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The Chinese Exclusion Example:
Race, Immigration, and American
Gatekeeping, 1882–1924
ERIKA LEE
IN 1876, H. N. CLEMENT, a
San Francisco lawyer, stood before a California State Senate Committee
and sounded the alarm: "The Chinese are upon us. How can we get rid
of them? The Chinese are coming. How can we stop them?" Clement's panicked
cries and portrayals of Chinese immigration as an evil, "unarmed invasion"
were shared by several witnesses before the committee which was charged
with investigating the "social, moral, and political effects" of Chinese
immigration. Testimony like Clement's was designed to reach a broad audience,
and the committee hearings themselves were part of a calculated political
attempt to nationalize the question of Chinese immigration. Their efforts proved successful when the United States Congress passed the Chinese
Exclusion Act on 6 May 1882. This law prohibited the immigration of
Chinese laborers for a period of ten years and barred all Chinese immigrants
from naturalized citizenship. Demonstrating the classbias in the law,
merchants, teachers, students, travelers, and diplomats were exempt from
exclusion.
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