1866: “‘A gang of
Chinamen employed by the railroad
was covered up by snow and 4 or 5 died
before they could be exhumed. The
snow fell to such a depth that one entire
encampment was covered up during the
night.”
When Spring came, the Chinese
were pitted against the Cornish miners
in a massive effort to complete the
tunnel. At the end of each week, the
work of the crews was measured.
Always the Chinese outmeasured the
Cornish miners. But when the Chinese
struck for similar wages and similar
hours, “Eight hour day good for white
man, all the same good for Chinese,”
they received no sympathy or kindred
response from other workers. The
strike failed and the Chinese workers
continued to be whipped when
rebellious and to be denied release to
look for other work.
in 1869 when the last spike was
driven and the Central Pacific tracks
were linked in Utah with those of the
Union Pacific, the oratory that rolled
from the lips of the top brass steamed
with praise for those who had made the
event possible. Only one man,
Superintendent Charlie Crocker’s
brother, E.B., had a word for the
Chinese: “I wish to call to your minds
that the early completion of this
railroad we have built has beenin large
measure due to that poor, despised
class of laborers called the Chinese, to
the fidelity and industry they have
shown.”
This meager recognition did
nothing to lessen the low regard in
which the Chinese were held, or to
improve their lot. When railroad
construction no longer required their
labors, the Chinese in this area eeked
out a living of sorts by working on the
levees and dikes that were being built
in the delta region to help reclaim
otherwise worthless land. Here, again,
the Chinese lived under almost
subhuman conditions in tent
encampments along the enbankments,
paid considerably less than the white
workers and shunned and ridiculed at
every turn. Nonetheless, the work they
did increased the value of the land from
$1 an acre to as much as $100 an acre.
One surveyor general of the state
estimated the increased value ‘‘due to
Chinese labor, building railroads and
reclaiming tule lands alone at
$289,700,000.”
Such was the tenor of the times in
the 1870s however, that the
remarkable work habits of the
Chinese, coupled with a 25 year old
history of non violent and quiet
habitation along the river banks of the
gold towns, led not to a happy union
with the other settlers or even to
complacent acceptance. The feeling
against the Chinese spread and
deepened, turning more vicious each
year.
The angry temper of the people in
the ’70s was due in large measure toa
depression. Employment was not easy
to find and resentment against the
Chinese, who were able to work for and
live on much less than the white
worker, ran high. The press was happy
to enlarge upon the already ugly
expressions of hate. The Chinese
laborer was described as “A slave
reduced to the lowest term of beggarly
economy, no fit competitor for an
American free man...he herds in scores
in small dens, where a white man and
his wife could hardly breathe, and he
has none of the wants of a civilized
white man. His sister is a prostitute
from instinct, religion, education and
interest, and degrading to all around
her. They defy the law, keep up the
manners and customs of China and
utterly disregard all the laws of health,
decency and morality. The health,
wealth, prosperity and happiness of
our State demands their expulsion from
our shores.”
This was one of the opening gunsin
the “The Chinese Must Go” campaign
that got its start in the early ’70s and
swelled to bitter and unmanageable
proportions by 1879. Chinatowns in
Truckee and other neighboring areas
were burned down or wiped out. A
crime against a Chinaman was no
crime at all. Murder was overlooked or
excused. If the Chinese were the
victims, there rarely was a penalty. If
however, they were the perpetrators,
the penalty was usually disproportionately high. Some Chinese were shot to
death for not paying their foreign
miner’s tax. The man behind the gun
was charged with nothing. On the other
hand, the Chinese, noted for his love of
gambling, could be sentenced toseveral
months in jail if caught playing
forbidden Fan Tan.
Small wonder that when the
gunpowder explosions that whumped
in 1879 were cheered by the
Occidentals, the Orientals exchanged
sullen looks and buried their heads
more deeply in their collarless coats.
They were experts at reading the
handwriting on the wall, and 1879 was
not to be a good year for them.
Let the nabobs on Nevada City’s
seven hills ring the welkin and wait
complacently to be engulfed by the
promised prosperity of 1879, the
Chinese would count their diminishing
sm,
number and bewail an income thatbarely withstood the counting.
One year earlier, in 1878, there had
been 328 Chinese in the rapidly
expanding Mother Lode town. There
had been several shops, restaurants
and drug stores, and when the Chinese
celebrated their own New Year, they