Surfing was a white phenomenon, and glorified by the white band, the Beach Boys. I was the drummer myself in a rock band when in a private school, Moses Brown.
Los Angeles in the 1950s was 90% white — and determined to stay that way:
An episode of the hit 1960s California cop show “Dragnet” — white folks everywhere, as it is supposed to be in a white nation!
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….Wiki on Phelan, an honest, excellent and brave mayor
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_D._Phelan
James D. Phelan
James D. Phelan | |
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United States Senator from California |
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In office March 4, 1915 “ March 4, 1921 |
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Preceded by | George Clement Perkins |
Succeeded by | Samuel M. Shortridge |
25th Mayor of San Francisco | |
In office January 4, 1897 “ January 7, 1902 |
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Preceded by | Adolph Sutro |
Succeeded by | Eugene Schmitz |
Personal details | |
Born |
April 20, 1861 |
Died | August 7, 1930 (aged 69) Saratoga, California |
Political party | Democratic |
Alma mater | St. Ignatius College University of California-Berkeley |
James Duval Phelan (April 20, 1861 “ August 7, 1930) was an American politician, civic leader and banker. He served as Mayor of San Francisco from 1897 to 1902 and represented California in the United States Senate from 1915 to 1921. Phelan was also active in the movement to restrict Japanese and Chinese immigration to the United States.
Contents
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Early years[edit]
Phelan was born in San Francisco, the son of James Phelan and Alice Kelly. James Phelan (1819-1892) was an Irish immigrant who became wealthy during the California Gold Rush as a trader, merchant, banker and real estate investor.[1]
James D. Phelan graduated from St. Ignatius College in 1881. He had two sisters, Alice Phelan Sullivan and Mary Louis Phelan.[2]
Career[edit]
Phelan studied law at the University of California, Berkeley and then became a banker. He was elected Mayor of San Francisco and served from 1897 until 1902. He pushed for the reform City Charter of 1898 in San Francisco. He served as the first president of the League of California Cities, which was created in 1898.[3] During this time, Phelan established himself as a leader in what fellow anti-Japanese agitator V.S. McClatchy described as the “holy cause” of Japanese exclusion.[4]
He remained active in the anti-Japanese movement after leaving office, securing then-presidential candidate Woodrow Wilson‘s support for restricting Japanese immigration in 1912 and helping to push through California’s discriminatory alien land law in 1913.[5] Phelan was also an advocate for excluding Chinese from the United States. In fact, in a debate with Imperial Chinese Consul Ho Yow, Phelan mentioned that the Chinese were an undesirable population because they had strong ties to their native country and were incapable of assimilating to the American society.
This debate occurred just nineteen months after the outbreak of plague in San Francisco’s Chinatown.[6] Phelan mentioned that the Chinese had different mindsets and that after twenty years, they remained unchanged in their values. He concluded that American progress would be stunted if the United States continued to allow Chinese immigrants to remain in the country, and that the
Chinese workers were taking work away from white workers. [7]
Water and land rights[edit]
In the 1900s, Phelan bought land and water acreage in various places around the San Francisco Bay Area, and he obtained the rights to the water flow of the Tuolumne River in Hetch Hetchy Valley. Ethan A. Hitchcock, Secretary of the Interior under President Theodore Roosevelt, tried to stop Phelan, but Roosevelt decided that the wild area could be used for “the permanent material development of the region.”[8] Phelan’s plans for the region included publicly funded water and electricity for a geographical entity he called “Greater San Francisco.”[8] With his Bohemian Club fellows, Phelan sought to annex land at the perimeter of San Francisco Bay.[8]
San Francisco Plague[edit]
In 1900, San Francisco citizens distrusted government for previous waste of taxpayers’ money as well as previous refusal to enhance community resources. [9] Government officials refused to invest in public health because health was seen as a personal concern or even a commodity. For this reason, citizens had a lot of hope in Mayor Phelan, who had previously declared the need for healthier living conditions as well as the need for “health departments to provide salutary environments.” [10]
During his tenure as the Mayor of San Francisco, Phelan and his administration were faced with dealing with the San Francisco plague of 1900-1904 that infected the San Francisco Chinatown community.
Prior to the plague outbreak in Chinatown, Phelan was an active advocate for improving public health in San Francisco. On October 25, 1897, Phelan addressed the California health board in San Francisco and stated that government intervention was needed in order to establish healthier living conditions. [11] He argued that public health departments required more funding to help improve living conditions. Furthermore, in 1899, Phelan continued his strong advocacy for public health and the prevention of disease through city measures. Later that year, in a shocking move, he opted instead to support an $18-million-dollar bond to create a new hospital, schools, and city parks.[12] On September 1899, Phelan and the San Francisco Board of Supervisors further defunded the cities health department. The San Francisco health department was only allocated $155,960 with two-thirds of that going towards the operation of municipal hospital. [13] Shortly after, the health board members were released from their duties due to political in-house fighting and excessive patronage. After being sworn in, Phelan’s new health department board members discovered that the department was broke and that within the first six months of fiscal year 1899 – 1990 the department had already spent the majority of its budget. [14] Through the defunding and mishandling of the department, Phelan and his administration left the health department and the city ill-prepared for what was looming around the corner.
On June 1900 San Francisco’s city hall received the news that Joseph J. Kinyoun had instituted a travel ban in hopes of preventing the spread of the plague to the rest of the country. Mayor Phelan confirmed the news by stating that Kinyoun had notified him personally about the travel ban. Phelan went on to blame the federal court ruling that restricted the ability of the local government to deal with the plague. [15]
In order to improve sanitary living conditions in Chinatown,
Governor Gage proposed to hire inspectors and workers to eradicate the plague. Governor Henry Gage requested for Mayor Phelan and his administration to match the states $25,000 contribution. However, Phelan informed Governor Gage that the city did not have the resources to match the states contribution. After meeting with Governor Gage, Phelan and his Board of Supervisors agreed to contribute $6,000. [16] On the summer of 1901, Mayor Phelan publicly announced that he would not run for another term. “During his final address before leaving office, Phelan praised the health board, claiming that because of its vigilance the city ‘was saved from Oriental infection.'” [17] Phelan concluded by thanking the federal government and their efforts to help the city endure the crisis.
Although The San Francisco Plague in Chinatown was reported in journalism, the material printed was prone to exaggerations, biased information, and focused on making the Chinese population look substandard. Newspapers were heavily averse to the Democratic Phelan administration and believed the health officials were corrupt and wasteful. For this reason, publications refused to print public health initiatives to prevent disease outbreaks and instead would focus on the community’s lack of sanitation. Acts of racism were apparent because publications were heavily inclined to use offensive images and headlines to attract attention of readers. [18]
Earthquake recovery efforts[edit]
During the 1906 San Francisco earthquake Phelan was a member of the Committee of Fifty, called into existence by Mayor Schmitz to manage the crisis. Afterward, when Dr. Edward Thomas Devine, representing the American Red Cross by appointment of President Roosevelt, was responsible for Relief and Red Cross Funds, ex-Mayor Phelan was allowed to assist Devine, thus keeping the money out of the hands of Schmitz and Abe Ruef. Phelan became Chairman of the Board of Directors of the San Francisco Relief and Red Cross Funds when Dr. Devine was relieved of his post in July 1906.
U.S. Senate[edit]
As a Democrat, Phelan ran for the U.S. Senate against Republican Joseph R. Knowland and Progressive Francis J. Heney. He was elected to the United States Senate in 1914 and served from March 4, 1915, to March 3, 1921. Although he had toned down his anti-Japanese rhetoric during World War I, when the United States had allied with Japan, in 1919, Phelan once again began to speak out against the “Yellow Peril,” delivering a speech in favor of Japanese exclusion before a special session of the state legislature.[5]
He was an unsuccessful candidate for re-election in 1920, defeated by Republican Samuel M. Shortridge, coming in second with 40% of the vote.
His defeat may have been the result of his racially tinged campaign; one of his re-election campaign posters contained the headline “Keep California White.”[5]
(This poster is displayed at the Japanese American National Museum). During his time in the Senate, he was chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Railroads during the 64th Congress and of the U.S. Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands during the 65th Congress.
Later life[edit]
His home, Villa Montalvo
After his time in the Senate, Phelan returned to banking and collected art.
He remained active in the anti-Japanese movement, collaborating with McClatchy and the Japanese Exclusion League of California to successfully ban Japanese immigrants from entering the country with the Immigration Act of 1924.[5]
He died at his country estate Villa Montalvo in Saratoga, California in 1930. He is buried in the family mausoleum in Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma, San Mateo County, California.
Legacy[edit]
- After Phelan’s death, the Villa Montalvo estate was given to the people of Santa Clara County. It is now a center for the performing and visual arts. Some of his mementos and correspondence are on display in the library at Villa Montalvo.
- Phelan Building in San Francisco, built in 1908.
- Phelan Avenue, the main thoroughfare on the Ocean Campus of the City College of San Francisco, is named for him.[19]
- The small town of Phelan in the Californian High Desert of the Mojave Desert is named after him.
- James D. Phelan Elementary School in the Moreland School District in San Jose, California, was named for him.
- The James D. Phelan awards, given to young California writers and artists, were established by a bequest in his will.[20]
- A dorm at the University of San Francisco used to be called Phelan Hall, but was renamed in 2017 after protests by students concerned about Phelan’s racist views.[19]
See also[edit]
- John P. Irish, who opposed Phelan over the latter’s anti-Japanese proposals
LEGACY OF A NATIVE SON: JAMES DUVAL PHELAN & VILLA MONTALVO (1993), by James P. Walsh and Timothy J. O’Keefe; “Creating the Fortune, Creating the Family,” Journal of the West (Spring, 1992) by James P. Walsh
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….Valentine McClatchy, another great Keltic-American
Note that neither Phelan nor McClatchy felt the Japanese and Chinese were lazy or especially criminal. They were simply pro-white in the healthiest, most natural sense, and convinced that our race was the highest, most attractive, most creative and innovative — in short, the best, and, most of all, it is simply OUR people — to love, defend and cherish!
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Valentine S. McClatchy
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V. S. McClatchy
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Born | August 29, 1857 |
Died | May 15, 1938 (aged 80) |
Occupation | Journalist |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Santa Clara University |
Valentine Stuart McClatchy (August 29, 1857 – May 15, 1938) was an American newspaper owner and journalist. As publisher of The Sacramento Bee (now The McClatchy Company) from his father’s death in 1883, McClatchy co-owned the paper with his brother Charles K. McClatchy until 1923. After leaving the newspaper business, he became a leading figure in the anti-Japanese movement in California and formed key exclusionary groups to lobby for alien land laws and race-based limits on immigration and naturalization.
Early life and career[edit]
McClatchy was the son of the prominent nineteenth-century publisher James McClatchy, who was hired by John Rollin Ridge, founder of the Sacramento Bee (known as the Daily Bee when he became editor in 1857). “V.S.” graduated from Santa Clara College in 1877, and after the elder McClatchy’s death in 1883 he took on joint ownership of the Bee with his brother. “C.K.” served as the editor, while Valentine took on the role of publisher. As early as 1915, he began writing about the menace posed by Japanese immigrants, and by 1919 he had largely retired from the paper, turning his efforts instead to publishing a series of anti-Japanese pamphlets. He officially left the Bee in 1923, when C.K. bought him out to obtain sole control of the company.[1]
Anti-immigration lobbying[edit]
China opened migration into California from Asia, this increased the nativism within the United States which culminated into the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act.[2] With more Asian people coming at the turn of the century adversaries arose to counter the migration of the Asian people. The first exclusionary league that arose was the Japanese and Korean Exclusion league. With a common and vested interest in keeping the Asiatic peoples from immigrating into America. Two years later, the group renamed themselves to the Asiatic Exclusion League (AEL), the AEL’s purpose was the same as its predecessor the exclusionary group only expanded their nativist goals to affect other Asiatic peoples.
The AEL’s focus was primarily based upon limiting Asiatic migration all together, this was done through amending some of the existing laws like the 1913 California Alien Land Law Act with revisions that made it harder for Asiatic people to reside in California. McClatchy was able to line himself up with nativist groups and take members from the AEL and Native Sons of the Golden West (he was a member of Pacific Parler No. 10[3]), and The Japanese Exclusion League to create an exclusionary group that not only focused on Asiatic Immigration but, also on Mexican and Filipino immigration. The California Joint Immigration Committee (CJIC) formed in 1925 with McClatchy serving as the Secretary of the CJIC. McClatchy was able to surround himself with prominent Californian politicians at the time, such as Attorney General Ulysses S. Webb, Governor Hiram Johnson and Senator James D. Phelan. The CJIC through McClatchy was also able to get aide from other organizations, one of the organizations that assisted the CJIC was the California State Federation of Labor.[4]
McClatchy as the secretary was then able to write and distribute pamphlets published by the CJIC. The pamphlets focused on guarding immigration from countries that were not Anglo-European origin. McClatchy was able to formulate arguments that would only benefit the eugenics belief that had been gaining popularity since the 1917 Immigration Act.[5]
With a new purpose of guarding the Immigration gates against all immigrants the CJIC, through McClatchy, began to adopt precedents through court cases to help create a hierarchy of races. Attempting to use the Thind and Ozawa cases to help differentiate white from the “other.” These cases were able to distinguish asiatic people as a race other than white, however, with immigration from Mexico seemingly increasing post-war; McClatchy was adamant about adopting a test-case for Mexicans to gain a classification of their race to ensure they would not be able to be exempt from the 1924 Immigration Act.[6]
In 1937, he lobbied to strip Kibei, Japanese Americans born in the United States who were sent to Japan to study or visit family for an extended time, of their citizenship if they had lived in Japan for more than a year.[1]
He died of a heart condition on May 15, 1938.[1]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Niiya, Brian. “V.S. McClatchy”. Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
- ^ Daniels, Roger (1974). Racism In California: A Reader in the History of Oppression. New York: Macmillan. p. 55.
- ^ Conmy, Peter Thomas (1942), The history of California’s Japanese problem and the part played by the Native Sons of the Golden West in its solution (PDF), Native Sons of the Golden West, p. 5, retrieved May 6, 2022
- ^ Hirobe, Izumi (2001). Japanese Pride, American Prejudice: Modifying the Exclusion Clause of the 1924 Immigration Act. Stanford University Press. pp. 71–72.
- ^ McClatchy, Valentine Stuart (1925). Guarding the Immigration Gates: What Has Been Done What Is Still to Be Done. California Joint Immigration Committee.
- ^ Molina, Natalia (2014). How race is made in America : immigration, citizenship, and the historical power of racial scripts. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520280083. OCLC 898719258.
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We demand our country back! We sweated, we fought for, and we built it!
The jews hated this video I shot in front of a Pennsylvania steel mill, and hacked at it day and night. (This is a third generation of the video, hence the poor visual and audio quality.) Note especially the Great-Depression/Obama Recession part!
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Did our ancestors fight and die so our white lands be given to the gimmigrant invaders? Would our ancestors go off to war if they knew what the perverts were doing to our lands ?
Thanks for the home school reading assignment for today.