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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.
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.
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.
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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