Log In  |  Register Now  
 Home | Syndication Services | Media Features | Research Center | Archive | Contributors | About Us

To receive emails containing headlines and highlights from The Globalist,
sign up here.



Topic

Companies

Culture

Development

Diplomacy

Economy

Environment

Finance

Health

History

Markets

Media

Music

Politics

Religion

Security

Sports

Technology

Women

Youth


Region

Africa

Asia-Pacific

Europe

Latin America

Middle East

North America


Globalist Bookshelf

Best Books of 2012

Best Books of 2011


Editorial Staff

Contributors

Jobs & Internships


Subscribers to The Globalist's premium services can log in here:

Username:

Password:

Forgot your password?



 

Order "Driven Out" here. Read Part II here.

Globalist Bookshelf > Global History
Dog Tags for Chinese Immigrants
 

By Jean Pfaelzer | Monday, September 03, 2007
 

Much attention is currently focused on the 12 million illegal immigrants who call the United States home. As Jean Pfaelzer — the author of "Driven Out" — writes, today's immigration debate is strikingly similar to the backlash against Chinese Americans in the late 19th century. She traces the civil disobedience campaign that Chinese Americans waged in an effort to protect their liberties.


n September 19, 1892, the presidents of the Chinese Six Companies, initially organizations of Chinese merchants established in major cities across the United States, ordered all 110,000 Chinese immigrants in the United States to commit mass civil disobedience.

Red leaflets appeared on the walls and windows of Chinatowns throughout the country commanding Chinese to defy the new Geary Act that required Chinese residents to carry a photo identification card to prove that they were legal immigrants.

The Dog Tag Law

Thousands honored the call to disobey the “Dog Tag Law,” and they faced immediate deportation.
Democratic Congressman Thomas Geary had seized on anti-Chinese sentiment — and wrote an identification bill that easily passed the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Their refusal to carry an identity card, America’s first internal passport, created perhaps the largest organized act of civil disobedience in the United States.

The identification cards had their roots in slavery. Before the Civil War, enslaved blacks had often been forced to carry identifying passes when they left their plantations — and free blacks were required to bear papers proving that they were not slaves.

Now, following four decades of forced expulsions in the Pacific Northwest, Chinese immigrants were similarly compelled to carry an “orderly scheme of individual identification and certification” to “protect their right to remain in the country.”

Unfair treatment

In 1892, with a presidential election fast approaching, Democratic congressman Thomas Geary of Sonoma County California, had seized on anti-Chinese sentiment.

He wrote an identification bill that easily passed the House of Representatives, 178-43, and the Senate, 30-15. The Geary Act gave a Chinese laborer one year to register for a certificate or face immediate deportation.

A long struggle

The identity card was to contain two duplicate photographs that were “securely affixed to the papers by strongly adhesive paste… The photographs shall be sun pictures, such as are usually known as card photographs, of
America's first internal passport created perhaps the largest organized act of civil disobedience in the United States.
sufficient size and distinctness to plainly and accurately represent the entire face of the applicant, the head to be not less than 1.5 inches from base of hair to base of chin.”

The Geary Act initiated an intense two-year struggle as the Chinese defied restrictive judicial decisions, repressive congressional acts and mob violence.

As soon as the 1892 act was signed into law by President Harrison, the Six Companies declared, “No other nation in the world treats Chinese like the United States does… We must organize and subscribe money to hire lawyers to defend ourself. We must…complain to the ambassadors of our own Government to help us fight against this injustice.”

Humiliating the Chinese

The Geary Act did more than require the Chinese to wear identification cards. It extended the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the first law to ban immigration based on race, for ten more years and restated the ban against Chinese immigrants becoming U.S. citizens.

Another humiliating provision called for two white witnesses to testify to a Chinese person’s immigration status. This was the first time a federal statute included a racial condition on the right to testify.

And it was the first time that illegal immigration became a federal crime punishable by a year’s imprisonment with hard labor

Changing laws

The identification cards used for "tagging" the Chinese immigrants had their roots in slavery.

Tom Riordan, the San Francisco attorney who had represented the Chinese in earlier civil rights suits, stated: “This Act is clearly unconstitutional…if a Chinaman is found in this country without a certificate, the burden of proof in showing that he has a right to remain here is thrown upon him, whereas the Constitution provides that in an action of this kind the man is presumed innocent until he is proved guilty and then the proof of his guilt falls on the Government.”

Editor's Note: This feature is adapted from DRIVEN OUT: THE FORGOTTEN WAR AGAINST CHINESE AMERICANS by Jean Pfaelzer. Copyright 2007 by Jean Pfaelzer. Reprinted with permission of the author.

Read Part II here.




Join the discussion of this article on our Facebook page.

Follow The Globalist on Twitter.




Copyright © 2000-2013 by The Globalist. Reproduction of content on this site without The Globalist's written permission is strictly prohibited. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

The Globalist claims full trademark rights to The Globalist name and logos.

1100 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20036