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Press Photos

Each thumbnail is clickable for a large view. These images from BECOMING AMERICAN: The Chinese Experience are to be used solely for the promotion of the PBS series. The specified credit (highlighted below in bold) must appear when published.

 

Second generation Chinese American Shawn Wong   SHAWN WONG

Second generation Chinese American Shawn Wong. "My mother would wear Chinese dresses, cheong sams," says Wong in the documentary. "My mother and father would speak Chinese to each other at home, and, and here I am, this little boy. I wanted to be, you know, Willie Mays. I wanted to be Roy Rogers."
Courtesy of Shawn Wong.

Chinese workers building of the transcontinental railroad   WORKERS ON THE TRANSCONTINENTAL RAILROAD

The building of the transcontinental railroad was perhaps the greatest engineering feat of the 19th century. Initially hired for manual labor only, Chinese workers proved able at skilled work - serving as masons, tracklayers and foremen.
Credit: Denver Public Library, Western History Collection (Neg. #x-21513)

Mrs. Polly Bemis, a pioneer woman   PIONEER WOMAN POLLY BEMIS

Sold into slavery in China, Lalu Nathoy was brought to Idaho and put to work as a 'sing-song girl,' a bar hostess in one of the makeshift mining towns. By the end of her life she was Mrs. Polly Bemis, a pioneer woman.
Credit: Idaho Historical Society

Yung Wing, the first Chinese man to graduate from Yale University   YALE'S FIRST CHINESE GRADUATE

Yung Wing and two others traveled from Macao to Connecticut to be trained as missionaries. Yung Wing became the first Chinese man to graduate from Yale University as part of the Class of 1854.
Credit: Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford, CT

P.T. Barnum show   BARNUM'S CHINESE FAMILY, PWAN YEE KOO AND HER ENTOURAGE

A scene familiar to mid-19th Century America was the P.T. Barnum show rolling into town. People could step into the side-show tents and see the two-foot tall 'man in miniature,' the tattooed man, and a living Chinese family. Who they really were, no one knows. But Barnum displayed them as aristocrats, and draped them in splendid silks.
Credit: Museum of the City of New York

The Chinese Exclusion Act passed in 1882   THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT HANDBILL

The Chinese Exclusion Act passed in 1882 marks the first time that the United States banned any group of people based on race or nationality. This handbill for a public rally celebrates with the words "Hip! Hoorah! The White Man Is On Top!"
Credit: British Columbia Archives (Neg. # PDP 03732)

1st Lt. Fred Gong (center) during WWII   1ST LT. FRED GONG (CENTER), LEAD BOMBADIER ON B-17 FLYING FORTRESS DURING WWII

While Pearl Harbor cast suspicion on Japanese Americans, it resulted in a more positive attitude about Chinese Americans. Suddenly, China was America's ally and Chinese Americans became the "good Asians." As patriotic fever swept through the country, thousands of Chinese American men enlisted.
Credit: Chinese Historical Society of Southern California

Shipyard worker Lonnie Young during WWII   SHIPYARD WORKER LONNIE YOUNG DURING WWII

The demands of wartime production enabled Chinese Americans to move into the American workforce in large numbers. For the first time Chinese American women took on jobs as welders, riveters, burners and flangers.
Courtesy of Connie Young Yu

Worker with sign following Pearl Harbor   WORKER WITH SIGN

In the aftermath of Pearl Harbor, U.S. Federal Agents began rounding up and questioning all of the Japanese. Howard Yip went to work daily with this sign displayed on his back, a notice to fellow workers that he is Chinese.
Credit: University of Southern California, on behalf of the USC specialized libraries and archival collections

Chinese immigrants at Angel Island Immigration Station in San Francisco   ANGEL ISLAND MEDICAL INSPECTIONS

Chinese immigrants arrived at Angel Island Immigration Station in San Francisco hoping to enter the United States, but had to go through a gauntlet of processing. The first step was a medical exam.
Credit: California State Department of Parks and Recreations

Angel Island interrogation   ANGEL ISLAND INTERROGATION

Trying to determine if an immigrant is really entitled to entry, Public Health Service and Immigration Service officers on Angel Island interrogate an arrival from China.
Credit: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD

Women and children on Angel Island   WOMEN AND CHILDREN ON ANGEL ISLAND

Chinese women and children wait at the Angel Island Immigration Station.
Credit: California Historical Society (Neg. # FN-18240)

Movie star Anna May Wong   MOVIE STAR ANNA MAY WONG

In 1932, Anna May Wong was the leading Chinese American actress in Hollywood. However, when a white leading man was cast in the movie based on Pearl Buck's runaway bestseller, The Good Earth, Wong knew she would be passed over for a white actress because Hollywood followed a strict code prohibiting kissing between people of different races.
Courtesy of Graham Hodges

Anna May Wong arriving at premiere   ANNA MAY WONG ARRIVING AT PREMIERE

Although actress Anna May Wong, born and raised in the United States, was considered the preeminent Chinese American actress of her generation she was usually relegated to stereotypical roles.
©Bettmann/CORBIS

Jerry Yang, a founder of Yahoo!   JERRY YANG

Jerry Yang, a founder of Yahoo!, recalls how, after he arrived in America as a child, his mother required him to memorize English words from the dictionary every day - and she would quiz him.
Credit: AP/Wide World Photos

Jean Tang (L), at her college graduation, and currently a student at Stanford Medical School   JEAN TANG

Jean Tang (L), seen here at her college graduation, and currently a student at Stanford Medical School, remembers her mother breaking into tears when she received a B in school. As a child she constantly absorbed the message that she was personally responsible for ensuring that her family's circumstances improved.
Courtesy of Jean Tang

Vincent Chin's mother   VINCENT CHIN'S MOTHER

Vincent Chin's mother sits holding a photo of her son. Out celebrating his imminent marriage at a bachelor party in Detroit, he was mistaken for Japanese by two white Americans who followed him out of the party and beat him to death.
Courtesy of Helen Zia

Protest of murder of Vincent Chin   VINCENT CHIN PROTEST

The murder of Vincent Chin and the subsequent sentence of his attackers (probation and a fine) brought Asian Americans together in protest and supported the growing realization that they could be a more effective political force if they worked together.
Courtesy of Helen Zia

President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Immigration Reform Act into law in 1965   PRESIDENT JOHNSON SIGNS BILL

In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Immigration Reform Act into law, opening the doors to Asians and other non-Europeans to come to America in record numbers.
Credit: LBJ Library and Museum

Ladybird Johnson, President Lyndon B. Johnson and Press Secretary Bill Moyers at the Statue of Liberty in 1965   PRESIDENT JOHNSON AT STATUE OF LIBERTY

(L to R) Ladybird Johnson, President Lyndon B. Johnson and Press Secretary Bill Moyers at the Statue of Liberty. The President was there to sign the 1965 Immigration Reform Act into law. The law opened the doors to Asians and other non-Europeans to come to America in record numbers.
Credit: LBJ Library and Museum


Helen Zia and BIll Moyers   HELEN ZIA AND BILL MOYERS

Author Helen Zia with Bill Moyers. Helen Zia graduated in Princeton's first class of women and is a prominent journalist and Chinese American activist.
Photo Credit: Jenny Doll