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What if Thomas J. Geary, pictured left, a Democratic congressman from California who authored the 1892 Geary Act, was required to carry a certificate of residency like this. But no, the Geary Act applied only to the Chinese in America.

Chinese Photo ID Cards, and Deportation Raids

Note: For the Chinese, life in late-19th century America was hard. Then, the Geary Act of 1892 made it even harder. It extended for another 10 years the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, barring more migrant Chinese laborers from entering the United States. It required Chinese already here to carry a photo residency permit. Failure to carry the Certificate of Residence was punishable by a year of hard labor and deportation.

The following article, about life under the Geary Act, was written by Grinnell College Historical Archaeologist Laura N. Ng. It is also posted on the Geary Project website which has posted a collection of the Chinese Certificates of Residence.

When the Geary Act passed, the Chinese Six Companies (a benevolent or mutual aid organization) told Chinese immigrants to refuse registration. In the end, the organization was unable to overturn the law and many Chinese migrants ended up registering. 

Each registrant received a Certificate of Residence (CoR) to prove that they were residing in the U.S. legally.  One of those who complied with the Geary Act was vegetable farmer Wong Turn who registered as a laborer and received his CoR on March 4th, 1894. 

certificate
Wong Turn’s original Certificate of Residence, 1894. (Courtesy of University of California Berkeley Ethnic Studies Library.)

Gom Benn Native

While Chinese migrants were expected to carry their CoR with them at all times, this important document could also be kept at a merchant store with a clansman whom they could trust especially if they would be crossing the Pacific Ocean to visit their home villages. 

Wong Turn successfully applied for a laborer return certificate to go to his home village of Gom Benn in Toisan County in 1900; when he returned to the U.S. in 1901, he stated to immigration officials that he placed his certificate with the Gee Chung store in San Bernardino Chinatown (Wong Hing Shin immigration interview 1907). 

Replacement ID

In 1906, however, Wong Turn was working as a vegetable farmer on leased land that was part of the Cooley Ranch in San Bernardino, and noticed that he was no longer in possession of his CoR, and sought a new one to replace his original certificate (Wong Turn interview 1907). 

He hired lawyer Ralph Swing to obtain the new CoR; Swing corresponded with U.S. immigration officials several times, and eventually obtained a new CoR in 1907. I happened to find Wong Turn’s lost CoR over 100 years later in online immigration records digitized by the UC Berkeley Ethnic Studies Library. 

Deportation

Historic newspapers from San Bernardino indicate that deportation raids occurred fairly frequently at Chinese truck farming cooperatives called “Chinese gardens” and could involve cooperation between Chinese Inspectors—immigration officers charged with enforcing federal Chinese Exclusion laws—and local San Bernardino Police. 

For example, in November 1906, a deportation raid that took place at night was led by Chinese Inspector Guy H. Tuttle with help from San Bernardino policeman John Henderson, who had been told that Chinese farmers living on the Golden Ranch on Sterling Street had no certificates. 

Tuttle and Henderson entered the residences and arrested eight Chinese on the truck farm; one person escaped in an irrigation ditch and another who had been caught stated that his certificate had burned in the San Francisco fire following the 1906 earthquake (The San Bernardino County Sun 1906). 

Another Raid

In June 1908, two Chinese Inspectors and two local San Bernardino police officers worked together to commence deportation raids on all of the Chinese truck farms east of the city at night. 

Unlike previous raids, shots were fired when two Chinese farmers ran from the scene and one Chinese man was roughly handled when he attempted to escape (The San Bernardino County Sun 1908). 

As a farmer, Wong Turn might have survived one of these violent deportation raids or at the very least heard about them.

All We Know

The last historical document that I could find on Wong Turn dates to 1921 when he was seeking to return to China again—20 years after his last trip to his home village. 

He was 57 years old by then, and had a $1,000 interest in a 100-acre Chinese vegetable farming cooperative located in Los Angeles (Wong Turn immigration interview 1921). 

Permission to Return

In order to receive permission to re-enter the U.S., Chinese laborers had to possess at least $1,000 or owe the equivalent in debts or property (Perkins, “Reminiscences of a Chinese Inspector.” 1976, 182). 

Presumably the goal of Wong Turn’s trip to China was to visit his wife Jin Shee whom he had not seen since they married two decades earlier, but he still had to contend with the Geary Act. 

During Wong Turn’s interview to obtain a laborer’s return certificate, he was asked to produce his replacement CoR from 1907, and two of his Chinese witnesses who vouched for his interest in the vegetable farm had to show their own CoR. The two witnesses were able to comply and remarkably both were in possession of their original certificates from 1894. 

The paper trail on Wong Turn turns cold after 1921. 

Life-long Threat

However, we do know that the Geary Act was in place until the Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed in 1943. This means that most Chinese migrants who registered in 1894 had to carry their CoR for their entire lives.

This was in fact the case for a Chinese house servant named Quon Ock who died in 1928 in the nearby city of Riverside. His employer—the Malloch family—noted that when Quon Ock passed away in their residence, they found his CoR underneath his pillow, which stated that he had registered in Riverside on February 21, 1894 (The Riverside Daily Press 1928, 10). 

For Chinese laborers like Wong Turn and Quon Ock, the threat of deportation and anti-Chinese violence that could come with the enforcement of the Geary Act cast a long and menacing shadow on their lives in America. 

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