Chinese Immigration and Exclusion Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What factors contributed to the Chinese Exclusion Act?



Similar documents
Irish Immigration Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Were the Irish considered white in the 19 th century?

Sample Lesson Handout 4 Stereotype and Caricature

Japanese Segregation in San Francisco Lesson Plan

Chinese Immigration in America Mr. Glazier US History II

Emancipation Proclamation Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Did Lincoln free the slaves or did the slaves free themselves?

Indian Removal Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did people in the 1830s support Indian Removal?

Title Why Did They Come? Key Words immigration, push factors, pull factors Grade Level 7 th grade, US History Time Allotted 60 minutes

Reconstruction SAC Lesson Plan

Immigration. The United States of America has long been the world s chief receiving

The Northern Economy and Industrialization Changes in the North

Louisiana Purchase Lesson Plan

Radical Reconstruction Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why was the Radical Republican plan for Reconstruction considered radical?

Social Security Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Which historical account of Social Security is more accurate?

Shays Rebellion. Central Historical Question: How did Americans react to Shays rebellion?

Ch. 15 Through Ellis Island and Angel Island: The Immigrant Experience/EQ: What was it like to be a an immigrant at the turn of the century?

Progressive Social Reformers SAC Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What were the attitudes of Progressive social reformers towards immigrants?

LESSON 5 Push-Pull Factors

Women in the 1950s. Central Historical Question: Is the image of the happy 1950s housewife accurate?

Sample Lesson Handout 1 Symbol and Metaphor

Lesson Plan: Citizenship

Chinese American: Exclusion/Inclusion Pre-Visit or Introductory Activity

Please note: Each segment in this Webisode has its own Teaching Guide

Cuban Missile Crisis Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did the Russians pull their missiles out of Cuba?

Grade 4: Module 3B: Unit 3: Lesson 2 Reading Opinion Pieces, Part II: How Authors Support Their Opinions with Reasons and Evidence

YOUNG BLACK MEN DON T FIT COMMON STEREOTYPES. Experiences of Young Black Men. Optimistic Views of Young Black Men

Chapter 16: The Economy of the West after the Civil War

AMERICAN HISTORY CHAPTER 7 WORKBOOK: IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION

Great Society Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Was the Great Society successful?

PUSD High Frequency Word List

French Revolution [10th grade]

Currency and Exchange Rates

Soldiers in the Philippines Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What accounted for American atrocities during the Philippine-American War?

Readers Theatre Gettysburg and Mr. Lincoln s Speech

Sedition in WWI Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Were critics of the First World War anti-american?

Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman. and the Underground Railroad. and the Underground Railroad LEVELED READER BOOK SA.

WILL WE BE MARRIED IN THE LIFE AFTER DEATH?

Cold War Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Who was primarily responsible for the Cold War: The United States or the Soviet Union?

Manifest Destiny Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: How did Americans justify Westward Expansion?

AN ASSEMBLY FOR HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL DAY 2016

Cold War Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Who was primarily responsible for the Cold War the United States or the Soviet Union?

Moral Issues and Catholic Values: The California Vote in 2008 Proposition 8

English as a Second Language Podcast ESL Podcast 292 Business Insurance

Your friend starts crying. He or she is married with two kids and a huge mortgage. Do you: Say you'll keep your mouth shut Go to 4

Hamilton vs. Jefferson Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: What were the differences between Hamilton and Jefferson?

RIGHTS OF DEAF AND HARD OF HEARING PEOPLE AT WORK

THE MAKING OF THE CONSTITUTION LESSON PLANS

T H E L E G I S L A T I V E B R A N C H

HOW TO RUN A SUCCESSFUL LAUNDRY BUSINESS FROM HOME

B.A. ENGLISH ENTRANCE TEST

Chapter 11 Quiz- The Roaring 1920s

Community Dialogue Participant s Guide. Lessons from Islamic Spain for Today s World

Before You Begin. Unit 14. Introduction. Learning Objectives. Materials Needed

Chapter 12 The South Section Notes Video Maps History Close-up Images Quick Facts

Devotion NT267 CHILDREN S DEVOTIONS FOR THE WEEK OF: LESSON TITLE: The Second Coming. THEME: Jesus is coming again. SCRIPTURE: Matthew 24:27-31

Jesus Parables in Chronological Order. Three Kingdom of Heaven Parables (#13-#15) Parable #13 Mark 4:26-29 The Growing Seed

The Age of Inventions

Quotes from Pope Francis on Immigration

AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE IN THE 19TH CENTURY

Jesus Parables in Chronological Order. Parable #41 ~ Matthew 24:32-35 ~ Signs From a Fig Tree ~ Scripture

The students will be introduced to the immigration station Ellis Island and participate in a reenactment of the experience of Ellis Island.

PHRASAL VERBS INTRODUCTION. The Òsmall wordsó in phrasal verbs are important, because they completely change the meaning.

YEAR 1: Kings, Queens and Leaders (6 lessons)

If you had a loan serviced by Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, your rights may be affected by a class action settlement, including your right to money.

CHAPTER 11 STRATEGY FOR SURVIVAL

Following the Wise Men What s Your Star? Matthew 2:1-12

HarperOne Reading and Discussion Guide for The Weight of Glory. Reading and Discussion Guide for. The Weight of Glory. C. S. Lewis.

2. What advice does the doctor send back? That he can find no medical reason for her illness, and he should look for an unnatural reason.

THEME: We need to completely trust in Jesus.

Three Branches of Government Webquest

No Greater Love Memorial Day May 26, 2013 Trinity United Methodist Church John 15:9-17

Declaration of Independence Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did the Founders write the Declaration of Independence?

Name: Class: Date: Lesson Assessment: The Home Front

The Amendments American History Lesson

TEACHING AMERICAN HISTORY PROJECT Lesson Title - Women and the Home Front-WWII From Lani Jones

Republican and Democratic Party 2012 Immigration Platform Comparison

JAMES Week 1: Persevere in Your Faith 1. LEADER PREPARATION

Helping Refugees. Grade Level: High School (9-12) Concept Areas: Social Studies, Government/Civics

Mitigation Works. 0 Earthquakes move mountains. But so do imagination and ingenuity when matched with implementation.

Overview. Mission Gate, ca. late 1700s Courtesy Texas Archeological Research Labs. Photo by Hunt Wellborn

miracles of jesus 1. LEADER PREPARATION

CORRELATION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS. 1 SE = Student Edition TE = Teacher Edition TR = Teacher Resources TECH = Technology

Equal marriage What the government says

Battling Beyond U.S. Borders

Stress Management. comprehend stress, (2) manage it and (3) respond positively to stress management as it applies to their life and goals.

Instructional Chunk #1: What is bias? How does bias effect perspective and opinion?

Interview with David Bouthiette [at AMHI 3 times] September 4, Interviewer: Karen Evans

Loans. What do you Want to Buy? Overhead 3-A. Beginner & Low-Intermediate Materials

A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens

MAKE BIG MONEY QUICKLY! Low Start Up Cost! Easy To Operate Business! UNLIMITED INCOME POTENTIAL!

Reformation Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Why did Luther challenge the Catholic Church?

ACTIVITY 7.1 Introduction to the Silk Road

Virginia Standards of Learning & Essential Historical Skills Taught

CHRISTIAN SERVICE. P a g e 1. Chapter 1: God s Call to Service

Watch Out When You Seek Help with Your Immigration Papers!

Mexican Wedding Traditions

Abraham Lincoln Pre-Test

Name: Abraham Lincoln. by Cynthia Sherwood

INTEGRATED SKILLS TEACHER S NOTES

CITIZENSHIP PETITION: CANDIDATE INFORMATION SHEET

TEACHING AMERICAN HISTORY PROJECT Lesson Title - Henry Ford & the Assembly Line Russell T. Hart

Transcription:

Lesson Plan Central Historical Question: What factors contributed to the Chinese Exclusion Act? Materials: Railroad PPT (one slide) United Streaming Video Segment: Perilous Endeavor (from The West: The Grandest Enterprise Under God: 1868-1874): http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidassetid=42602663-96b4-464d-87c6-2d47008403d0&blnfromsearch=1&productcode=us Timeline of Chinese Immigration in the 19 th Century Chinese Immigration Documents A-D Chinese Immigration Graphic Organizer Plan of Instruction: 1. Introduction: Show slide of Promontory Point, Utah. Mini-lecture: During Civil War, the North passed laws that helped industry (because the Southern representatives couldn t block them). Congress passed the Pacific Railway Act of 1863: the government would give RR companies free land and loan them money to build the transcontinental railroad (afterwards, the RR companies were supposed to sell the land on both sides of the track and pay back the government, but they never ended up doing that). Two companies competed to get the most land and money: Union Pacific (built tracks from East to West) and Central Pacific (built tracks from West to East). On May 10, 1869, the Central Pacific Railway met the Union Pacific Railway in Promontory Point, Utah, marking the completion of the transcontinental railroad. 2. Transition: the building of the railroad depended on the labor of hundreds of thousands of workers. In the West, most of the people who built the railroad were Chinese. Show United Streaming clip: Perilous Endeavor (7:24) (from The West: The Grandest Enterprise Under God: 1868-1874): http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidassetid=42602663-96b4-464d-87c6-2d47008403d0&blnfromsearch=1&productcode=us

3. Hand out Timelines. Review with students. Ask students: Use the timeline to generate hypotheses in response to this question: What happened between the 1860s, when Chinese were welcomed, and 1882, when they were excluded? Elicit student hypotheses and have students fill in hypothesis section of Graphic Organizer. Some hypotheses that students should come up with: They were just racist against the Chinese. The RR was finished, so they didn t need the Chinese anymore. The Panic of 1873 meant more people were looking for jobs and they didn t want to compete with Chinese. 4. Hand out Documents A-D and have students complete Graphic Organizer. 5. Explain homework: Write 1-page: What factors contributed to the Chinese Exclusion Act? Use evidence to support your answer. Citations: Lee Chew, The Biography of a Chinaman, Independent, 15 (19 February 1903), 417 423. http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/41/ Henry Grimm. The Chinese Must Go: A Farce in Four Acts. San Francisco: A.L. Bancroft & Co., Printers, 1879. http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/hb0m3n978s/?&brand=oac Thomas Nast. Cartoon. Harper s Weekly. February 18, 1871, p. 119. An Address From the Workingmen of San Francisco to Their Brothers Throughout the Pacific Coast. August 16, 1888. http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/hb7199n8g9/?&brand=oac Copyright 2009, Avishag Reisman and Bradley Fogo.

Timeline of 1848 Gold discovered at Sutter's Mill, California; many Chinese arrive to mine for gold. 1850 Foreign Miners tax mainly targets Chinese and Mexican miners. 1852 Approximately 25,000 Chinese in America. 1854 Court rules that Chinese cannot give testimony in court. 1862 Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association forms. 1865 Central Pacific Railroad recruits Chinese workers; ultimately employs about 15,000 Chinese workers. 1869 First transcontinental railroad completed. 1870 California passes a law against the importation of Chinese and Japanese women for prostitution. 1871 Los Angeles: anti-chinese violence; 18 Chinese killed. 1873 Panic of 1873; start of major economic downturn that last through the decade; blamed on corrupt RR companies. 1877 Chico, CA: anti-chinese violence. 1878 Court rules Chinese ineligible for naturalized citizenship. 1880 Approximately 106,000 Chinese in America; California passes anti-miscegenation law (no interracial marriage). 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act: prohibits Chinese immigration (in one year, Chinese immigration drops from 40,000 to 23). 1885 Rock Springs Wyoming Anti-Chinese Violence. 1892 Geary Act extends Chinese Exclusion Act.

Document A: Anti-Chinese Play, 1879 If this document were your ONLY piece of evidence, how would you answer the question: Why did Americans pass the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act? Source: The page above comes from a play called The Chinese Must Go: A Farce in Four Acts by Henry Grimm, published in San Francisco, 1879. In just the first page, you will be able to see many of the common stereotypes of Chinese immigrants in the 19 th century.

Document B: Political Cartoon, 1871 If this document were your ONLY piece of evidence, how would you answer the question: Why did Americans pass the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act? Source: The cartoon was drawn by Thomas Nast for Harper s Weekly, a Northern magazine. In this cartoon, we see Columbia, the feminine symbol of the United States, protecting a Chinese man against a gang of Irish and German thugs. At the bottom it says "Hands off-gentlemen! America means fair play for all men."

Document C: Workingmen of San Francisco (Modified) If this document were your ONLY piece of evidence, how would you answer the question: Why did Americans pass the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act? We have met here in San Francisco tonight to raise our voice to you in warning of a great danger that seems to us imminent, and threatens our almost utter destruction as a prosperous community. The danger is, that while we have been sleeping in fancied security, believing that the tide of Chinese immigration to our State had been checked and was in a fair way to be entirely stopped, our opponents, the pro-china wealthy men of the land, have been wide-awake and have succeeded in reviving the importation of this Chinese slave-labor. So that now, hundreds and thousands of Chinese are every week flocking into our State. Today, every avenue to labor, of every sort, is crowded with Chinese slave labor worse than it was eight years ago. The boot, shoe and cigar industries are almost entirely in their hands. In the manufacture of men s overalls and women s and children s underwear they run over three thousand sewing machines night and day. They monopolize nearly all the farming done to supply the market with all sorts of vegetables. This state of things brings about a terrible competition between our own people, who must live as civilized Americans, and the Chinese, who live like degraded slaves. We should all understand that this state of things cannot be much longer endured. Vocabulary Imminent: about to happen Source: The document above is a speech to the workingmen of San Francisco on August 16, 1888.

Document D: Autobiography of a Chinese Immigrant (Modified) If this document were your ONLY piece of evidence, how would you answer the question: Why did Americans pass the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act? The treatment of the Chinese in this country is all wrong and mean... There is no reason for the prejudice against the Chinese. The cheap labor cry was always a falsehood. Their labor was never cheap, and is not cheap now. It has always commanded the highest market price. But the trouble is that the Chinese are such excellent and faithful workers that bosses will have no others when they can get them. If you look at men working on the street you will find a supervisor for every four or five of them. That watching is not necessary for Chinese. They work as well when left to themselves as they do when some one is looking at them. It was the jealousy of laboring men of other nationalities especially the Irish that raised the outcry against the Chinese. No one would hire an Irishman, German, Englishman or Italian when he could get a Chinese, because our countrymen are so much more honest, industrious, steady, sober and painstaking. Chinese were persecuted, not for their vices [sins], but for their virtues [good qualities]. There are few Chinamen in jails and none in the poor houses. There are no Chinese tramps or drunkards. Many Chinese here have become sincere Christians, in spite of the persecution which they have to endure from their heathen countrymen. More than half the Chinese in this country would become citizens if allowed to do so, and would be patriotic Americans. But how can they make this country their home as matters now are! They are not allowed to bring wives here from China, and if they marry American women there is a great outcry. Under the circumstances, how can I call this my home, and how can any one blame me if I take my money and go back to my village in China? Source: The passage above is from Lee Chew, The Biography of a Chinaman, Independent, 15 (19 February 1903), 417 423.

Name : Graphic Organizer What factors contributed to the Chinese Exclusion Act? STEP 1: Read the timeline carefully. Write your HYPOTHESES for why the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed in 1882. STEP 2: Read document A-D. For each, write any evidence you find for what led to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. Document A: Play Based on this document, why did many white Americans support the Chinese Exclusion Act? Document B: Nast Cartoon Document C: Workingmen speech Document D: Lee Chew s Autobiography

In the space below, answer the following question: Why did Americans pass the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882? Use evidence from the documents and the timeline.