Everything started going well until the 1930’s hit, that's when they started to suffer an extremely low rate because of when the Great Depression. 200 or even more businesses were closed down in Chinatown. When the war ended they started to reopen their businesses which made the population increase. This had a downside because due to the living conditions the lived in an extremely small apartment. This was a problem because newly immigrated Chinese had to find a home or with people around the city. Some of the apartments had 12 people in a home and only had two beds to sleep in. Around the 1950s and early 1960s, Chinatown was destroyed to provide space for a new project which was Nathan Phillips Square also for the new City Hall. Whatever
The Chinese laborers were signed to five-year contracts, after those five years around half returned to China while the other half stayed, creating Honolulu’s Chinatown. The neighborhood quickly grew with around 6,000 people occupying it. But in 1886 a fire broke out and destroyed eight blocks of Chinatown. The government responded to this fire by putting building restrictions, sadly none of those were enforced causing more rickety buildings to be built. In 1900 Chinatown became quarantined thanks to the Black Death. An answer to this solution was “sanitary fires” to try to prevent further spread of the disease.
There are some main causes The great depression, first in 1934 per week They made $ 4.80 per week and They paid $ 3 by The incomes of Their Homes, all that happened to Birmingham Alabama in 1934, in Chicago everything rises for The men and The women for the food , And then spent $ 1.10 that was spent on food in stores, The three cases are The three cases were The financial downfall, low wages, and unemployment.
As per the book, the Chinese started working on a low wages replacing the jobs for other population. As result Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882, effectively barring Chinese immigration. This reduced the Chinese population. Document 17 -1 'Pun Chi Appeals to congress in Behalf of Chinese Immigrants In California' explains the poor condition
Chinatown is an ethnic neighborhood in the metropolitan area of Los Angeles, California. The grand opening of Chinatown took place on June 25, 1938 in Central Plaza, which would later become well-known for its dynamic Chinese American community. However, the original Chinatown, now referred to as “Old Chinatown”, developed around 1870. With the migration and settlement of Chinese in Los Angeles throughout the late 19th century, a recognizable neighborhood (“Chinatown”) was established on Calle de Los Negros between El Pueblo Plaza and Old Arcadia Street. As the Chinese workers dominated in their fields, their neighborhood grew significantly. Old Chinatown spread farther and achieved a population of more than 3000 people. It was not only a residential
1929-1940 was the most traumatic years for people of the United States because in 1929 one of the biggest stock market crashes. In 1929 the economy was thriving, families were buying homes and cars were being sold at record numbers. As the stock mark crashed many families lost most of all their possessions including their houses and about one quarter of the United States workforce lost their jobs to the crash. During and after the stock mark crash most Americans were forced to adapt to the rapidly changing economic conditions by making significant changes to the spending habits and lifestyles. This crash tremendously affected the lives of the peopling living in the 30’s.
The United States experienced both the Great Depression and harsh weather conditions during the 1930’s causing Americans to suffer through extreme hardship and impoverishment. Many of the migrant farmers were bankrupt, destitute, and struggled to survive. Photographer and photojournalist, Dorothea Lange, captured the dangerous conditions migrant workers and their families endured through her photograph, Migrant Mother. The photograph not only displays a woman and children suffering, but also reveals the determination and willpower the woman had to provide for her family.
The assigned readings offered an interesting and complex view of some of the diverse groups of people who were marginalized in California during the Great Depression of the 1930s. The primary sources shared detailed information on how Mexicans, Filipinos, and White Americas experienced hostility and inequality in California. In Resistance, Radicalism, and Repression on the Oxnard Plain, Frank Barajas discusses how beet sugar growers on the Oxnard Plain cut the wages of Mexican laborers working in their fields. This ignited an uproar and began a strike movement among the betaberleros (sugar beet workers), who felt it was an injustice to lower wages and face discrimination just because they were minorities (Barajaos, 29-51). As commotion was occurring within the Oxnard Plain of California, conflict between the residents of the agricultural community of Watsonville and the Filipino farm labor community emerged. Many Watsonville residents showed a strong anti-Filipino sentiment, as well as social and sexual stereotyping of Filipinos (Witt, 293). This tension between Watsonville residents and Filipinos sparked the Watsonville Riot of 1930 (Witt, 299-300).
The mass of Chinese immigrants to a common ground in California paved the way for the emergence of Chinese enclaves referred to as Chinatowns. Early 20th century Chinatowns were associated with filth, depravity, and violence by American society. Chinatowns became very tight
Early Chinese immigrants became laborers in mines and railroads. Due to many chinese immigrants taking jobs, there was a backlash in the 1870s against Chinese immigrants in the work force. The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act was passed, which excluded Chinese laborers from entering the country barred all immigrants of Chinese descent from obtaining citizenship. Chinatowns were immigrant neighborhoods, where the old country still lives inside the new one. “As the American economy weakened, the Chinese labor force became a threat to mainstream society”(Chinatown Resource guide).
In 1850, Chinese immigrants in San Francisco established a Chinatown, others soon followed. Boston’s Chinatown was established by 1875. Chinatown was then, as it still is now, a place of support and security where one could find a bed, job, and social services; a place of cultural familiarity where one could share common food, language, and customs. Excluded from the larger society, Chinatown was home.
The early to mid 20th century brought forth an America submerged in modernism, advanced technology, reformed social views, and in the 1920’s a skyrocketing economy. However, this time was also plagued by 2 high fatality wars, development of extremely dangerous weapons, ill treatment of people brought on by fear, the Great Depression, and some government policies that eventually failed. The first 45 years of the 1900’s were marked by irregular and exceptionally large shifts in culture and technology that the beginning of the century is completely disparate from the middle of the century.
The development of Chinatown first began with the many Chinese immigrants that appeared in the United States. Because of the Transcontinental Railroad, many Chinese immigrants were paid laborers working on the project and were thought of by employers as reliable laborers who would work, without complaint, even under strenuous conditions(Norton 1924, 283–296). Chinese immigrants came in waves because of the grand opportunity. These immigrants were paid significantly lower wages than white workers, then blamed Chinese laborers for lashing down pay and taking away jobs. After the railroad was completed and white laborers in other industries began to fear for their jobs, anti-Chinese attacks increased, including beatings, arson and
October 29, 1929, would be the start of one of America's worst epidemics. The Great Depression was a time in America where the economy and American lifestyle completely crashed. This depression impacted the workforce of the time greatly, causing people to lose jobs and soon go homeless.
I have been around touring multiple states throughout the country. During my visit I have met a number of people who are hardworking, persistent and willing to help out in whatever way they can. They are all worried though, ever since the great depression has started they have been struggling, not just one but all as a whole. Families are poor, starving, and homeless. Natural disasters like windstorms and floods are also making it impossible for all these people to get up on their feet. Theses are your people, they are the backbone of america, it is hard to see men women and children struggle to gain daily life needs when they should just be essentials. While walking down the streets of Illinois I encountered multiple kids running around
Chinese started immigrating to California in 1850, in the hope to find gold, become rich, and to find better opportunities. Most of the time, the men left their families and came to America themselves in hope to return to their mainland with money to help their families. The types of jobs they received when they arrived were working on railroads, intensive farming, and domestic work that whites wanted nothing apart of. As more Chinese kept coming over, the people of the United States realized how many Chinese were in the U.S. and decided to try to keep them out. They did this by violent attacks, discriminatory laws, newspaper articles, and the Chinese Exclusion Act which stopped immigration of Chinese for 10 years. The Chinese responded to all this violence and tried moving east or settled into the ghettos of American cities which are referred to as “Chinatowns.” Chinatowns were depressing areas and they consisted of lonely men who got involved in prostitution, gambling, and