Foreign Miner's Tax
Background Information
for



And They Came to the StreetsThat
Were Paved With Gold
Background information
The Chinese miners were welcomed in California in the beginning.
However, the white gold miners began to resent the Chinese miners, feeling
that they were discovering gold that the white miners deserved. In 1852,
a special foreign miner's tax aimed at the Chinese was passed by the California
legislature. This tax required a payment of three dollars each month at
a time when Chinese miners were making approximately six dollars a month.
Tax collectors could legally take and sell the property of those miners
who refused or could not pay the tax. Fake tax collectors made money by
taking advantage of people who couldn't speak English well, and some tax
collectors, both false and real, stabbed or shot miners who couldn't or
wouldn't pay the tax. During the 1860's, many Chinese were expelled from
the mine fields and were forced to find other types of jobs.Bibliography
Foreign
Miner's Tax from Asian American Experience in the U.S. A Chronological
History: 1763-1996


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