Tomorrow's Stories

An Ocean and a Dream Away

Description

FILIPINO AMERICAN HISTORY In 1763 Filipino Seamen established a settlement in what is now known as Louisiana. The Spanish American War made American national of Filipinos and from the early 1900's through 1935 they were free to enter the United States as long as they had the price of a boat ticket. Waiting to be told are the stories of the descendants of those Spanish colonial seamen, early workers in sugar plantations of Hawaii, men who served in the U.S. Navy since World War I, women who came in the 1920s and 1930's ambitious and aspiring college students, eager young workers who toiled in Alaska canneries, farms in California, Arizona, Washington and Montana, the railroads, kitchens and restaurants, as postal workers or houseboys, the American-born second generation of pre-World War II days, war brides, and countless others who constitute the subsequent groups of immigrants from the Philippines. Stories of Depression, riots and discrimination, vignettes of dance halls, gambling and the other leisure time activities, the lodges, churches and organized Filipino communities, the process of acculturation, and the value of family are some of the information
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Writer
Villamin, Nieves Catahan, Marquez, Rosalie Salutan, Talaugon, Joe T
Title
Tomorrow's Stories
Publisher
Authorhouse
Year
2020
Language
English
Pages
286
Weight
880 gr
EAN
9781728359106
Dimensions
279 x 216 x 23 mm
Binding format
Paperback / softback

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Categories

Boekstra