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#142857 05/10/05 12:23 PM
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At 2:20 this afternoon, Washington time, all the telegraph offices in the country were notified by the Omaha telegraph office to be ready to receive the signals corresponding to the blows of the hammer that drove the last spike in the last rail that united New York and San Francisco with a band of iron.

http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/big/0510.html



btw, interesting to note the apposition of 'Europe' and 'Asia' as descriptions.




#142858 05/10/05 02:02 PM
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Sounds ironic

directly connecting the nations of Europe with those of Asia
interesting to note the apposition of 'Europe' and 'Asia' as descriptions. Er--could you 'splain a bit, please? I can't hear you with my eyes closed.


#142859 05/10/05 03:13 PM
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Er--could you 'splain a bit, please? I can't hear you with my eyes closed.

Maybe it's a reference to this (although you never know with mav, do you):

http://wordsmith.org/board/showflat.pl?Cat=&Board=words&Number=145866






#142860 05/10/05 08:37 PM
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> (although you never know with mav, do you):

mwah~hah~ha, my watched plot never boils...

and yes, the ASp is as perfickly orientatatated as usual :)

edit: to unpackage that a bit more, I thought it was interesting that this early on, they used the description of Asia as a natural 'opposite pole' to Europe, and also thought it was an ironic reference to a far-away place, given the huge numbers of Chinese labourers imported to slave on laying the railroad.


#142861 05/11/05 01:30 PM
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Thanks, Anna; I hadn't read that thread (or many others lately--my babies came home from college this weekend!).
As to the mention in the article, I took it as a parallel to the importance of a link between Europe and Asia, quite possibly the recently-opened Orient Express. Though I'll never know--I can hardly ask the writer!

Oh, and according to one piece I read, the Chinese laborers immigrated; they were not "imported".

#142862 05/11/05 02:42 PM
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> not "imported".

Really? I don't know much about this chapter of history, but thought I had read that large numbers of men had come from China and had not stayed beyond the construction years. Maybe my faulty memory though.


#142863 05/11/05 03:09 PM
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Pardon the thread derailment, but you did notice this, Jackie?


#142864 05/11/05 06:02 PM
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did someone crosstie this with another thread?



TEd
#142865 05/12/05 08:43 AM
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Chinese labour forces ebbed and flowed around the newer countries during the 19th century. The Chinese working on US railways weren't slaves, although they worked vey hard for very little pay. Many of them came directly from the failed goldfields of California or the Chinatown slums of San Francisco.

Although they were accepted on the west coast, the midwest and the east never really felt comfortable with Chinese neighbours, and they weren't encouraged to stay. Many of them made enough money to go back to China and live in some style, but many more remained or moved on to Australia and New Zealand as gold fields opened up in those two countries.

I read a book about this very subject some years ago, but I can't remember the title or the author, I'm afraid.




#142866 05/12/05 11:37 AM
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another reason they left US was, for many years, only men were allowed to enter US, and misseganation laws prevented them from marrying anyone but one of their own race. so life here in US was one of almost complete celebacy.




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