Chinese Exclusion Act Research Paper

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The Chinese Exclusion Act was passed in 1882 to target Chinese immigrants coming to the United States. It restricted Chinese immigration to the U.S. as well as prevented Chinese immigrants from returning back to America after leaving. A majority of the workers in California were Chinese males, because they were viewed as better workers. This of course made the natives hate the Chinese, leading to violent conflicts between the races. To add on, they had a different culture and lifestyle than the typical people in America. Racial conflicts continued to arise with more and more Chinese immigrants coming to the U.S., until the government restricted the Chinese immigration altogether with the Chinese Exclusion Act. The Chinese Exclusion Act and the hatred towards the Chinese was mainly caused by the competition for jobs and because they had a different …show more content…

In fact, the Central Pacific Railroad Company employed “about 15,000 Chinese workers” (Timeline). Fifteen thousand people is considerably large especially when they are all working under the same company. The Central Pacific Railroad Company probably fired so many Chinese immigrants, because they were good workers who took any pay. Even the Chinese thought that they were better workers than the white people. According to an autobiography of a Chinese immigrant, “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” (Chew). Nevertheless, a Chinese male was usually chosen over a white male for a job during the 19th to 20th century, because they were viewed as better workers, leading to conflicts between the natives and

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