Chinese in Steel City (2) | The “Chinese Labor Experiment” at Beaver Falls (1872)
——记录匹兹堡华人的百年转型 场景描述: 1872年初,一个细雨蒙蒙的早晨,在赫尔州海狸瀑布(Beaver Falls)火车站。站台被一堵高高的木围墙临时封闭,只有几名警卫和工厂负责人约翰
More——记录匹兹堡华人的百年转型 场景描述: 1872年初,一个细雨蒙蒙的早晨,在赫尔州海狸瀑布(Beaver Falls)火车站。站台被一堵高高的木围墙临时封闭,只有几名警卫和工厂负责人约翰
MoreIn 1848, a cry of alarm from the Sacramento River Valley in California reached Taishan and Kaiping in Guangdong, thousands of miles away.
It was an era of social upheaval and hardship in making a living. Tens of thousands of young Chinese people, carrying the simple wish of "enough to feed their families," bid farewell to the bustling life of the Pearl River Delta and embarked on wooden boats known as "big-eyed boats." They were given a hopeful title—"Gold Mountain Visitors."
However, the waves of the Pacific Ocean did not offer them a gentle welcome. After months of wandering and the trials of disease, when they finally set foot on the docks of San Francisco, they were not greeted by a land of gold, but by the beginning of arduous labor. In the mining areas of California, the Chinese laborers used the most rudimentary tools to meticulously sift through the slag abandoned by the white settlers—the first pioneering mark of Chinese immigration to North America.
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