Wyoming city honors Chinese massacre victims 140 years later
By Carl Samson
4 hours ago
Wyoming city honors Chinese massacre victims 140 years latervia Erik Hamm / YouTube
Carl Samson
By Carl Samson
4 hours ago
Descendants of Chinese miners killed in an infamous massacre in Rock Springs, Wyoming, in 1885 joined archaeologists this summer to excavate a site where their ancestors once lived. Last week, their efforts culminated in a memorial ceremony that honored the victims of one of Americas most violent anti-Chinese attacks.
What happened: A mob of white miners and railroad workers converged on Rock Springs Chinatown on Sept. 2, 1885, killing 28 Chinese migrant workers and burning tens of homes to the ground. The violence stemmed from labor tensions in Union Pacific Railroads coal mines, where the company had hired Chinese workers as strike-breakers after European miners walked off the job. This occurred three years after the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act had restricted Chinese immigration and fueled anti-Chinese sentiment nationwide.
It was instigated, Laura Ng, an Iowa-based archaeology professor who led the dig, told the Cowboy State Daily last month. It started as a fight in the coal mine, but it was pre-planned by two white coal miners. Despite the mobs actions being widely known, no one was ever indicted.
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Interestingly, the research has highlighted parallels between historical and contemporary immigration tensions. Speaking to KHOL, Rock Springs Mayor Max Mickelson noted the irony that his town still relies on migrant labor while Sweetwater County has strengthened partnerships with ICE under the current administration. As someone who is a descendant of immigrants that came to this country from Europe, I find it very frustrating that as a country we have decided to take an anti-immigrant stance, he said.
More:
https://nextshark.com/wyoming-rock-springs-chinese-massacre-memorial