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Immigration Japanese
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The U.S. Mainland: Growth and Resistance

In the mainland of the United States, Japanese immigration began much more slowly and took hold much more tentatively than it had in Hawaii. While an initial handful of adventurers left Japan for California in the 1860s, the number of immigrants did not reach the thousands until the 1880s. By 1900 there were still fewer than 25,000 Japanese nationals in the U.S. These early arrivals scattered up and down the Pacific coast, forming small communities within small towns and larger cities, such as San Francisco's Japan Town. Farm labor was a common choice among the first immigrants, but they also could be found in lumber mills and mining camps, and sometimes established general stores, restaurants, and small hotels.

Union member Taro Yoshihara
Union member Taro Yoshihara, 1917

The turn of the century saw the beginning of a great twenty-five-year surge of immigration, in which more than 100,000 Japanese nationals arrived in the U.S., and during which many of the foundational institutions of the Japanese American community were established. These newcomers at first found much of their employment in migratory labor, working the farms, mines, canneries, and railroads of the American West, sometimes becoming active in the labor agitation of the period. Eventually, however, many were able to launch their own businesses, at first serving the needs of their own community with Japanese restaurants, boarding houses, and shops, but soon opening department stores and tailoring chains that catered to the general public. Japanese cooperative societies, such as the Japanese Associations, provided financial support and advice to many such enterprises. Many Japanese farmers, using the labor-intensive growing methods of their homeland, were able to buy their own land and launch successful agricultural businesses, from farms to produce shops. By 1920, Japanese immigrant farmers controlled more than 450,000 acres of land in California, brought to market more than 10 percent of its crop revenue, and had produced at least one American-made millionaire.

newspaper article, 1905
Newspaper article, 1905

Even at the peak of immigration, Japanese immigrants never made up more than a tiny percentage of the U.S. population. However, by the early years of the century, organized campaigns had already arisen to exclude Japanese immigrants from U.S. life. Sensational reports appeared in the English-language press portraying the Japanese as the enemies of the American worker, as a menace to American womanhood, and as corrupting agents in American society-in other words, repeating many of the same slanders as had been used against Chinese immigrants in the decades before. The head of the American Federation of Labor, Samuel Gompers, denounced all Asians and barred them from membership in the nation's largest union. Legislators and mayors called for a Japanese Exclusion Act to protect the U.S. from "the brown toilers of the mikado's realm." Anti-Japanese legislation quickly followed. In 1908, the Japanese and American governments arrived at what became known as the "Gentlemen's Agreement"; Japan agreed to limit emigration to the U.S., while the U.S. granted admission to the wives, children, and other relatives of immigrants already resident. Five years later, the California legislature passed the Alien Land Law, which barred all aliens ineligible for citizenship, and therefore all Asian immigrants, from owning land in California, even land they had purchased years before.

These new legal barriers led to elaborate circumventions of the law, as Japanese landowners registered their property in the names of European Americans, or in the names of their own U.S.-born children. Meanwhile, Japanese immigration became disproportionately female, as more women left Japan as "picture brides", betrothed to emigrant men in the U.S. who they had never met. Finally, the Immigration Act of 1924 imposed severe restrictions on all immigration from non-European countries, and effectively ended Japanese immigration, supposedly forever. For as long as this Act was in effect, it seemed that the first great generation of Japanese immigrants was also to be the last.

Reading at the Chicago Y.M.C.A.
Reading at the Chicago Y.M.C.A., 1915

The Nisei
As the hopes of future immigrants were dashed, however, a new generation of Japanese Americans was making itself known. By 1930, half of the Japanese in the United States were Nisei—members of the U.S.-born second generation. Nisei were the children of two worlds: the traditional Japanese world maintained at home by their parents—the Issei—and the multiethnic U.S. culture that they were immersed in at school and at work. The Nisei were born U.S. citizens, and were more likely to speak English than Japanese, more likely to practice Christianity than Buddhism, and more likely to prefer "American" food, sports, music, and social mores than those of Japanese tradition. Many Nisei struggled to reconcile the conflicting demands of their complex cultural heritage. However, they overwhelmingly identified themselves as Japanese Americans, not as Japanese in America.

The Japanese American Citizens League, an organization of Nisei professionals, declared in its creed:

I am proud that I am an American citizen of Japanese ancestry, for my very background makes me appreciate more fully the wonderful advantages of this nation… I pledge myself… to defend her against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
These words were published in 1940. Before the next year was out, the Japanese American community would find its resolve, its resilience, and its faith in the nation put to a severe test.

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last updated 02/02/04 view basic version

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Irish
1790 The federal government requires two years of residency for naturalization
1864 Congress legalizes the importation of contract laborers
1819 Congress establishes reporting on immigration
1868   Japanese laborers arrive in Hawaii to work sugar cane fields. (Japanese)
1885   Congress bans the admission of contract laborers.
1929   Congress makes annual immigration quotas permanent.
1948   Supreme Court rules that California’s Alien Land Laws prohibiting ownership of agricultural property violates the Constitution’s 14th Amendment.

The United States admits persons fleeing persecution in their native lands; allowing 205,000 refugees to enter within two years
1952 Immigration and Nationality Act: individuals of all races eligible for naturalization; reaffirms national origins quota system, limits immigration from Eastern Hemisphere; establishes preferences for skilled workers and relatives of U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens; and tightens security and screening standards and procedures
1953 Congress amends 1948 refugee policy to allow for the admission of 200,000 more refugees
1980   The Refugee Act redefines criteria and procedures for admitting refugees
1986   Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) legalizes illegal aliens residing in the U.S. unlawfully since 1982.
1907   The U.S. and Japan form “Gentleman’s Agreement” in which Japan ends issuance of passports to laborers; U.S. agrees not to prohibit Japanese immigration.
1913   California’s Alien Land Law rules that aliens “ineligible to citizenship” were ineligible to own agricultural property.
1915   The Supreme Court rules in Ozawa v. United States first-generation Japanese ineligible for citizenship and could not apply for naturalization.
1924   Immigration Act of 1924: establishes fixed quotas of national origin and eliminates Far East immigration.
1988   Civil Liberties Act provides a presidential apology and compensation of $20,000 to all Japanese-American survivors of the World War II internment camps.
2001   A memorial honoring Japanese-American veterans and detainees opens on the edge of the Capitol grounds in Washington, D.C.
1941 Japan’s surprise attack on Pearl Harbor galvanizes America’s war effort; over 1,000 Japanese-American community leaders incarcerated for “national security”.
1942 President Franklin Roosevelt signs Executive Order 9066: authorizes building “relocation camps” for Japanese Americans living along the Pacific Coast.
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