Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Monday, May 30, 2011
Environment of the Shelter
Activities around Angel Island
Immigration on Angel Island
Info From:
http://www.aiisf.org/history
&
http://immigration-online.org/20-angel-island.html
Image From:
http://www.alamo.edu/pac/faculty/rhines/1302theme2.htm
Entry by Lt. Juan Manuel de Ayala
http://www.bcx.org/photos/places/parks/angelisland/
Breaking News: Nike Missiles in the Bay
http://members.tripod.com/airfields_freeman/CA/Airfields_CA_SanFran.htm
Modern Angel Island
Angel Island is an island located in California, San Francisco. It was used for military forts and immigration centers in the early twentieth century. Angel Island is now used as a state park. It is administered by the California State Park. Now, Families,friends and tourists takes a hike, have a picnic, ride bikes or kayak and camp. The only way to get to Angel Island is by
ferries.
info from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angel_Island_%28California%29
image from:
http://angelisland.org/
By:Changmo Kang
Quarantine Station
In 1891, a Quarantine Station was opened at Ayala Cove , where ships from foreign ports could be fumigated, and immigrants suspected of carrying diseases could be kept in isolation. Obtained from the Navy in 1892, the decommissioned, ALGOMA-class wooden screw sloop USS Omaha and its boilers were used to supply superheated steam for
People suspected of carrying disease were first isolated at Angel Island and then put through a process that would cleanse their bodies of the infection. After they were cleared they would continue to the mainland.
The position of the Quarantine station was inconvenient, since it was so far from mainland clinics.
As years passed, use of Quarantine Stations diminished. Better medical examinations were made at ports of embarkation, and improved medical practices
In 1946 the Station was declared surplus, and all functions were moved to San Francisco. In 1957, three years after the cove became a State Park, all but four of the Quarantine Station’s forty-odd buildings were razed. Today little evidence remains of the sixty-five years of public service provided by the Angel Island Quarantine Station.
Miwok Artifacts
An Account from the Inside
When the ship finally entered the San Francisco Bay, all the passengers were separated. The few who were of a wealthier status were free to embark on land, while the rest of us were sent to Angel Island. There we were quarantined until deemed fit to enter. When we arrived on the island, we were again separated by race and then began our medical exams. Luckily for me, I passed my exam, but those who did not, were immediately deported back to the land they were trying to flee. The easy part was over and now I had to worry about the oral exam. It took about a week to receive my test and while waiting, I was stuck in what was called the barracks, but to me, it felt like a prison. It even included the stereotypical guards and a huge fence. The conditions inside were barely sanitary and my time spent waiting was focused on keeping myself healthy. After two weeks of living on the island, I was given my oral exam and just passed. Even though I knew I would face hardships in this new foreign country, my freedom that was suppressed while on Angel Island could never be taken away from me again.
Info from:
http://www.aiisf.org/history
http://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=Detained_on_Angel_Island
Image from:
http://www.wright.edu/cgi-bin/cm/dialogue/dialogue.cgi?action=section_bymonth§ion=features&month=May&year=2006
Involvement in the World Wars
http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2009/summer/angel.html