Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #chinozhist

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Some quick notes for myself before I visit the See Yup Temple in South Melbourne with a group of family historians this afternoon.

#chinozhist

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On my mother's side, we are descendents of goldrush-era Chinese immigrants to Australia. There were three brothers who were involved in the Beechworth mines possibly from as early as the 1860s. Their names were 黄世彦, 黄世圖 and 黄世祚. familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1…

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Wong Shi Hoo is my great grandfather - my maternal grandmother's father. He was naturalised and became a British subject in 1885. recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/AutoSe…
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Read 11 tweets
A thought...

The Immigration Restriction Act 1901 (AKA the #WhiteAustralia policy) didn't come out of the blue.

The Chinese knew it was coming and actively organised against it - politically and intellectually.

This publication was part of that struggle. #chinozhist

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You can download an electronic copy from the @Library_Vic. It was originally published in 1888, well before most "Australians" had arrived on our shores from Europe.

handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/107652

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Through family history research, I was surprised (and immensely proud) to find that my ancestors were involved in this Chinese civil rights struggle. Wong Shi Geen was my great grandfather's brother.

Here he cosigns with some notable leaders in the Chinese community (p7)

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March is Women’s History Month, so each day I’m going to tweet a piece of work by a woman about Chinese Australian women’s history… let’s see how we go! (I’m a day late, so I’ll post two today to catch up.) #chinozhist #WomensHistoryMonth
Morag Loh and Christine Ramsay, 'Survival and Celebration: An Insight into the Lives of Chinese Immigrant Women, European Women Married to Chinese and Their Female Children in Australia from 1856–1986' (Melbourne: self-published, 1986) #chinozhist #WomensHistoryMonth
Sophie Couchman, ‘“Oh, I Would like to See Maggie Moore Again”: Selected Women of Melbourne’s Chinatown’, in 'After the Rush', ed. Sophie Couchman, John Fitzgerald and Paul Macgregor (Melbourne: Otherland Press, 2004), pp. 171–90. #chinozhist #WomensHistoryMonth
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