The Gentleman's Agreement of 1908
Following the Japanese government's easing of isolationist emigration policies in 1868, Japanese began immigrating to the U.S. Pacific Coast, landing primarily in California, with a spike at the start of the 20th century following an 1894 treaty granting Japanese immigration rights. Finding migratory labor jobs and often working farms, railroads and mines for low wages, the Japanese soon found themselves as a target for discriminatory campaigns, an echo of those made after the Chinese immigration Gold Rush boom of 1852.
Among other tactics, this included exclusion from joining the American Federation of Labor, the largest union in the country, and the 1905 launch of the Asiatic Exclusion League, founded with the goal of putting a stop to Japanese and Koreans immigration. Additionally, in 1905, the San Francisco Chronicle launched an 18-month anti-Japanese newspaper campaign that warned of an invasion of “little brown men” and headlines like “The Japanese Invasion, the Problem of the Hour.” Prompting particular outrage by the Japanese government was the October 11, 1906, regulation passed by the San Francisco Board of Education calling for all Japanese and Korean students, along with Chinese students, to be sent to segregated “Oriental School,” despite the fact that just 93 Japanese students, 25 of whom were born in America, lived in the district.
"To shut (Japanese students) out from the public schools is a wicked absurdity," Roosevelt told Congress in December 1906.
Although Japan and the San Francisco Board of Education adhered to the Gentlemen’s Agreement, which was never ratified by Congress, it didn’t end discrimination against Japanese immigrants. Attacks and protests against Japanese immigrants and businesses were frequent.
California’s Webb-Haney Act of 1913, also known as the Alien Land Law, banned “all aliens ineligible for citizenship” lawn-owning rights. About 10 years later, the Immigration Act of 1924, or Johnson-Reed Act, was signed into law by Calvin Coolidge, making the Gentlemen's Agreement obsolete.
"Of all the races ineligible to citizenship under our law, the Japanese are the least assimible and the most dangerous to our country,” V.S. McClatchey, a California newspaper publisher, said while lobbying for the act, which established a national origin quota system and a ban on Japanese immigrants until the law was repealed in 1952.
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