Driven Out: The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans by Jean Pfaelzer

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(Hardcover)

  • Publisher: Random House Inc
  • Pub. Date: May 2007
  • ISBN-13: 9781400061341
  • Sales Rank: 136,266
  • 432pp
 
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Synopsis

A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK

The brutal and systematic “ethnic cleansing” of Chinese Americans in California and the Pacific Northwest in the second half of the nineteenth century is a shocking–and virtually unexplored–chapter of American history. Driven Out unearths this forgotten episode in our nation’s past. Drawing on years of groundbreaking research, Jean Pfaelzer reveals how, beginning in 1848, lawless citizens and duplicitous politicians purged dozens of communities of thousands of Chinese residents–and how the victims bravely fought back.
In town after town, as races and classes were pitted against one another in the raw and anarchistic West, Chinese miners and merchants, lumberjacks and field workers, prostitutes and merchants’ wives, were gathered up at gunpoint and marched out of town, sometimes thrown into railroad cars along the very tracks they had built.

Here, in vivid detail, are unforgettable incidents such as the torching of the Chinatown in Antioch, California, after Chinese prostitutes were accused of giving seven young men syphilis, and a series of lynchings in Los Angeles bizarrely provoked by a Chinese wedding. From the port of Seattle to the mining towns in California’s Siskiyou Mountains to “Nigger Alley” in Los Angeles, the first Chinese Americans were hanged, purged, and banished. Chinatowns across the West were burned to the ground.

But the Chinese fought back: They filed the first lawsuits for reparations in the United States, sued for the restoration of their property, prosecuted white vigilantes, demanded the right to own land, and, yearsbefore Brown v. Board of Education, won access to public education for their children. Chinese Americans organized strikes and vegetable boycotts in order to starve out towns that tried to expel them. They ordered arms from China and, with Winchester rifles and Colt revolvers, defended themselves. In 1893, more than 100,000 Chinese Americans refused the government’s order to wear photo identity cards to prove their legal status–the largest mass civil disobedience in United States history to that point.

Driven Out features riveting characters, both heroic and villainous, white and Asian. Charles McGlashen, a newspaper editor, spearheaded a shift in the tactics of persecution, from brutality to legal boycotts of the Chinese, in order to mount a run for governor of California. Fred Bee, a creator of the Pony Express, became the Chinese consul and one of the few attorneys willing to defend the Chinese. Lum May, a dry goods store owner, saw his wife dragged from their home and driven insane. President Grover Cleveland, hoping that China’s 400,000 subjects would buy the United States out of its economic crisis, persuaded China to abandon the overseas Chinese in return for a trade treaty. Quen Hing Tong, a merchant, sought an injunction against the city of San Jose in an important precursor to today’s suits against racial profiling and police brutality.

In Driven Out, Jean Pfaelzer sheds a harsh light on America’s past. This is a story of hitherto unknown racial pogroms, purges, roundups, and brutal terror, but also a record of valiant resistance and community. This deeply resonant and eye-opening work documents a significant and disturbing episode in American history.

“Jean Pfaelzer has pulled back the veil on one of the most horrendous, frightening, violent, and little known moments in American history, when the Chinese were driven from their homes and businesses in an effort to expel them from communities, states, and ultimately the country.  This is the most comprehensive history of this period I have ever read, and Pfaelzer has written it with sensitivity and a keen eye for the horrifying, heartbreaking, and often uplifting and triumphant details.  Driven Out couldn't be more timely or important.”
 –Lisa See, Author, Snow Flower and the Secret Fan
 
“Driven Out: the Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans is a meticulously researched and very readable recounting of America’s systematic effort to purge all Chinese immigrants, from the mid-19th into the early-20th centuries. Jean Pfaelzer documents hundreds of cases in which the Chinese were lynched, maimed, burned out of their neighborhoods, and forced at gunpoint to leave mining camps, small villages, Indian reservations, and Chinatowns. The methodical and ruthless nature of this ethnic cleansing was matched only by the resistance from the Chinese — sometimes with guns and knives or fists and sometimes with savvy recourse to their government representatives as well as petitions, public confrontations, and hundreds of lawsuits using white attorneys up to the U.S. Supreme Court. Pfaelzer has names and stories for these incidents — making the actors real and accessible. This is a valuable addition to our understanding of the making of modern America.”
–Franklin Odo, Director, Smithsonian Institution Asian Pacific American Program; Author, The Columbia Documentary History of the Asian American Experience

“Thanks to this gripping narrative, Chinese immigrants to the Far West — so long overlooked — now stand front and center in the saga of the struggle for civil rights in these United States.”
– Kevin Starr, University of Southern California; Author, California, A History

"Too few Americans have any idea that these events mark the nation’s past. Pfaelzer capably reconstructs a shameful history.”
Kirkus Reviews






Kirkus Reviews

For the last half of the 19th century, Americans mounted an ecumenical campaign to expel Chinese immigrants, as this far-ranging, disturbing book chronicles. Pfaelzer (English/Univ. of Delaware) taught for many years in Eureka, in northernmost California, where on arriving she remarked on the absence of Asian American students. "I was told," she writes, "that Chinese parents would not send their kids to HSU because ninety years earlier all the Chinese had been driven from Eureka." The grim campaign of 1885 was little documented, as were similar episodes up and down the Pacific Coast. The drive against the Chinese began almost the moment that Chinese arrived to work in the gold fields of California, she writes; though threatened and badly outnumbered, the Chinese refused to abandon their claims, and violence ensued, despite the efforts of local heroes such as the fair-minded, Kentucky-born Sheriff Clay Stockton. Chinese importers of labor continued to deliver workers to the railroads and lumberyards, while other workers established restaurants and laundries; though their work was needed, these men without women were also feared and despised. The campaign of pai hua, or "Driven Out," intensified long after the gold rush, when unemployed whites began to arrive in the Northwest in number and demand their share of the economy; even African Americans participated, while in San Francisco, the Anti-Coolie League met every Friday at the local B'nai B'rith chapter. Against them, as Pfaelzer writes, the threatened Chinese resisted, mostly by legal means and even within the legal system, while some white politicians attempted to persuade vigilantes to "deprecate all violence or undue force in theexpulsion of the Chinese as inviting the interference of the Federal Courts." The violence continued, however, to the point that the government of China was finally moved to protest, to little avail. Too few Americans have any idea that these events mark the nation's past. Pfaelzer capably reconstructs a shameful history. Agent: Sandra Dijkstra/Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency

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Biography

Jean Pfaelzer is professor of English and American studies at the University of Delaware. The author of four other books and numerous articles on nineteenth-century history, culture, women’s literature, feminist theory, and cultural theory, she has served as the executive director of the National Labor Law Center, been appointed to the D.C. Commission for Women, and worked for a member of Congress on immigration, labor, and women’s issues. She lives near Washington, D.C.

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Driven Out: The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americansby Anonymous

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January 20, 2008: My husband moved our family to Humboldt County in 1988. We lived in this racist county for eight years. During this time, I was told of the 1885 loading of Chinese residents onto ships in Eureka, to be sent to San Francisco, by many locals who gleefully bragged of this event, as if it had just occurred, instead of one hundred years before. When we finally sold our property (in 1996) I left Humboldt County for good. If I never return to Eureka, it will be too soon...