安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- How Chinese migrants in Los Angeles Chinatown gained self-reliance
Prior research has found that during that period, approximately 400,000 Chinese migrants came to the U S , many of whom went to California to build the Transcontinental Railroad
- Chinese in the California gold rush - Wikipedia
Chinese miners contributed to state and local tax revenues considerably and also took very little resources from the state Favorability towards exclusion shifted from being attributed to competition to being financially feasible in 1858 as California gained its economic footing
- Know Your Chinese American History – Chinese American Museum, Los Angeles
Although they were often paid low wages, the Chinese helped to change the landscape of California’s agriculture, creating the vineyards and the agricultural system of California
- Chinese Immigrants and the Gold Rush | American Experience | PBS
By 1870 there were 63,000 Chinese in U S , 77% of whom were in California That year, Chinese miners contributed more than $5 million to state's coffers through the Foreign Miners Tax,
- Chinese American Culture - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
All of the ethnic communities who worked the coastal waters during California’s early history should be recognized and honored for their skill, courage, and determination as they contributed to making California the world’s fifth largest economy
- Chinese-Americans: Remembering A Golden Legacy - PBS SoCal
With nothing to lose, approximately 25,000 Chinese immigrated to "Gam Saan," translated as "Gold Mountain" in Cantonese, by 1850 California owes much to the laborers of these Chinese immigrants, as they built most of the nation's entryway into the state - The Transcontinental Railroad
- Chinese Exclusion - calmigration. org
Chinese immigrants were among the first to arrive in California in 1849, as news spread of the fortunes that could be found in “Gam Saan” (Gold Mountain) In the next five years, 25,000 Chinese migrants arrived in California
- History of San Francisco’s Chinatown
The state of California initially tried to create legal blockades to Chinese immigration—and integration into American society—by requiring special licenses for businesses run by
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