Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

A history of Chinese Immigration to Oregon -- The Chinese in Portland

created by qousqous

(idea) by qousqous (4.4 d) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Mon Dec 18 2000 at 2:48:52

The Chinese in Portland

Portland's first record of Chinese residents was in 1850, when two Chinese men were living in the city. Immigrants trickled into Portland through the 1850s and early 1860s. Chinese immigration to Portland increased dramatically in 1864, when the city's Chinese population grew from 87 to 200. The Chinese population grew ever more quickly, to 1700 Chinese in 1880, 4400 in 1890, and 7800 in 1900.

A major factor for the large increase of the Chinese population in the 1880's was the expulsion of Chinese from Seattle and Tacoma. Chinese all over the West Coast were often discriminated against, for a variety of reasons. Chinese were seen as taking jobs away from Americans, and as driving down wages, as many Chinese were willing to work for less than Americans. They were also seen as a drain on society, rather than an integral part of the American populace, as many had plans to take all their money home to China, though they rarely accomplished this. And Chinese were often thought to be an "amoral stain" on the community, with their brothels, opium dens, and different religious beliefs. Chinese were met with discrimination and sometimes violence in the workplace and in the community at large. In 1886, prompted by a severe economic depression, Chinese were expelled from Seattle and Tacoma, and many came to Portland. Though there was still much anti-Chinese sentiment among Portlanders, they had not yet opted for total expulsion.

Following the expulsions to the north, many vigilantes in Portland pushed for the expulsion of Chinese. Chinese were evicted from the adjacent communities of Mount Tabor, Albina, and Oregon City in February of 1886. But in Portland, businessmen and the aristocracy prevented this action, as they were dependent on cheap Chinese labor. Chinese continued to face discrimination, organized groups whose main purpose was to harass Chinese, and occasional killings and burnings of houses. But the Chinese, perhaps accustomed to hardship after fleeing the chaos in their homeland, resisted and continued to make a living in Portland.

As in most Chinesesettlements in the West, Portland's Chinese mostly lived in a Chinatown ghetto, isolated both because of discrimination and by their own desire to live in a Chinese community. Portland's Chinatown was not originally where today's Chinatown is: it was located mainly between Ash on the north, Salmon on the south, Third on the west, and the Willamette on the east. Major sources of employment for Chinese in Portland were the salmon canneries, Chinese laundries, railroad building, the iron industry, papermaking, the textile industry, servant jobs, and public works such as canal and road building.


A history of Chinese Immigration to Oregon
<-- prev | Index | next -->


printable version
chaos

A history of Chinese Immigration to Oregon -- The Chinese in Eastern Oregon A history of Chinese Immigration to Oregon A History of Chinese Immigration to Oregon -- Motivations for Migration: push and pull Mount Tabor
Portland, Oregon Chinatown Historic Adventure Land of the Northwest Chinatown West Coast
Straightedge ghetto Mark Hatfield vigilante
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
Nodes to live by:
The blue lights of suburban living rooms
Can I use my manhood as a weapon?
Throwing sparks, growing dahlias
test5
Waverley
Making cheese
Citing writeups
Hands
Hot chocolate
blood pressure
Eyes Wide Shut
My first writeup
Indiana Jones' Crusade for the Perfect Female, or Why We Go Grail-Hunting
New Writeups
Wuukiee
May 15, 2008(idea)
locke baron
Kuznetsov class aircraft carrier(thing)
_lesra
for abby(thing)
Adaptive Child
Annie's garden salsa(recipe)
Simulacron3
Zig-Zag(thing)
Ouzo
questions(idea)
Ouzo
Special Grilled Cheese(fiction)
Noung
Tiananmen Square Massacre(idea)
aneurin
Lord St Clair(person)
artman2003
Assholes and Douchebags: A Comparison(person)
locke baron
Tyan Thunder K8WE(thing)
locke baron
Udaloy class destroyer(thing)
Scaevola
Same-sex marriage(idea)
SteveMurrayFromNZ
British Standard Handful(idea)
nailbiter
nerve stapling(thing)
This affordable entertainment brought to you by The Everything Development Company