Public History Spotlight (The Immigration and Ethnic History Newsletter)

The Angel Island Immigration Station is a valuable public history resource for scholars, educators, students, and the public. From the physical structure (where immigrants inscribed their hopes, fears, and observations) to the memories and perspectives of those who were processed and detained, the site serves as an important reminder of racist and exclusionary immigration laws and the humanity of the individuals who have been subject to them then and now.

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Once Upon a Wednesday: An Island, Enlightening History and the Tampon 11-20mm f2.8 Lens (Looking Glass)

For those of you unfamiliar with Angel Island Immigration Station, it was an immigration facility that operated from January 21, 1910, to November 5, 1940, where immigrants entering the United States were detained and interrogated. It has served other purposes since then and today is managed and maintained by the nonprofit organization Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation (AIISF).

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Russell Nauman
Resistance and “PerforMemory” amidst Pandemic-era Anti-Asian Hate: Unsettling Chronologies of Exclusion at Angel Island (IIAS Newsletter)

The year 2022 marked the 140th anniversary of the Chinese Exclusion Act. A series of events in the San Francisco Bay Area revolving around the Angel Island Immigration Station re-engaged with questions pertaining to exclusion, migration, race, and incarceration amidst a new wave of anti-Asian hate crimes during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Angel Island Family Day Scheduled For Saturday (San Francisco Patch)

The historic Angel Island Immigration Station will host a Family Day this Saturday. The sold-out event will take place from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Attendees will receive a round trip ferry ride from either Tiburon or San Francisco, a shuttle service to the Immigration Station and lunch from Shef, an online marketplace for cooks to connect with customers in their community and earn income selling homemade dishes.

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History of Angel Island, The Ellis Island of the West (SF Travel)

Activities and attractions offered on the island include picnic sites with breathtaking views, fishing and sunbathing at coves and beaches, hiking trails through wooded terrain, biking on the five-mile Perimeter Road, camping, historic military sites and buildings, and an educational tram tour. The most popular attraction, however, is the old Immigration Station at China Cove.

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Plain Sight (The Stanford Daily)

Along the pale, cracking wood of Angel Island’s barracks, etched symbols from that time are still visible today. Since the California Department of Parks and Recreation took possession of the island and made it a State Park, 220 Chinese poems have been identified.

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