| Building Communities
In
the face of a hostile public, and in response to hard
times and legal exclusion, Chinese immigrants began to
build communities unlike any others in North America:
Chinatowns. With the completion of the railroads and the
end of the gold rush, Chinese immigrants moved in increasing
numbers to urban areas. There, they began to congregate
in Chinese-only neighborhoods that soon became known,
to Chinese and non-Chinese residents alike, as separate,
nearly independent, cities within the city.
A
Chinatown served as a safe haven and second home for Chinese
immigrants, a place to shop for familiar food,
to worship in a traditional temple,
or to catch up on the news
from the old country. It also was a good place to do business:
The shops and factories in a Chinatown were almost exclusively
Chinese-owned, and would hire Chinese workers when many
non-Chinese businesses would not. By the turn of the century,
Chinatowns had sprung up in cities, from San Diego to
El Paso to Connecticut, and formed a network that crossed
the continent.
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