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During the 1800s Chinese were mostly found in rural areas. In 1870, only 24 percent of California's Chinese resided in the San Francisco Bay Area. After the Exclusion Act, the Chinese American community went through a series of changes. By 1900, two-thirds of the state's Chinese lived in urban areas, and 45 percent of them were living in the Bay Area. Many ex-miners and railroad workers migrated to cities looking for jobs. More sinisterly, anti-Chinese riots in Seattle, Washington; Rock Springs, Wyoming; and other regions of the West drove hundreds of Chinese from rural areas to the relative safety of big cities like San Francisco for a modicum of protection from white racism. In San Francisco, Chinese could find immigrants like themselves who spoke the same language, came from the same culture, and ate the same food. Secret societies known as tongs provided support, friendship, and sometimes illegal activities to partake in. Fongs made up of family members from the same villages in China were also formed. The Chinese Six Companies bound together the community's largest businesses and provided leadership. There were also temples and Chinese theaters. In addition, San Francisco offered job opportunities as the city was already one of the country's largest manufacturing centers. There was also work in Chinatown's ethnic economy in laundries or restaurants. Almost all of these
workers and inhabitants were men at the time. The Chinese in California
were known as a bachelor society. Many had heard of the opportunities
in the Golden State and left their families behind in China, believing
that they could quickly make their fortune and then return home rich.
In reality, few Chinese were able to fulfill these dreams. Most prostitutes lived in working-class brothels. Even lower in status were those who worked in "cribs," small street-level rooms with bar-covered windows. From these windows, the women would call at men offering their services for different prices. Most women were treated like slaves and were open to all kinds of diseases suck as sexually transmitted diseases and opium addiction. Some were even beaten by their masters. The prostitute in
this photo is looking out onto a street in San Francisco's Chinatown waiting
for possible customers to pass by her "crib." By the time the
photo was taken (around 1905), the population of Chinese women had changed
dramatically. By 1900 the majority of Chinese women in America were wives,
and the days when almost every female could be considered a prostitute
were over. |
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