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Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Angel Island: Gateway to Gold Mountain, by Russell Freedman -- Day 89



Angel Island, in San Francisco Bay in California, was the official entry point to the United States for numerous Chinese, Japanese and Korean people as well as those from other nations, for thirty years during the early part of the twentieth century. Sometimes referred to as “The Ellis Island of the West,” the immigration center presented a formidable hurdle for many immigrants who, in addition to undergoing the standard health and welfare assessments, were detained unduly for extensive questioning about relatives in the States and their own ability to provide for themselves. Chinese in particular had a difficult time entering: they were affected by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1892 that limited immigration to members of exempt classes, native-born citizens, or wives and foreign-born children of citizens. Overall, it was an unwelcoming situation, particularly frustrating when so many Chinese in earlier decades had been indispensable workers in the construction of western railroads and other endeavors in the States. Always, they came to our western shores specifically to make a better life in the country known as Gold Mountain. Angel Island: Gateway to Gold Mountain begins as author Russell Freedman recounts how a California state park ranger noticed Chinese characters inscribed on the walls of an abandoned building on Angel Island in 1970. Feeling sure these writings were a significant record of prior times when immigrants inhabited the building, he advocated for their preservation. Years later with the support of Asian American groups and others, reclamation efforts moved forward until finally, in 2009, Angel Island Immigration Station opened to the public as a National Historic Landmark. Freedman draws extensively on memoirs, diaries, letters and photos to bring the Angel Island experience into sharp focus. Ages 10-14.


The immigration facility on the east coast of our continent, Ellis Island in New York Harbor, may be well known to many Americans; its walls saw thousands upon thousands of deeply personal stories unfold as newcomers arrived on our shores in the years between 1892 and 1954. Gwenyth Swain’s Hope and Tears: Ellis Island Voices is a superb introduction to the varied fabric of this place – capturing the perspectives of immigrants and detainees, nurses and doctors, officials and volunteers in short poetic essays and monologues, supplemented by revealing archival photographs. On both sides of the continent, newcomers were subject to changing laws and regulations, biases, and unpredictable circumstances even as our nation strove to welcome them. Reading about the history of immigration can only shed more light on present-day issues, which remain complicated at best. Ages 10 to adult.


Their Great Gift: Courage, Sacrifice, and Hope in a New Land by John Coy brings the experience of immigrants to America up-to-date for young readers, simply and empathetically conveyed through photos and brief testimonies of newcomers from around the world. Ages 6-9.