Sweet Cakes, Long Journey: The Chinatowns of Portland, Oregon

by Marie Rose Wong

2004

Status

Available

Call number

979.5

Publication

University of Washington Press

DDC/MDS

979.5

Description

Around the turn of the twentieth century, and for decades thereafter, Oregon had the second largest Chinese population in the United States. In terms of geographical coverage, Portland's two Chinatowns (one an urban area of brick commercial structures, one a vegetable-gardening community of shanty dwellings) were the largest in all of North America. Marie Rose Wong chronicles the history of Portland's Chinatowns from their early beginnings in the 1850s until the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in the 1940s, drawing on exhaustive primary material from the National Archives, including more than six thousand individual immigration files, census manuscripts, letters, and newspaper accounts. She examines both the enforcement of Exclusion Laws in the United States and the means by which Chinese immigrants gained illegal entry into the country. The spatial and ethnic makeup of the combined "Old Chinatown" afforded much more contact and accommodation between Chinese and non-Chinese people than is usually assumed to have occurred in Portland, and than actually may have occurred elsewhere. Sweet Cakes, Long Journey explores the contributions that Oregon's leaders and laws had on the development of Chinese American community life, and the role that the early Chinese immigrants played in determining their own community destiny and the development of their Chinatown in its urban form and vernacular architectural expression. Sweet Cakes, Long Journey is an original and notable addition to the history of Portland and to the field of Asian American studies.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member ladycato
This book is an interesting study of the Chinatowns within Portland, Oregon. So many other books focus on San Francisco. Portland was unique in that it escaped much of the anti-Chinese fervor that overtook California and Tacoma in Washington. The urban arrangement of Portland was part of the reason
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for this. The Chinese weren't segregated into their own "ghetto," but had buildings scattered across portions of downtown, as well as many gardens that provided produce for the city. The historical maps of downtown Portland are especially good in this book. There is nothing comparable online.

Wong is very detailed in her analysis (sometimes it feels a wee bit exhaustive) and there are many footnotes in the back. The first portions of the book covered more general issues of the Chinese experience in the western United States, and as that was material I had read in other books, I was impatient for more on Portland. I did like a section that explored the process of immigration, both legal and illegal, since that discussed things I hadn't encountered before.

This was a great book for my research needs.
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ISBN

0295983833 / 9780295983837

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