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Chinese Immigrants In America

Decent Essays

During America’s earliest years the British colonies were settled by a variety of European colonists who came to America in order to both escape political and religious persecution and find new opportunities to start anew. Although immigration was highly encouraged during the colonial era, as the vast majority of immigrants were white Protestants, immigrants were suddenly no longer welcome when foreigners of other countries began entering the United States during the late eighteenth century. Of these new immigrants, the Chinese were one of the first Asian people to immigrate to the United States. Their arrival was encouraged by the job opportunities that opened up by the Gold Rush of 1849, the construction of the transcontinental railroad in the 1860s, and the civil war that surrounded China during the mid-nineteenth century. Of these new Chinese immigrants during nineteenth century, more than 90 percent lived through the Pacific coast, and more than two-thirds lived in California.
While the Chinese were originally welcomed as a source of low-wage labor, they later experienced a severe backlash as the Gold Rush came to an end and the transcontinental railroad was complete, leaving a large population of Chinese immigrants and American settlers in search of jobs, bringing out a fierce competition between the two groups. Chinese workers, who were often willing to work for less than their American counterparts, increasingly faced discriminatory state and local laws and violent

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