Closing the golden door : Asian migration and the hidden history of exclusion at Ellis Island
(2021)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : The University of North Carolina Press, 2021
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781469665733 (electronic bk.) MWT14656529, 1469665735 (electronic bk.) 14656529
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The immigration station at New York's Ellis Island opened in 1892 and remained the largest U.S. port for immigrant entry until World War I. In popular memory, Ellis Island is typically seen as a gateway for Europeans seeking to join the "great American melting pot." But as this fresh examination of Ellis Island's history reveals, it was also a major site of immigrant detention and exclusion, especially for Chinese, Japanese, and other Asian travelers and maritime laborers who reached New York City from Europe, the Americas and the Caribbean, and even within the United States. And from 1924 to 1954, the station functioned as a detention camp and deportation center for a range of people deemed undesirable. Anna Pegler-Gordon draws on immigrants' oral histories and memoirs, government archives, newspapers, and other sources to reorient the history of migration and exclusion in the United States. In chronicling the circumstances of those who passed through or were detained at Ellis Island, she shows that Asian exclusion was both larger in scope and more limited in force than has been previously recognized

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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