In 1874, J.L. Chow opened Chow Chow Laundry at 904 Elm Street. He was the first person of Asian descent to be listed in the city directories. By 1891, 41/49 laundries in Dallas were Chinese-owned.
Fueled by decades of bigotry, a propaganda campaign was initiated against Chinese laundries by White competitors.
The Dallas Daily Times Herald ran an editorial in 1894: Danger in Inferior Laundries: Dallas Customers Cannot Be Too Careful Where They Send Their Soiled Clothing.
"… the employees of the inferior laundries referred to, run the risk of contracting some vile disease… The people should give white laundries a chance" texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/met…
News portrayed Chinese people as criminal, primitive, and diseased. Around 1898, most Chinese laundry proprietors had to close their businesses.
904 Elm Street is now location of Bank of America Plaza, the tallest skyscraper in the city and home to many of the region's most prestigious businesses- including Downtown Dallas Inc.
For #AAPIHeritageMonth, I wanted a picture in front of the building to commemorate J.L. Chow and all of the Chinese laundry proprietors whose livelihoods were destroyed by racism.
A security guard came outside and told us we weren't allowed to take photos there.
Later that day, I spoke at the Unity Against Hate rally and called upon my fellow Asian Americans to think of our heritage not just as our food or traditions-- it is our legacy.
Leave a trace of yourself behind for the next generation. Do something. Create something. Write something. Say something to let the world know we were here. J.L. Chow was here.
"The email raised a host of complaints about Joan Jackson, senior adviser to Superintendent Javier Montañez, claiming that she 'has created a work environment that eight district-level leaders consider intimidating, hostile and abusive.'" providencejournal.com/story/news/edu…
It's hard to find detailed info about Joan Jackson's career prior to Providence, because she used to go by Joan Massey.
"Our Exclusive Program allows you to adopt a Full Caucasian baby only." - @everlastadopt 🤦🏻♀️ So many things wrong, not enough space in a tweet. #adoption
"By the 1860s, there were lots of things around here for settlers to fight- illness, insects, hardship, Comanche Indians, and starting in 1861, the Yankees." (Images of America: Southlake by Connie Cooley and the Southlake Historical Society)
Early Southlake settler Spencer Graham is lauded by the United Confederate Veterans (UCV) for "citizenship, military service, character, and Christian qualities." (Images of America: Southlake by Connie Cooley and the Southlake Historical Society)
For the past decade - and especially in recent years - I've said just about all I can about Southlake. @CarrollISD's actions speak for themselves. Some have asked why I keep fighting. And, on days like this, it is beyond exhausting.
@Carrollisd Do I think @CarrollISD leadership will somehow develop moral fortitude overnight and fight HB 3979? Absolutely not. If there's one thing I learned during my time in the district, it's that White Supremacy and bigotry run deep there. And power and wealth usually prevail.
@Carrollisd But what I also learned as a student at @CarrollISD is how devastating it can be to feel like you don't belong. And think that what is taught within those walls reflects the outside world. That there is no hope.
#FBF 🧵: Found my old "Letter to the Editor" submission which was published (heavily edited) in the now defunct Southlake Times. Dated September 8, 2009. #flashbackfriday@Carrollisd#Southlake
@Carrollisd I wrote this piece after learning @Carrollisd would not allow teachers to show @BarackObama's address to students during class. Parents had to remove them from school if they wanted their children to watch it.
@Carrollisd@BarackObama "This decision is less about time constraints and more about the collective closed-mindedness of a community. It is about the fear of exposing children to different ideals than they have heard at home-- that they might actually form opinions according to their own free will."