Houston Chronicle

Where U.S. immigrants come from: The No. 1 country is ... China

From despised ‘illegal immigrants’ to the ‘model minority’

- By Erika Lee

Once singled out for exclusion by law from the United States, Chinese immigrants now make up the largest single group of arrivals a year into this country. The Census Bureau says China replaced Mexico as the top country of origin for immigrants to the U.S. in 2013.

Given the history, this growth — and the fact that Chinese immigrants are considered part of the Asian-American “model minority”— seems improbable. But the story of Chinese immigratio­n, past and present, reminds how fickle our attitudes about immigrants can prove.

Although many of today’s Chinese immigrants are students and investors, earlier Chinese immigrants were considered the lowest of the low-skilled. Chinese sailors were among the crew on a ship that arrived in Baltimore in 1784. Chinese immigrants were living in New York City in the 1830s. And Chinese were among the thousands of gold seekers who rushed into California during the Gold Rush in the mid-19th century. By 1870, there were 64,000 Chinese in the United States, most of them in California, and almost all of them from the Pearl River Delta outside Guangzhou in southern China.

These Chinese immigrants faced a tremendous hostility, despite amounting to only a small fraction of the total foreign-born population in the United States in the late 19th century. They were charged with taking away jobs, corrupting white women, and threatenin­g American civilizati­on. In 1882, the U.S. passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, which barred Chinese laborers, prohibited all Chinese immigrants from becoming naturalize­d citizens, and allowed only select classes of Chinese to apply for admission.

While the act was in effect — from 1882 to 1943 — Chinese immigrants became America’s first “illegal” immigrants. Chinese immigratio­n drasticall­y dropped, though it never totally stopped. Many of those who came resorted to false papers (like my own grandfathe­r). Those who arrived in San Francisco faced harsh interrogat­ions, humiliatin­g medical examinatio­ns, and long detentions in unsanitary barracks.

In the past 50 years, Chinese immigratio­n has undergone a dramatic transforma­tion. The 1965 immigratio­n Act ended national origins quotas favoring immigratio­n from Europe over other parts of the world; it also establishe­d preference­s for profession­al and skilled workers. At the same time, China’s subsequent economic modernizat­ion and global outlook revived and diversifie­d the flow of immigratio­n from China.

In 1960, there were just under 100,000 Chinese-born immigrants in the United States. In 2010, the Census reported over 3.3 million adult Chinese-Americans. As of that year, Chinese-Americans had higher median annual personal earnings than the general U.S. population.

While Chinese immigrants may not be scrutinize­d in the same way that undocument­ed low-skilled Mexican immigrants are, it would be wrong to assume that America has fully embraced Chinese and other Asian immigrants. Some Americans resent having to go to a doctor who has a foreign accent, for example, or having their kids compete with talented foreign-born (and secondgene­ration Asian-American) students for college admissions or jobs.

There could be even more resentment if China’s national wealth and strength becomes more pronounced,

For more on this story, click here.

 ?? Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle ?? Cindy Lee runs in the grass during this year’s Texas Lunar New Year Celebratio­n.
Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle Cindy Lee runs in the grass during this year’s Texas Lunar New Year Celebratio­n.

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