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Speech During the Anti-Chinese Incidents
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Judge Thomas Burke, "Speech During the Anti-Chinese Incidents,"
From The Daily Seattle Post-Intelligencer, November
6, 1885, p. 3.
Judge Thomas Burke: It was considered
by a number of persons who met today that it was the duty of
all good citizens to unite for the purpose of considering this
question and advising as to the best lies to pursue. False stories
have been carried to and fro, to invite hostility, and they,
like poison, have done their mischief, by tending to alienate
one class from the other. It was the judgment of thoughtful
men that a meeting where false statements might be pierced by
the keen point of truth, would be conducive of good, and tend
to unite the community. There is no division among the honest
people. We are all laborers, and the attempt to draw class lines
is false and malicious. We want by lawful and fair means, that
this community and the Territory shall be freed from the presence
of the Chinese. There are but two questions. Shall we do it
like Americans, according to law? Or as foreigners, outside
the law? I am an American, and appeal to Americans. Of the two
methods – the lawful and unlawful – I favor the
American method. The deputy sheriffs were organized to protect
the interests of the laborers. History records the fact that
no class suffers so much from riots as the working men, and
in the future you will curse the counsel of those who incite
or advise you to lawlessness. This nation has turned to the
oppressed of Europe, and welcomed them to her doors. After being
here two years they can take a farm, and in five years be accorded
the ballot, which requires an American 21 years to attain. All
fields are open to them. All that is asked of them is to uphold
the laws. I have patience with the German, the Frenchman, or
the Englishman, when he sneers at the laws of this country,
but none for the Irishman. I am but one remove myself, having
been born in America, and I have a right to speak of him. He
comes from a land where he is ground down, burdened and oppressed,
to free America, where he is given a farm, his children can
grow up and be educated, as our public schools are thrown open
to them, his sons can, and do, fill offices of trust, and every
freedom is accorded to him. When an Irishman raises his voice
against this Republic then my patience ceases, and I stand aghast
at the base ingratitude. How can they raise their hands against
the laws of the government that has done more to elevate the
laboring man than any other government on the face of the earth?
I am a poor man, and don’t hire much help; but I have
not had a Chinaman in my house for two years. I pay a white
woman five dollars more per month than a Chinaman would do the
same work for; but it is a matter of principle with me, and
I felt it my duty. In this matter much has been accomplished.
There is not a corporation in King county employing Chinese,
and outside of the laundries there are only a few house servants
in private families and they are being replaced as speedily
as possible. This is all being accomplished by peaceful means.
Three or four hundred armed men at Tacoma went around and packed
up the Chinese, bag and baggage, and marched them through the
streets and eight miles out to Lakeview, where they were left
on the prairie all night, exposed, without shelter, to a drenching
storm, and two died from exposure. After the expulsion of the
Chinese, their stores and houses were burned. The mayor of Tacoma
is a foreigner, and can hardly speak the English language. I
have read how the Germans rose up against the Jews and drove
them from their homes. I remember how they drove the Russian
peasants out; but what am I to think that only thirty miles
from where I stand, in the Republic of the United States, such
atrocities have been committed? It could not be done under an
American. It was done under a German. [Derisive shouts and hisses
from the gallery.]
George V. Smith – I hope
the working-men will be patient and listen to what the Judge
has to say.
Mr. Burke – Excuse me, Mr.
Smith, but I can assure you I need no one to intercede with
a Seattle audience for me. I know the people of Seattle. They
will hear me if they hate me. They have no reason to hate me,
for I have always been their friend. Why, gentlemen, injustice
to a dog I would denounce. One year from tonight you will say
I am right. In Tacoma they have gone further, and actually notified
lawful American citizens to go. "The American must go."
That’s the word in Tacoma. I am a free man, and would
rather live under the autocrat of all the Russias than live
under the rule of a dozen or twenty lawless men – worse
than tyrants. You may go outside the law, but you will be glad
to get back. Mark the course of the French Republic; mark the
course of our nation. Look at the English; while they oppress
they demand their liberty, because the greatest king of England
cannot go outside the law. I have never advised you wrongfully.
Look at it! One year ago, while you were voting for the forfeiture
of the unearned land grants held by grasping monopolies, the
people of Tacoma stood almost to a man for monopoly. Now they
go to the other extreme. I do not believe there is a city in
the United States presided over by an American, or a man with
an American heart, where such outrages could or would be permitted.
They say they did it peacefully. If a highwayman presents a
pistol to my head and takes my pocket-book from me, or comes
to my house and holds a bludgeon over me and compels me to leave,
he does not use force or violence. He would do it peacefully,
but would it be lawful or right? To call such work peaceful
is adding insult to injury. In the future the blackest page
in the history of Washington Territory will be that on which
it is recorded that 200 human beings were driven out of Tacoma
like dogs, and compelled to face a driving storm all night,
during which two of their number died from exposure. Dumb animals
are deserving of better treatment than that. The same God that
makes my heart beat made the Chinaman. He is not to blame for
his condition or color. In the South black men are persecuted,
in Hungary the Jews are maltreated and persecuted, and so it
goes. I believe the people of Seattle would lay down their lives
in defense of the law. It has not been twenty years since I
carried water on the railroad, and less than that since I worked
on the dump. My brothers are laborers, and why should I speak
against the laboring men? I am a free man, and will preserve
my liberty. This question is on the rapid road to solution,
but in order to hasten it you cannot afford to violate the eternal
laws of justice. The Chinese want to go, but don’t like
to be robbed or murdered. They are going as fast as possible.
Let the working men of the Queen City show to the world that
the great principle of justice prevails here. Do not be unjust
to a dog or horse, or anything else. The Chinamen are here under
solemn treaty stipulation, but they are going. The workingmen
will look around and see no Chinamen employed. It is to our
interest to see them go, but it is not to our interest, but
just the opposite, to see one drop of innocent blood spilled
or a single breach of the law. I knew you would listen to me.
If I should say a thousand times as distasteful things you would
listen to me. I thank you.
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