Volume 34, number 2
Rapids Historical Society
October 2012
Grand River Times The Newsletter of the Grand Rapids Historical Society
Inside this issue: Cover Story: October program: Ethnic Surprises Letter from our President, page 2 The “Rapids” drink, Lost and Find, page 3 Women’s Hall of Fame, historygrandrapids.org pages 4-5 Great Lakes History Conf; Photo Sleuth, page 6 Happening in History, page 7
Ethnic Surprises: The Early History of Chinese and Japanese Grand Rapids October 11, 2012, 7:00 p.m. Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum Presented by Diana Barrett, Grand Rapids Historical Commission “Chop Sooy and Suds” reads a 1902 headline attesting to the long history of Asians in Grand Rapids, but Chinese laundrymen had already been here for thirty years. By 1914 Stickley Brothers had recruited a Japanese furniture decorator to their factory. Front and center in a 1929 photograph taken at the Clinic for Infant Feeding, we see his wife and two sons, testifying to the family's sustained presence here. The story of Asians in early Grand Rapids includes successes (wealthy entrepreneur Chan Hoy), surprises (the first
Chinese granted U.S. citizenship got it here), and disappointments (no Chinese could attain “full” citizenship then, and Chan Hoy was refused re-entry after a business trip abroad). The experiences of early Asian immigrants will be set into the context of laws targeting them specifically, answer some questions (why so many laundries and so few women), and raise many more issues about the lives of Asian immigrants introduced into a booming Midwestern city 140 years ago.
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Next Program: The Walls of Marywood Tell the Story, by Sister Rose Marie Martin, Archives Director, Dominican Sisters Grand Rapids. Save the date: Thursday, November 8, 2012, 7 p.m., at the Dominican Center at Marywood.
Above: The two small Japanese-American boys with their mother in the center of the photo are Robert and James Seino Jr., the children of James and Karou Seino. They will be featured in Diana’s talk.
Above: Wong Chin Foo, in Grand Rapids in April of 1874. After a fight he finally received his citizenship papers here, little good it ever did him.
All images, Coll. 141-10-17, Grand Rapids Historical Society Records Collection. Reproduction and copyright regarding these images is available from Grand Rapids History & Special Collections, Archives, Grand Rapids Public Library, Grand Rapids, MI. Grand River Times
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