Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T03:03:33.144Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Crafting a Delta Chinese Community: Education and Acculturation in Twentieth-Century Southern Baptist Mission Schools

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Sieglinde Lim de Sánchez*
Affiliation:
Educational Policy Studies Department of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Extract

During Reconstruction between one-fourth and one-third of the southern African-American work force emigrated to northern and southern urban areas. This phenomenon confirmed the fears of Delta cotton planters about the transition from slave to wage labor. Following a labor convention in Memphis, Tennessee, during the summer of 1869, one proposed alternative to the emerging employment crisis was to introduce Chinese immigrant labor, following the example of countries in the Caribbean and Latin America during the mid nineteenth century. Cotton plantation owners initially hoped that Chinese “coolie” workers would help replace the loss of African-American slave labor and that competition between the two groups would compel former slaves to resume their submissive status on plantations. This experiment proved an unmitigated failure. African Americans sought independence from white supervision and authority. And, Chinese immigrant workers proved to be more expensive and less dependable than African-American slave labor. More importantly, due to low wages and severe exploitation by planters, Chinese immigrants quickly lost interest in agricultural work.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2003 by the History of Education Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Burwell, William M.Science and the Mechanic Arts against Coolies,“ De Bow's Review (July 1869), 557560.Google Scholar

2 Loewen, James The Mississippi Chinese (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1971), 2. Najia Aarim-Heriot, Chinese Immigrants, African Americans, and Racial Anxiety in the United States, 1848–1882 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2003). Aarim-Heriot's recent work examines the processes of interracial accommodation and conflict between African-Americans and Chinese in a period prior to the one covered in my article. However, her ambitious and broad-based approach is analytically thin on the Mississippi Delta and Louisiana, the two prime demographic centers of African-American and Chinese American populations in the South.Google Scholar

3 Burwell, Science and the Mechanic Arts,“ 559.Google Scholar

4 Ibid., 32–3.Google Scholar

5 Interviews were conducted by the author on numerous research trips down to the South from 1998–2001. Interviewees were chosen based upon affiliation with the Chinese community or the Chinese Mission Schools.Google Scholar

6 Sombart, Werner Der Moderne Kapitalismus (Munich, Germany: Munich Press, 1928).Google Scholar

7 Okihiro, Gary Y. Margins and Mainstreams: Asians in American History and Culture (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1994), 65.Google Scholar

8 Kwong, Peter The New Chinatown (New York: Harper Collins, 1987), 97100.Google Scholar

9 Rummel, George A.The Delta Chinese: An Exploratory Study in Assimilation“ (M.A. thesis, University of Mississippi, 1966), 27.Google Scholar

10 Max Weber noted in his travels through the American South that baptism was the most important prerequisite to economic and social acceptance in backwoods America's version of the Protestant work ethic. Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (New York: Scribner Press, 1958).Google Scholar

11 McMillen, Neil R. Dark Journey: Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1989), 91.Google Scholar

12 Ibid., 89–90.Google Scholar

13 Ibid., 89–90.Google Scholar

14 U.S. Bureau of the Census. Population, 1920. Prepared by the Housing Division, Bureau of the Census. Washington D.C.Google Scholar

15 Loewen, Mississippi Chinese, 66.Google Scholar

16 Ibid., 27–30.Google Scholar

17 (pseudonym), Betty Joe interview by author, 31 July 2000.Google Scholar

18 Cohn, David Where I Was Born and Raised (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1967), 156–7, Loewen, Mississippi Chinese, 73–80.Google Scholar

19 Workers Progress Administration [hereafter WPA], “Chinese of the Delta,” typescript, 1939.Google Scholar

21 Rice v. Gong Lum 139 MS 760 (1925).Google Scholar

23 Lum v. Rice 275 U.S. 78 (1927).Google Scholar

24 (pseudonym), Thomas Gong interview by author, 08 July 1999.Google Scholar

25 (pseudonym), Patricia Wong interview by author, 10 July 1999.Google Scholar

26 Chow, Jack interview by author, 09 July 1999.Google Scholar

28 Gunn, Jack W. A Caring Church: A History of the First Baptist Church of Cleveland (Cleveland, MS: First Baptist Church, 1987), 34–7.Google Scholar

29 WPA “Chinese of the Delta,” typescript, 1939.Google Scholar

30 Ting, Joe Interview by Jerry Young, 16 February 1977.Google Scholar

31 (pseudonym), Kathy Sit interview by author, 04 August 2000.Google Scholar

32 Anderson, Zora interview by Roberta Miller, 05 August 1978.Google Scholar

33 Commonly known in Southern communities as a single-story dwelling with the front and back doors facing one another. The notion was that one could shoot a shotgun from the backyard and it would exit through the front door.Google Scholar

34 Anderson, interview.Google Scholar

35 Loewen, The Mississippi Chinese, 159.Google Scholar

36 (pseudonym), Sit interview.Google Scholar

37 Anderson, interview.Google Scholar

39 Chow, James interview by Jerry Young, 24 February 1977.Google Scholar

40 Chow, Jack interview by author, 09 July 1999.Google Scholar

41 Gunn, A Caring Church, 35.Google Scholar

42 WPA, “Chinese of the Delta,” typescript, 1939.Google Scholar

44 Wong, Paul interview by author, 08 August 1999.Google Scholar

45 WPA “Chinese of the Delta,” typescript, 1939.Google Scholar

46 Miller, Martha interview by author, 09 July 1999.Google Scholar

47 (pseudonym), Betty Joe interview.Google Scholar

48 WPA “Chinese of the Delta,” typescript, 1939.Google Scholar

49 Miller, interview.Google Scholar

51 Chow, Jack interview.Google Scholar

52 State of Mississippi. Rural and Consolidated Schools Recapitulation Sheet, 1942.Google Scholar

53 Gong, Thomas Joe, Henry, Wong, Paul, Wong, Sue-Ling, Miller, Martha, interviews by author, July 1999.Google Scholar

54 Wong, Sue-Ling interview by author, 10 July 1999.Google Scholar

55 Miller, interview.Google Scholar

56 Wong, Paul interview.Google Scholar

58 WPA “Chinese of the Delta,” typescript, 1939.Google Scholar

59 This expression referred to “if you are not pure white you are black” idea prevalent among Mississippi White(s) and throughout the country, at the time.Google Scholar

60 Quan, Lotus Among the Magnolias, 49.Google Scholar

61 Less than 8 percent of all Chinese in the United States are Christian, according to S. W. Kung, Chinese in American Life: Some Aspects of Their History, Status, Problems, and Contributions (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1962), 55. But at least 25 percent of the Delta Chinese are church members; in Cleveland, Mississippi, over 50 percent belong to a church.Google Scholar