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  1. Timeline of Chinese history. This is a timeline of Chinese history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in China and its dynasties. To read about the background to these events, see History of China. See also the list of Chinese monarchs, Chinese emperors family tree, dynasties of China and years in China.

    • Transpacific Trade
    • Fields of Work For First Wave Immigrants
    • Anti-Chinese Movement
    • Exclusion Era
    • Chinatown: Slumming, Gambling, Prostitution, and Opium
    • Second Wave
    • Third Wave
    • Statistics of The Chinese Population in The United States
    • See Also
    • Documentaries

    The Chinese reached North America during the era of Spanish colonial rule over the Philippines (1565–1815), during which they had established themselves as fishermen, sailors, and merchants on Spanish galleons that sailed between the Philippines and Mexican ports (Manila galleons). California belonged to Mexico until 1848, and historians have asser...

    The Chinese moved to California in large numbers during the California Gold Rush, with 40,400 being recorded as arriving from 1851 to 1860, and again in the 1860s when the Central Pacific Railroad recruited large labor gangs, many on five-year contracts, to build its portion of the transcontinental railroad. The Chinese laborers worked out well and...

    In the 1870s, several economic crises came about in parts of the United States, and many Americans lost their jobs, from which arose throughout the American West an anti-Chinese movement and its main mouthpiece, the Workingman's Party labor organization, which was led by the Californian Denis Kearney. The party took particular aim against Chinese i...

    Settlement

    Across the country, Chinese immigrants clustered in Chinatowns. The largest population was in San Francisco. Large numbers came from the Taishan area that proudly bills itself as the No. 1 Home of Overseas Chinese. An estimated half a million Chinese Americans are of Taishanese descent. At first, when surface gold was plentiful, the Chinese were well tolerated and well received. As the easy gold dwindled and competition for it intensified, animosity to the Chinese and other foreigners increas...

    Discrimination

    The flow of immigration (encouraged by the Burlingame Treaty of 1868) was stopped by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. This act outlawed all Chinese immigration to the United States and denied citizenship to those already settled in the country. Renewed in 1892 and extended indefinitely in 1902, the Chinese population declined until the act was repealed in 1943 by the Magnuson Act. (Chinese immigration later increased more with the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, whic...

    Segregation in the South

    Chinese immigrants first arrived in the Mississippi Delta during the Reconstruction Era as cheap laborers when the system of sharecropping was being developed. They gradually came to operate grocery stores in mainly African American neighborhoods.The Chinese population in the delta peaked in the 1870s, reaching 3000. Chinese carved out a distinct role in the predominantly biracial society of the Mississippi Delta. In a few communities, Chinese children were able to attend white schools, while...

    In his book published in 1890, How The Other Half Lives, Jacob Riis called the Chinese of New York "a constant and terrible menace to society", "in no sense a desirable element of the population". Riis referred to the reputation of New York's Chinatown as a place full of illicit activity, including gambling, prostitution, and opium smoking. To some...

    The Magnuson Act, also known as the Chinese Exclusion Repeal Act of 1943, was proposed by U.S. Representative (later Senator) Warren G. Magnuson of Washington and signed into law on December 17, 1943. It allowed Chinese immigration for the first time since the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, and permitted Chinese nationals already residing in the co...

    In addition to students and professionals, a third wave of recent immigrants consisted of people who are living in or entered the country without documentation, who went to the United States in search of lower-status manual jobs. These undocumented immigrants tend to concentrate in heavily urban areas, particularly in New York City, and there is of...

    The table shows the ethnic Chinese population of the United States (including persons with mixed-ethnic origin).

    Becoming American. The Chinese Experience (a three-part documentary film by Bill Moyers about the history of the Chinese immigration into the USA), 2003. (Website)
    "Carved in Silence" (Producer/Director/Writer of National Endowment for the Humanities funded documentary with dramatic re-creations about the impact of detention on Chinese immigrants at Angel Isl...
  2. 551 BCE - 479 BCE. Life of Confucius . 512 BCE - 506 BCE. The Wu Chu wars in China between the States of Wu and Chu. 506 BCE. The Battle of Boju at which the Wu forces under Sun-Tzu defeated the Chu. c. 500 BCE. Life of the Chinese Relativist Philosopher Teng Shih (probable date of death 522 or 502 BCE). c. 500 BCE.

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  4. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This is a timeline of Chinese history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in China and its dynasties. To read about the background to these events, see History of China. See also the list of Chinese monarchs, Chinese emperors family tree, dynasties of China and years in ...

  5. www.history.com › topics › asian-historyChina: Timeline | HISTORY

    Mar 22, 2019 · Shang Dynasty, Confucius. • 1600-1050 B.C.: Shang Dynasty - The earliest ruling dynasty of China to be established in recorded history, the Shang was headed by a tribal chief named Tan. The ...

  6. Jan 29, 2020 · Mongol and Ming Eras: 1115 to 1550 A.D. First Known Cannon, Reign of Kublai Khan, Journeys of Marco Polo, Yuan (Mongol) Dynasty, Invention of Movable-Type Printing, Ming Dynasty, Explorations of Admiral Zheng He, Construction of the Forbidden City, Ming Emperors Close the Borders, First Portuguese Contact, Altan Khan Sacks Beijing.

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