
Asian American Comparative Collection:
Lectures
Priscilla Wegars, Ph.D., Volunteer Curator
Laboratory of Anthropology
University of Idaho
P. O. Box 441111
Moscow, Idaho 83844-1111 USA
208-885-7075
pwegars@uidaho.edu
I. Lectures Available through the Idaho Humanities Council
Speakers
Bureau
The following lectures cost only
$50.00 for Idaho hosting organizations, provided the presentation
itself is free and open to the general public. For more information,
contact
the
IHC
toll free
at 1-888-345-5346. For presentations outside those geographical and
attendance
requirements, contact Priscilla Wegars at the address above.
The
Chinese in Idaho
The Chinese began coming to Idaho in
the mid-1860s. While most were then
employed as miners, they also performed a wide variety of other
occupations,
and made important contributions to the growth and development of Idaho
as a state. This presentation provides background on Chinese
immigration
and focuses on the Chinese experience in Idaho, including occupations,
geographical distribution, customs, anti-Chinese legislation, and other
topics as requested. Excavations of Chinese archaeological sites in
Idaho
have shown that the Chinese here relied mostly on familiar products
imported
from China, but utilized American-made goods on occasion. (Slide and
artifact
presentation, 1 hour; lecture only, 30 minutes. Can be modified to
emphasize
northern Idaho, the Boise Basin, and so on).
Chinese
Women in the West
This presentation examines the lives
and occupations of Chinese women in
the West. Besides Polly Bemis, other Chinese women are individually
recognized
for their particular contributions and accomplishments. Historical
documents,
such as newspapers, census records, and marriage license applications,
help locate Chinese women in the West, while artifacts found on
archaeological
sites and in museums help us understand Chinese customs such as
footbinding,
and confirm the presence of Chinese women in areas for which no
documentation
exists. (Slide and artifact presentation, 1 hour; lecture only, 30
minutes).
Not "Ancestor
Worship:" Chinese Funerary Customs in
Idaho and the West
During the late nineteenth century
the Chinese in the interior Pacific
Northwest usually buried their dead in exclusively Chinese cemeteries,
such as those still surviving in Pierce, Idaho; Warren, Idaho; and
Baker
City, Oregon. In these cemeteries, pits are clearly visible where
remains
were later exhumed for shipment to China, but all such cemeteries
probably
still contain burials that were never disinterred. By the 1890s, and
into
the early twentieth century, Chinese people began to be buried in
Christian
cemeteries. While some remains from these cemeteries were eventually
returned
to China, most burials were interred there permanently, such as in
Hope,
Idaho; Lewiston, Idaho; John Day, Oregon; and elsewhere. Archival
documentation
exists for some of these cemeteries and burials. For example, records
in
one Idaho county contain a 99-year lease to "Jung Wah" for a portion of
the local Christian cemetery, and funeral and cemetery records list the
names of 46 people who were buried in the Baker City, Oregon, Chinese
cemetery
between 1894 and 1948. Further archival research, together with
physical
examination of cemetery sites, has provided a detailed picture of
Chinese
burial practices in these often remote communities during the late
nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. (Slide presentation; 40 minutes).
Polly
Bemis: A Chinese American Pioneer
Polly Bemis, Idaho's most famous
Chinese woman, lived here for over
60 years. Although owned at first by a Warren, Idaho, Chinese
businessman,
she later married Charlie Bemis, and the couple moved to a remote area
along the Salmon River. After two years in Warren after Charlie's death
in 1922, Polly Bemis returned to the Salmon River and remained there
until
just before her death in 1933. Since that time, numerous articles, two
books, and a movie have presented fictionalized versions of her life,
often
stating that she was a prostitute or that Charlie Bemis "won her in a
poker
game." Primary sources, combined with Chinese customs at the time,
provide
evidence showing that both statements are myths. This slide lecture
also
incorporates photographs of Polly and her home, and diary entries about
her by one of her neighbors. (45 minutes).
"A Real
He-Man's Job:" Japanese Internees
and the Kooskia Internment Camp, Idaho, 1943-1945
The Kooskia (KOOS-key) Internment
Camp is an obscure and virtually-forgotten
World War II U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
detention
facility that was located in a remote area of north-central Idaho
between
May 1943 and May 1945. It held "enemy aliens" of Japanese ancestry from
Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Minnesota,
Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Utah, and Washington, and
perhaps
other states, and included Japanese Latin Americans from Peru, Mexico,
and Panama. Although some of the 265 internees held camp
jobs,
most of these all-male, paid volunteers were construction workers for a
portion of the present Highway 12 between Lewiston, Idaho, and
Missoula,
Montana, parallel to the wild and scenic Lochsa River. "Digging in the
documents" has produced INS, Forest Service, Border Patrol, and
University of Idaho photographs
and other records. These, combined with internee and employee oral and
written interviews, illuminate the internees' experiences, emphasizing
the perspectives of the men detained at the Kooskia Internment Camp.
(Slide
presentation; 30 or 45 minutes).
II. Other Lectures Available
The following lectures are also
available, although not through the Idaho
Humanities Council Speakers Bureau.
Asian
American History in Baker City, Oregon
Chinese people were living and
working in Baker City, Oregon at least as
early as 1870. Twenty-nine men were miners, laundrymen, and cooks.
Three
women were listed as prostitutes, but may instead have been wives or
concubines.
The Chinese community constructed a temple in Baker City (called a
"joss
house" by the Caucasians there), but this was demolished many years
ago.
Baker City also had, and still has, a Chinese cemetery on the outskirts
of town. Japanese people began arriving in Baker City by 1900; 91 of
them
were listed there in the 1900 census. Of the 83 men, 73 were railroad
workers,
4 were household servants, 4 were cooks, 1 was a laundryman, and 1 was
a prisoner. Of the 8 women, 4 were prostitutes. Each one lived with a
Japanese
"landlady," who may have been the madam. Baker City's Mount Hope
cemetery
contains the graves of several former Japanese residents, and of some
Chinese
who were Christians. Although the Baker City Japanese were not herded
into
concentration camps during World War II, many were forced to leave
because
the area where they lived and/or worked was declared a "restricted
zone,"
for unknown "security" reasons, and they were not allowed to remain
there.
Much of the information presented is based on interviews with
representatives
of the Fong, Hirata, Hayashi, Yasui, Kobayashi, Kurata, and Yano
families.
(Slide presentation; 30 minutes; with Japanese and Chinese artifacts, 1
hour).
Chinese
(and/or Japanese) Artifacts from the Asian
American Comparative Collection
Within the past few years an
increasing number of nineteenth and twentieth
century Asian archaeological sites have been investigated in the West.
Excavators often find utilitarian food and beverage containers, ceramic
tablewares, opium- and tobacco-smoking paraphernalia, medicine bottles,
gambling related items, and miscellaneous hardware and implements.
Slides
introduce the audience to typical Chinese and/or Japanese artifacts,
followed
by a "hands on" session with actual examples. (Slide and artifact
presentation;
1 hour).
Chinese Heritage
Tourism in the Pacific Northwest
and Beyond
Large numbers of Chinese immigrants
began coming to the western United
States during the latter part of the 1850s. They worked mainly as
gold miners at first, and later on the railroads, but soon took up a
wide
variety of other occupations. By the early 1900s most of them had
died or had returned to China. Their legacy remained, however, in
the form of artifacts, documents, photographs, and archaeological
sites.
Since the early 1990s, Dr. Priscilla Wegars, with the assistance of
Professor
Terry Abraham, has been leading educational tours to a number of the
West's
best-preserved Chinese heritage sites, some easily accessible only by
raft
or jet boat. This illustrated lecture will integrate three
concepts.
One is a discussion of sites that are associated with the western
United
States' overseas Chinese pioneers, the second is an examination of how
such sites are publicized to attract both Chinese American and
non-Chinese
American visitors, and the third is an exploration of some of the
partnerships
that have evolved to investigate these sites and interpret them to the
public. We will also look at some efforts that were unsuccessful,
and others that were, or are, culturally insensitive. (Slide
presentation;
45 minutes).
"Female Boarding" Establishments and
their Relationship to Prostitution
in the Old West
Around the turn of the century, "the
world's oldest profession" flourished
in many western locations. From the 1880s to about 1910, newspapers,
historical
photographs, oral histories, police records, and other primary sources
provide a wealth of information on prostitutes, their activities, and
their
ethnicities. Fire insurance maps of various towns often show buildings
labeled "female boarding." Surprisingly, these were not residences for
genteel young ladies. Instead, the phrase was a polite term for a house
of prostitution. Because bordellos, or "parlor houses," emphasized
high-priced
luxury and entertainment for an affluent clientele, they became known
as
"resorts" or "sporting houses." Working-class men, on the other hand,
usually
patronized the lower-priced "cribs" and brothels. Besides examining the
different features of the various establishments, this lecture also
investigates
the entrepreneurial madams who ran, and often owned, the houses; the
"girls"
who practiced this profession; and the men who purchased their
services.
(Slide presentation; 30 minutes).
How "Mainstream"
Museums Can Attract and Involve
Asian American Audiences
Although museums today are eager to
attract and involve people from diverse
cultural backgrounds, actually doing so presents certain challenges.
This
presentation discusses how to reach out to Asian Americans more
successfully,
first by identifying relevant materials that may already be present in
your collections; by learning more about the history of Asian Americans
in your own community; by accurately interpreting your objects; by
avoiding
inappropriate exhibits and insensitive signage; by becoming more
culturally
aware of Asian Americans' concerns, and by examining examples of
exhibits
that have accomplished these goals. (Slide presentation; 30 minutes).
Rice
Bowls in the Diggings: Chinese Miners
near Granite, Oregon
The 1862 discovery of gold on Granite
Creek in northeastern Oregon resulted
in Chinese miners purchasing or leasing placer claims in the vicinity
between
at least 1867 and 1891. Their legacy, 60 acres of hand-stacked rock
tailings,
is now known as the Ah Hee Diggings. University of Idaho
archaeologists,
assisted by
Passport In Time
volunteers, established that an adjacent terrace served as a "mess
hall"
for the Chinese miners. Evidence for such use included pieces of large
Chinese cooking woks, cooking oil cans with embossed Chinese
characters,
and numerous fragments of "Bamboo" pattern rice bowls. Accompanying
historical
research demonstrated that in 1870 the Chinese, all men, comprised more
than 80 percent of the local population. Although most mined, others
operated
Chinese stores, gambling houses, and other businesses in the town of
Granite.
That community thus became a sort of "ethnic village," providing a
familiar,
supportive environment for its Chinese residents. (Slide and artifact
presentation,
1 hour; lecture only, 30 minutes).
"Who's Been
Workin' on the Railroad?" The Ethnic
Origins of Rock Ovens on Railroad-Related Sites
Small domed rock structures have been
reported at numerous places in the
West. Those that occur on railroad-related sites are mainly associated
with railroad construction camps; a few are known to have been built by
later section gang workers. While folklore has often referred to them
as
"Chinese ovens," no archaeological or documentary evidence has yet been
found that would definitely support a Chinese association with either
their
manufacture or use in the United States. Instead, there is reason to
believe
that they were built and used mainly by Italian immigrants, for baking
bread. See (type "rock ovens" after following link)
"Who's Been
Workin' on the Railroad?:
An Examination of the Construction, Distribution, and Ethnic Origins of
Domed Rock Ovens on Railroad-Related Sites," by Priscilla Wegars, in
Historical Archaeology,
25(1):37-65, 1991. (Slide presentation; 30 minutes).
Return to AACC
March 2007/lectures.htm/pwegars@uidaho.edu