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{{family name hatnote|Chin|lang=Chinese}}
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[[Image:ChinLinSou.jpg|thumb|Chin Lin Sou]]
[[File:Chin Lin Sou.png|thumb|Chin Lin Sou, ca. 1880s. History Colorado, Stephen H. Hart Library and Research Center]]
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'''Chin Lin Sou''' (1836 – 1894, 陳林新) was an influential leader in the [[Chinese American]] community and prominent figure in [[Colorado]].<ref name="Monnett">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Sou, Chin Lin|pages=146|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of the Great Plains|last=Monnett|first=John H.|editor=David J. Wishart|publisher=University of Nebraska Press|isbn=0803247877|year=2004}}</ref> He immigrated to the [[United States]] from [[Guangzhou]], [[China]], in 1859 at the age of 22. Chin stood out amongst his Chinese peers at the time in the United States as he dressed like a westerner and spoke perfect English. He was a supervisor of hundreds of Chinese workers on the building of the [[Transcontinental Railroad]] and feeder lines across California, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, and Colorado.
'''Chin Lin Sou''' (September 29, 1836 – August 10, 1894, 陳林新) was an influential leader in the [[Chinese American]] community and prominent figure in [[Colorado]].<ref name="Monnett">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Sou, Chin Lin|pages=146|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of the Great Plains|last=Monnett|first=John H.|editor=David J. Wishart|editor1-link=David J. Wishart|publisher=University of Nebraska Press|isbn=0803247877|year=2004}}</ref> He immigrated to the [[United States]] from [[Guangzhou]], [[China]], in 1859. Chin stood out amongst other Chinese immigrants at the time as he dressed like a westerner and spoke perfect English. He was a supervisor of hundreds of Chinese workers who built the [[transcontinental railroad]] and feeder lines across California, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, and Colorado.


He was among the first Chinese immigrants in Colorado.<ref name="HC bio"/> He became wealthy by buying abandoned mines by selling them or operating placer mines. He was a merchant in [[Gilpin County, Colorado|Gilpin County]] and [[Denver]], Colorado. Known as a leader, he addressed racial prejudice and founded and was a member in organizations to support Chinese business people and communities. In 1977, a stained glass portrait of Chin was installed for his role in Colorado's history at the Old Supreme Court in the [[Colorado State Capitol]] building in Denver.
He was among the first Chinese immigrants in Colorado.<ref name="HC bio"/> He became wealthy by buying abandoned mines and selling them or operating [[Placer mining|placer mines]]. He was a merchant in [[Gilpin County, Colorado|Gilpin County]] and [[Denver]], Colorado. Known as a leader, he founded and was a member in organizations that supported Chinese business people and communities. In 1977, a stained glass portrait of Chin was installed at the Old Supreme Court in the [[Colorado State Capitol]] building in Denver for his role in Colorado's history.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Chin Lin Sou was born in [[Canton, China|Canton]] (now called [[Guangzhou]]) in southern China in or around 1836.<ref name="HC bio" /><ref name="Den Lib bio">{{Cite web |date=2019-12-01 |title=Chin Lin Sou (1836 - 1894) |url=https://history.denverlibrary.org/colorado-biographies/chin-lin-sou-1836-1894 |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=Denver Public Library History |language=en}}</ref> To escape the civil war in China ([[Taiping Rebellion]]),<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> he traveled by sea to [[San Francisco]], California in 1859.<ref name="HC bio" /><ref name="Plains humanities">{{Cite web |title=Chin Lin Sou (1837-1894) |url=http://plainshumanities.unl.edu/encyclopedia/doc/egp.asam.020 |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=plainshumanities.unl.edu}}</ref> He intended to reap the opportunities that he heard of about the [[Western United States|American West]].<ref name="HC bio">{{Cite web |title=Chin Lin Sou |url=https://www.historycolorado.org/sites/default/files/media/documents/2017/chin_lin_sou.pdf |access-date=2021-11-15 |website=History Colorado}}</ref> In the United States, he was seen as less foreign than other Chinese people because he wore western clothing,<ref name="CE" /> was over six feet tall, had blue eyes, and spoke English fluently.<ref name="HC bio" /><ref name="Den Lib bio" /> He was recognized as an intelligent man and a quick learner.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />
Chin Lin Sou was born in Canton (now called [[Guangzhou]]) in southern China on September 29, 1836.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=76}} To escape the civil war in China ([[Taiping Rebellion]]),<ref name="Den Lib bio">{{Cite web |date=2019-12-01 |title=Chin Lin Sou (1836 - 1894) |url=https://history.denverlibrary.org/colorado-biographies/chin-lin-sou-1836-1894 |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=Denver Public Library History |language=en}}</ref> he traveled by sea to [[San Francisco]], California in 1859.<ref name="HC bio" /><ref name="Plains humanities">{{Cite web |title=Chin Lin Sou (1837-1894) |url=http://plainshumanities.unl.edu/encyclopedia/doc/egp.asam.020 |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=plainshumanities.unl.edu}}</ref> He was inspired by tales of success in the [[Western United States|American West]].<ref name="HC bio">{{Cite web |title=Chin Lin Sou |url=https://www.historycolorado.org/sites/default/files/media/documents/2017/chin_lin_sou.pdf |access-date=2021-11-15 |website=History Colorado}}</ref> Upon his arrival, he mined for gold for several years in California.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=76}}
In the United States, he was seen as less foreign than other Chinese people because he wore western clothing,<ref name="CE" /> was over six feet tall, had blue eyes, and spoke English fluently.<ref name="HC bio" /><ref name="Den Lib bio" />{{efn|His eyes were discussed as grey in one source<ref name="CI" /> and blue-grey in another.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=76}}}} Based upon the color of his eyes and his height, his family may have been from northern China.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=76}} He was recognized as an intelligent man and a quick learner,<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> who had great executive ability.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=76}}


==Career==
==Career==

===Railroad===
===Railroad===
He worked on the [[First Transcontinental Railroad]] as the foreman of a group of [[Chinese Railroad Workers|Chinese railroad workers]], many of whom Chin, himself, recruited and helped to gain passage into the United States.<ref name="Peak" /> He first worked for [[Charles Crocker]] of the [[Central Pacific Railroad]] in Donner Pass in the Sierra Mountains of California and then the [[Great Basin]] of Utah. He worked among hundreds of Chinese who also fled China's civil war.<ref name="Plains humanities" /> The transcontinental railroad was completed on May 10, 1869 at [[Promontory, Utah]].<ref name="Plains humanities" />
[[File:Chinese railroad workers sierra nevada.jpg|thumb|Chinese workers in the snow constructing the [[first transcontinental railroad]].]]
He worked on the [[first transcontinental railroad]] as the foreman of a group of [[Chinese Railroad Workers|Chinese railroad workers]], many of whom Chin himself recruited and helped to gain passage into the United States.<ref name="Peak" /> He first worked for [[Charles Crocker]] of the [[Central Pacific Railroad]] at [[Donner Pass]] in the [[Sierra Nevada]] Mountains of California and in then the [[Great Basin]] of Utah. He worked among hundreds of Chinese who also fled China's civil war.<ref name="Plains humanities" /> The transcontinental railroad was completed on May 10, 1869, at [[Promontory, Utah]],<ref name="Plains humanities" /> becoming what is considered the greatest technological event of the 19th century.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=77}}


[[File:Appleton's illustrated hand-book of American cities; (1876) (14597221180).jpg|thumb|left|Appleton's illustrated hand-book of American cities, 1876]]
He worked in Nevada for the Central Pacific Railroad.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> Then, he worked for Gen. [[Grenville Dodge]] of the [[Union Pacific Railroad]],<ref name="Plains humanities" /> which had joined with Central Pacific.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> Working to bring the railroad tracks to government standard,<ref name="Plains humanities" /> he worked in Utah, Wyoming, and Nebraska from the [[Rocky Mountains]] to the [[Great Plains]].<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /><ref name="Plains humanities" /> In Colorado, he worked for the [[Denver Pacific Railroad]],<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> which built a feeder line between Denver and [[Cheyenne, Wyoming]] to the Union Pacific line.<ref name="CE" />
He worked in Nevada for the Central Pacific Railroad.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> Then, he worked for Gen. [[Grenville Dodge]] of the [[Union Pacific Railroad]],<ref name="Plains humanities" /> which had merged with Central Pacific.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> Working to bring the railroad tracks to government standards,<ref name="Plains humanities" /> he worked in Utah, Wyoming, and Nebraska from the [[Rocky Mountains]] to the [[Great Plains]].<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="Plains humanities" /><ref name="CE" /> In Colorado, he worked for the [[Denver Pacific Railroad]],<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> which built a feeder line from Denver to the Union Pacific line at [[Cheyenne, Wyoming]].<ref name="CE" /> With Denver connected to the transcontinental railroad, it had access to national markets and became the "Queen City of the West."{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=77}}


His leadership was important to the construction of the railroad because Chinese railroad workers were used to lay the steel rails.<ref name="Peak" /> Railroad company owners hired Chinese workers because they were able to pay them less than white workers, who worked shorter days and received food rations. Hundreds of Chinese workers died from disease or injuries on the job, due to the use of explosives and from mudslides and avalanches. Their work included blasting mountain sides, after which they cleared the rubble and build retention walls. At the time, there were no laws to protect railroad workers from occupational hazards.<ref name="CE" /><ref name="Transcontinental railway">{{Cite news |date=2015-06-21 |title=Transcontinental railway 100th anniversary. |page=4 |work=The Los Angeles Times |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22375393/transcontinental-railway-100th/ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref>
His leadership was important to the construction of the railroad.<ref name="Peak" /> Railroad company owners hired Chinese workers because they were able to pay them less than white workers, who worked shorter days and received food rations. Hundreds of Chinese workers died from disease or injuries on the job, due to the use of explosives and as the result of mudslides and avalanches. Their work included blasting mountain sides, after which they cleared the rubble and built retention walls. At the time, there were no laws to protect railroad workers from occupational hazards.<ref name="CE" /><ref name="Transcontinental railway">{{Cite news |date=2015-06-21 |title=Transcontinental railway 100th anniversary. |page=4 |work=The Los Angeles Times |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22375393/transcontinental-railway-100th/ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref>


===Mining===
===Mining===
Amongst the first Chinese pioneers in Colorado, in 1871 he moved to [[Black Hawk, Colorado|Black Hawk]], [[Colorado]], where he was the unofficial leader of a group of Chinese immigrants who settled in a community called [[Cottonwood, Colorado|Cottonwood]].<ref name="Peak">{{cite web|url=http://www.rmpbs.org/byways/ptp_chinese.html|title=Peak to Peak|publisher=Rocky Mountain Public Broadcasting Network|accessdate=2008-11-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080905041014/http://www.rmpbs.org/byways/ptp_chinese.html|archive-date=2008-09-05|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="CVL">{{Cite web |date=2015-07-13 |title=Chin Lin Sou: A Pioneer in More Ways Than One |url=https://www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org/digital-colorado/colorado-histories/beginnings/chin-lin-sou-a-pioneer-in-more-ways-than-one/ |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=Colorado Virtual Library |language=en-US}}</ref> It may have been the first settlement of Chinese in Colorado.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />
Amongst the first Chinese pioneers in Colorado, he moved in 1871 to [[Black Hawk, Colorado|Black Hawk]], [[Colorado]], where he was the unofficial leader of a group of Chinese immigrants who settled in a community called [[Cottonwood, Colorado|Cottonwood]].<ref name="Peak">{{cite web|url=http://www.rmpbs.org/byways/ptp_chinese.html|title=Peak to Peak|publisher=Rocky Mountain Public Broadcasting Network|accessdate=2008-11-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080905041014/http://www.rmpbs.org/byways/ptp_chinese.html|archive-date=2008-09-05|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="CVL">{{Cite web |date=2015-07-13 |title=Chin Lin Sou: A Pioneer in More Ways Than One |url=https://www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org/digital-colorado/colorado-histories/beginnings/chin-lin-sou-a-pioneer-in-more-ways-than-one/ |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=Colorado Virtual Library |language=en-US}}</ref> It may have been the first settlement of Chinese in Colorado.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />


He was well-paid as a supervisor in a mine.<ref name="HC bio" /> He managed more than 300 Chinese workers by 1874 and the crew expanded into North Clear Creek<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> and Lower Russell Gulch.<ref name="Labor" /> He managed the employment of Chinese workers, including hiring them, negotiating wages, and drafting contracts with various mine owners.<ref name="CE" /><ref name="Labor" /> Also acting as a merchant, he sold them the supplies that they needed. The Chinese workers generally worked 10 hours a day, except Sundays when they worked 6 to 8 hours.<ref name="Labor">{{Cite news |date=November 7, 1874 |title=Chinese Labor |via= Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection |work=Colorado Springs Gazette |url=https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=d&d=CSG18741107.2.62&e=-------en-20--1--img-txIN%257ctxCO%257ctxTA--------0------ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref>
He was well-paid as a mine supervisor.<ref name="HC bio" /> He managed more than 300 Chinese workers by 1874 and the crew expanded into North Clear Creek<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> and Lower Russell Gulch.<ref name="Labor" /> He hired Chinese workers, negotiated their wages, and drafted employment contracts with mine owners.<ref name="CE" /><ref name="Labor" /> Also a merchant, he sold them the supplies that they needed. The Chinese workers generally worked 10 hours a day, except Sundays when they worked 6 to 8 hours.<ref name="Labor">{{Cite news |date=November 7, 1874 |title=Chinese Labor |via= Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection |work=Colorado Springs Gazette |url=https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=d&d=CSG18741107.2.62&e=-------en-20--1--img-txIN%257ctxCO%257ctxTA--------0------ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref>


[[File:Chinese Gold Miners b.jpg|thumb|Roy D. Graves, Chinese gold miners]]
Chin became wealthy by buying and selling abandoned mine.<ref name="Monnett"/><ref name="CE" /> Since Chinese miners could not file original claims for mines in the western United States, Chin began to work mines abandoned by whites. They specialized in placer mining that used water to collect gold from steam beds. It was a less profitable form of mining.<ref name="CE" /> He supervised hundreds of Chinese placer mines between 1870 and 1894, when he died. Edward L. Thayer, his mining partner, managed mines near [[Denver]], [[Fairplay, Colorado|Fairplay]], Central City, and Black Hawk. He and Thayer operated supply stores in [[Gilpin County, Colorado]].<ref name="CE" /> He became wealthy through the sale of two of his mines that became successful.<ref name="CVL" />
Chin became wealthy by buying and selling abandoned mines.<ref name="Monnett"/><ref name="CE" /> Since Chinese miners could not file original claims for mines in the western United States, Chin began to work mines abandoned by whites. The Chinese specialized in placer mining that used water to collect gold from stream beds. It was a less profitable form of mining,<ref name="CE" /> because it was a time-intensive process to pan for residual bits of gold.{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=78}} He supervised hundreds of Chinese placer mines between 1870 and 1894, when he died. He and Edward L. Thayer, his mining partner, managed mines near [[Denver]], [[Fairplay, Colorado|Fairplay]], [[Central City, Colorado|Central City]], and Black Hawk. They also operated supply stores in [[Gilpin County, Colorado]].<ref name="CE" /> He became wealthy through the sale of two of his profitable mines.<ref name="CVL" /> His first deposit at the National Bank in Central City was for $60,000 ({{inflation|US|60000|1873|fmt=eq}}).{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=78}}


Chin received a good reputation in the community due to "his gentlemanly and dignified deportment" and "rare skill in conducting business affairs."<ref name="CE" /> He was given a chair of honor at the [[Central City Opera House]].<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> Chin was offered the job of Central City marshal. Due to prejudice against Chinese people, he turned the offer down. He said "being Chinese gave him enough problems."<ref name="Den Lib bio" />
Chin had a good reputation in the community due to "his gentlemanly and dignified deportment" and "rare skill in conducting business affairs."<ref name="CE" /> He was given a chair of honor at the [[Central City Opera House]].<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> Chin was offered the job of Central City marshal. Due to prejudice against Chinese people, he turned down the offer. He said "being Chinese gave him enough problems."<ref name="Den Lib bio" />


A fire in 1874 was blamed on the Chinese, the rumor being that it was started during religious ceremonies. Chin told the ''Central City Register'' newspaper that "Chinese are too frequently made the victims of circumstance which any other nationality would escape without censure, and they desire to have their side of the case represented as it is." He also stated that the fire started from a chimney that had not been cleaned properly<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> or due to a defective flue.<ref name="CE" />
A fire in 1874 was blamed on the Chinese, the rumor being that it was started during religious ceremonies. Chin told the ''Central City Register'' newspaper that "Chinese are too frequently made the victims of circumstance which any other nationality would escape without censure, and they desire to have their side of the case represented as it is." He stated that the fire started from a chimney that had not been cleaned properly<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> or due to a defective flue.<ref name="CE" />


===Businessman===
===Denver===
He moved to Denver, where [[Chinatown, Denver|Chinatown]] had been established by 1880. It was located between 14th and 17th Streets on Wazee.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> Chin continued to manage mining operations while also operating a business in Denver.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> He imported goods from China—like furniture, food, and clothing—that he sold in Denver. A leader within the city, he was known as the "Mayor of Chinatown."<ref name="HC bio" />
He moved to Denver, where [[Chinatown, Denver|Chinatown]] had been established by 1880. It was located between 14th and 17th Streets on Wazee.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> Chin continued to manage mining operations while also operating a business in Denver.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> He imported goods from China—like furniture, food, and clothing—that he sold in Denver. A leader within the city, he was known as the "Mayor of Chinatown."<ref name="HC bio" />


He and other Chinese were subject to racial discrimination and violence. When the United States government passed a law that prevented Chinese immigrants from becoming citizens, it meant that they would be unable to bring a case of violence or discrimination to court.<ref name="HC bio" /> He co-founded "The Six Companies", which was a group of Chinese American business and insurance companies.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> He was a member of the Chee Kong Tongs, a group of Chinese who united to provide support, aid and loans for one another.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />
He and other Chinese were subject to racial discrimination and violence. When the United States government passed a law that prevented Chinese immigrants from becoming citizens, it meant that they would be unable to bring a case of violence or discrimination to court.<ref name="HC bio" /> He co-founded "The Six Companies", which was a group of Chinese American business and insurance companies.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> He was a member of the Chee Kong Tongs, a group of Chinese who united to provide support, aid and loans for one another.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />


[[File:1880 Anti-Chinese Riot in Denver anagoria.JPG|thumb|left|Anti-Chinese riot in Denver, 1880]]
On October 31, 1880, a group of white people started a riot against the Chinese. One man, Sing Lee, was murdered. Anyone that looked Chinese was attacked and Chinese businesses were destroyed. Many Chinese moved out of Denver to larger cities, like Chicago.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> At its height, there were more than Chinese residents in Denver's Chinatown.<ref name="CL Willie obit" /> The number of Chinese in Denver dropped from 980 in 1890,<ref name="CE" /> to 110 residents by 1940,<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> and only three families later in the 1940s.<ref name="CE" />
On October 31, 1880, a group of white people started a riot against the Chinese. One man, Sing Lee, was murdered. Anyone that looked Chinese was attacked and Chinese businesses were destroyed. Many Chinese moved out of Denver to larger cities, like Chicago.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> At its height, there were more than 3,000 Chinese residents in Denver.<ref name="CL Willie obit" /> The number of Chinese in Denver dropped from 980 in 1890,<ref name="CE" /> to 110 residents by 1940,<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> and only three families later in the 1940s.<ref name="CE" />


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
By the 1873,<ref name="LoDo Lily">{{Cite web |title=Women of the West Museum: The LoDo Mural Project |url=https://www.his.com/~njohn/wow/lily.htm |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=www.his.com}}</ref> he had earned enough money to bring his wife over from China.<ref name="CI" /> They lived in Black Hawk,<ref name="CL Willie obit" /><ref name="LoDo Lily" /> [[Fairplay, Colorado|Fairplay]], and [[Como, Colorado|Como]].{{sfn|Wei|2016|p=78}} They later moved to [[Denver]], living at 2031 Market Street.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />
By the 1870s, he had earned enough money to bring his family over from China. He later moved to [[Denver]], living at 2031 Market Street.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> At least one child, Willie (born 1886 in Blackhawk), was born in a mining town before they settled in Denver.<ref name="CL Willie obit">{{Cite news |date=1939-12-01 |title=Denver Chinatown Loses Its Mayor; Served 25 Years |pages=17 |work=Clarion-Ledger |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/89046386/denver-chinatown-loses-its-mayor/ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref> He and his wife had six children,<ref name="CE" /> including Lily, Chin Mon Lung, Chin Chin Lung,<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> Edward, and Wawa.<ref name="CE" /> Over time, they changed their names to more Americanized names, having the surname follow their first name. Chin Mong Lunch became Jimmy Lin Sou, and then Jimmie Chin. Similarly, Chin Chin Lung became Willie (also William) Lin Sou, followed by Willie Chin.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />


He and his wife had six children,<ref name="CE" /> including Lily, Chin Mon Lung, Chin Chin Lung,<ref name="Den Lib bio" /><ref name="CE" /> Edward, and Wawa.<ref name="CE" />{{efn|Lily was born in Blackhawk on December 3, 1873.<ref name="LoDo Lily" /> Willie was born in 1886 in Blackhawk.<ref name="CL Willie obit">{{Cite news |date=1939-12-01 |title=Denver Chinatown Loses Its Mayor; Served 25 Years |pages=17 |work=Clarion-Ledger |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/89046386/denver-chinatown-loses-its-mayor/ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref>}} Over time, they took on more Americanized names, including having the surname follow their first name. Chin Mong Lung became Jimmy Lin Sou, and then Jimmie Chin. Similarly, Chin Chin Lung became Willie (also William) Lin Sou, followed by Willie Chin.<ref name="Den Lib bio" />
Lily, considered the first Chinese American girl born in Colorado,<ref name="CE" /> married Look Wing Yuen, a rich merchant. Willie was a successful businessman, was known as the mayor of Chinatown, and raised his children to live an American lifestyle. They received a public education. He wanted to end a lottery that was common to the Chinese, but caused conflict with law enforcement.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> During [[World War II]], Willie and Edward served in the [[United States Army Air Corps]].<ref name="CE" /> When Willie died in 1939, Jimmy took the title of mayor of Chinatown. Jimmy ran several Chinese restaurants. Even though many Chinese had dispersed throughout Denver, he tried to maintain a Chinatown community, between 20th and 21st Streets and Market and Blake Streets. This was particularly important for older members of the society who had nowhere else to go.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> Wawa attended the Colorado Women's College, graduating with a business degree.<ref name="CE" />


Lily, their first child born in 1873<ref name="CI">{{Cite web |title=From railroad workers to Flying Tigers: a legacy of progress |url=https://www.chinainsight.info/people-2016/1154-from-railroad-workers-to-flying-tigers-a-legacy-of-progress.html |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=www.chinainsight.info}}</ref> is considered the first Chinese American child born in Colorado.<ref name="CE" /><ref name="CI" /> She married Look Wing Yuen, a rich merchant. Willie, a successful businessman, was known as the mayor of Chinatown. He raised his children to live the American lifestyle, including attaining a public education. He wanted to end a lottery that was common to the Chinese, but caused conflict with law enforcement.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> During [[World War II]], Willie's sons Willie and Edward served in the [[United States Army Air Corps]].<ref name="CE" /> When Willie died in 1939, Jimmy took the title of mayor of Chinatown. Jimmy ran several Chinese restaurants. Even though many Chinese had dispersed throughout Denver, he tried to maintain a Chinatown community between 20th and 21st Streets and Market and Blake Streets. This was particularly important for older members of the society who had nowhere else to go.<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> Wawa attended the [[Colorado Women's College]], graduating with a business degree.<ref name="CE" />
Chin Lin Sou became a naturalized citizen of the United States.<ref name="CE" /> He died in 1894 and was buried in Denver's [[Riverside Cemetery (Denver, Colorado)|Riverside Cemetery]],<ref name="Monnett"/> the city's oldest cemetery. He is identified as one of five influential people there.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-09-28 |title=5 Influential Figures Buried In Denver’s Oldest Operating Cemetery, Riverside Cemetery |url=https://secretdenver.com/most-influential-people-riverside-cemetery-denver/ |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=Secret Denver |language=en-US}}</ref> Family members had his body exhumed and transferred to China.<ref name="CE">{{Cite web |date=2021-02-16 |title=Chin Lin Sou |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/chin-lin-sou |first1=Michala |last1=Whitmore |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=coloradoencyclopedia.org |language=en-US}}</ref>

Chin Lin Sou became a naturalized citizen of the United States.<ref name="CE" /> He died on August 10, 1894<ref name="Den Lib bio" /> and was buried in Denver's [[Riverside Cemetery (Denver, Colorado)|Riverside Cemetery]],<ref name="Monnett"/> the city's oldest cemetery. He is identified as one of five influential people there.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-09-28 |title=5 Influential Figures Buried In Denver's Oldest Operating Cemetery, Riverside Cemetery |url=https://secretdenver.com/most-influential-people-riverside-cemetery-denver/ |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=Secret Denver |language=en-US}}</ref> Family members had his body exhumed and transferred to China.<ref name="CE">{{Cite web |date=2021-02-16 |title=Chin Lin Sou |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/chin-lin-sou |first1=Michala |last1=Whitmore |access-date=2021-11-16 |website=coloradoencyclopedia.org |language=en-US}}</ref>


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
[[File:CO State Capitol Old Supreme Court.jpg|thumb|Old Supreme Court, [[Colorado State Capitol]], showing a portion of the stain glass windows of historical Coloradans]]
Chin, as well as his children and descendants, became important figures in the city.<ref name="Monnett"/> A stained glass portrait of Chin was placed in the [[Colorado State Capitol]] in the old Supreme Court room<ref name="HC bio" /> in 1977 by the Ethnic Minority Council of the Colorado Centennial-Bicentennial Commission.<ref name="CE" /><ref>{{Cite news |date=January 6, 1977 |title=Minority stained glass window dedication set |via= Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection |work=The Douglas County News |url=https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/?a=d&d=DCN19770106-01.2.112&srpos=1&e=-------en-20--1--img-txIN%257ctxCO%257ctxTA-%2522Chin+Lin+Sou%2522-------0------ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref> In the portrait he was wearing a red Chinese gown, whereas Chin generally wore business suits.<ref name="CE" />
Chin, as well as his children and descendants, became important figures in the city.<ref name="Monnett"/> A stained glass portrait of Chin was placed in the [[Colorado State Capitol]] in the old Supreme Court room<ref name="HC bio" /> in 1977 by the Ethnic Minority Council of the Colorado Centennial-Bicentennial Commission.<ref name="CE" /><ref>{{Cite news |date=January 6, 1977 |title=Minority stained glass window dedication set |via= Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection |work=The Douglas County News |url=https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/?a=d&d=DCN19770106-01.2.112&srpos=1&e=-------en-20--1--img-txIN%257ctxCO%257ctxTA-%2522Chin+Lin+Sou%2522-------0------ |access-date=2021-11-16}}</ref> In the portrait he was wearing a red Chinese gown, whereas Chin generally wore business suits.<ref name="CE" /> He is also memorialized with other pioneers on a mosaic tile wall at the [[Colorado Convention Center]].<ref name="CI" />


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Chinese American history]]
* [[Chinese American history]]

==Notes==
{{notelist}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

==Sources==
* {{Cite book |last=Wei |first=William |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bljfCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA76 |title=Asians in Colorado: A History of Persecution and Perseverance in the Centennial State |date=2016-04-05 |publisher=University of Washington Press |isbn=978-0-295-80636-5}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* {{Cite book |last1=Jung |first1=William |title=Biography of Chin Lin Sou |language=en | year=1990 | oclc=47932420}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Lee |first1=Sue |title=Voices from the Railroad: Stories by Descendants of Chinese Railroad Workers |last2=Yu |first2=Connie Young |date=2019 |publisher=Chinese Historical Society of America |isbn=978-1-885864-60-4}}
* {{Cite book |last=Taggart |first=Janet L. |title=Chin Lin Sou: Chinese-American Leader |date=2013 |publisher=Filter Press, LLC |isbn=978-0-86541-155-5}}
* {{Cite book |last=Taggart |first=Janet L. |title=Chin Lin Sou: Chinese-American Leader |date=2013 |publisher=Filter Press, LLC |isbn=978-0-86541-155-5}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160103060831/https://theautry.org/explore/exhibits/lodo/lily.htm Short biography of Lily Chin], daughter of Chin Lin Sou
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160103060831/https://theautry.org/explore/exhibits/lodo/lily.htm Short biography of Lily Chin], daughter of Chin Lin Sou

{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 19:01, 15 November 2024

Chin Lin Sou, ca. 1880s. History Colorado, Stephen H. Hart Library and Research Center

Chin Lin Sou (September 29, 1836 – August 10, 1894, 陳林新) was an influential leader in the Chinese American community and prominent figure in Colorado.[1] He immigrated to the United States from Guangzhou, China, in 1859. Chin stood out amongst other Chinese immigrants at the time as he dressed like a westerner and spoke perfect English. He was a supervisor of hundreds of Chinese workers who built the transcontinental railroad and feeder lines across California, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, and Colorado.

He was among the first Chinese immigrants in Colorado.[2] He became wealthy by buying abandoned mines and selling them or operating placer mines. He was a merchant in Gilpin County and Denver, Colorado. Known as a leader, he founded and was a member in organizations that supported Chinese business people and communities. In 1977, a stained glass portrait of Chin was installed at the Old Supreme Court in the Colorado State Capitol building in Denver for his role in Colorado's history.

Early life

[edit]

Chin Lin Sou was born in Canton (now called Guangzhou) in southern China on September 29, 1836.[3] To escape the civil war in China (Taiping Rebellion),[4] he traveled by sea to San Francisco, California in 1859.[2][5] He was inspired by tales of success in the American West.[2] Upon his arrival, he mined for gold for several years in California.[3]

In the United States, he was seen as less foreign than other Chinese people because he wore western clothing,[6] was over six feet tall, had blue eyes, and spoke English fluently.[2][4][a] Based upon the color of his eyes and his height, his family may have been from northern China.[3] He was recognized as an intelligent man and a quick learner,[4] who had great executive ability.[3]

Career

[edit]

Railroad

[edit]
Chinese workers in the snow constructing the first transcontinental railroad.

He worked on the first transcontinental railroad as the foreman of a group of Chinese railroad workers, many of whom Chin himself recruited and helped to gain passage into the United States.[8] He first worked for Charles Crocker of the Central Pacific Railroad at Donner Pass in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California and in then the Great Basin of Utah. He worked among hundreds of Chinese who also fled China's civil war.[5] The transcontinental railroad was completed on May 10, 1869, at Promontory, Utah,[5] becoming what is considered the greatest technological event of the 19th century.[9]

Appleton's illustrated hand-book of American cities, 1876

He worked in Nevada for the Central Pacific Railroad.[4][6] Then, he worked for Gen. Grenville Dodge of the Union Pacific Railroad,[5] which had merged with Central Pacific.[4][6] Working to bring the railroad tracks to government standards,[5] he worked in Utah, Wyoming, and Nebraska from the Rocky Mountains to the Great Plains.[4][5][6] In Colorado, he worked for the Denver Pacific Railroad,[4][6] which built a feeder line from Denver to the Union Pacific line at Cheyenne, Wyoming.[6] With Denver connected to the transcontinental railroad, it had access to national markets and became the "Queen City of the West."[9]

His leadership was important to the construction of the railroad.[8] Railroad company owners hired Chinese workers because they were able to pay them less than white workers, who worked shorter days and received food rations. Hundreds of Chinese workers died from disease or injuries on the job, due to the use of explosives and as the result of mudslides and avalanches. Their work included blasting mountain sides, after which they cleared the rubble and built retention walls. At the time, there were no laws to protect railroad workers from occupational hazards.[6][10]

Mining

[edit]

Amongst the first Chinese pioneers in Colorado, he moved in 1871 to Black Hawk, Colorado, where he was the unofficial leader of a group of Chinese immigrants who settled in a community called Cottonwood.[8][11] It may have been the first settlement of Chinese in Colorado.[4]

He was well-paid as a mine supervisor.[2] He managed more than 300 Chinese workers by 1874 and the crew expanded into North Clear Creek[4] and Lower Russell Gulch.[12] He hired Chinese workers, negotiated their wages, and drafted employment contracts with mine owners.[6][12] Also a merchant, he sold them the supplies that they needed. The Chinese workers generally worked 10 hours a day, except Sundays when they worked 6 to 8 hours.[12]

Roy D. Graves, Chinese gold miners

Chin became wealthy by buying and selling abandoned mines.[1][6] Since Chinese miners could not file original claims for mines in the western United States, Chin began to work mines abandoned by whites. The Chinese specialized in placer mining that used water to collect gold from stream beds. It was a less profitable form of mining,[6] because it was a time-intensive process to pan for residual bits of gold.[13] He supervised hundreds of Chinese placer mines between 1870 and 1894, when he died. He and Edward L. Thayer, his mining partner, managed mines near Denver, Fairplay, Central City, and Black Hawk. They also operated supply stores in Gilpin County, Colorado.[6] He became wealthy through the sale of two of his profitable mines.[11] His first deposit at the National Bank in Central City was for $60,000 (equivalent to $1,526,000 in 2023).[13]

Chin had a good reputation in the community due to "his gentlemanly and dignified deportment" and "rare skill in conducting business affairs."[6] He was given a chair of honor at the Central City Opera House.[4] Chin was offered the job of Central City marshal. Due to prejudice against Chinese people, he turned down the offer. He said "being Chinese gave him enough problems."[4]

A fire in 1874 was blamed on the Chinese, the rumor being that it was started during religious ceremonies. Chin told the Central City Register newspaper that "Chinese are too frequently made the victims of circumstance which any other nationality would escape without censure, and they desire to have their side of the case represented as it is." He stated that the fire started from a chimney that had not been cleaned properly[4] or due to a defective flue.[6]

Denver

[edit]

He moved to Denver, where Chinatown had been established by 1880. It was located between 14th and 17th Streets on Wazee.[4] Chin continued to manage mining operations while also operating a business in Denver.[4] He imported goods from China—like furniture, food, and clothing—that he sold in Denver. A leader within the city, he was known as the "Mayor of Chinatown."[2]

He and other Chinese were subject to racial discrimination and violence. When the United States government passed a law that prevented Chinese immigrants from becoming citizens, it meant that they would be unable to bring a case of violence or discrimination to court.[2] He co-founded "The Six Companies", which was a group of Chinese American business and insurance companies.[4] He was a member of the Chee Kong Tongs, a group of Chinese who united to provide support, aid and loans for one another.[4]

Anti-Chinese riot in Denver, 1880

On October 31, 1880, a group of white people started a riot against the Chinese. One man, Sing Lee, was murdered. Anyone that looked Chinese was attacked and Chinese businesses were destroyed. Many Chinese moved out of Denver to larger cities, like Chicago.[4] At its height, there were more than 3,000 Chinese residents in Denver.[14] The number of Chinese in Denver dropped from 980 in 1890,[6] to 110 residents by 1940,[4] and only three families later in the 1940s.[6]

Personal life

[edit]

By the 1873,[15] he had earned enough money to bring his wife over from China.[7] They lived in Black Hawk,[14][15] Fairplay, and Como.[13] They later moved to Denver, living at 2031 Market Street.[4]

He and his wife had six children,[6] including Lily, Chin Mon Lung, Chin Chin Lung,[4][6] Edward, and Wawa.[6][b] Over time, they took on more Americanized names, including having the surname follow their first name. Chin Mong Lung became Jimmy Lin Sou, and then Jimmie Chin. Similarly, Chin Chin Lung became Willie (also William) Lin Sou, followed by Willie Chin.[4]

Lily, their first child born in 1873[7] is considered the first Chinese American child born in Colorado.[6][7] She married Look Wing Yuen, a rich merchant. Willie, a successful businessman, was known as the mayor of Chinatown. He raised his children to live the American lifestyle, including attaining a public education. He wanted to end a lottery that was common to the Chinese, but caused conflict with law enforcement.[4] During World War II, Willie's sons Willie and Edward served in the United States Army Air Corps.[6] When Willie died in 1939, Jimmy took the title of mayor of Chinatown. Jimmy ran several Chinese restaurants. Even though many Chinese had dispersed throughout Denver, he tried to maintain a Chinatown community between 20th and 21st Streets and Market and Blake Streets. This was particularly important for older members of the society who had nowhere else to go.[4] Wawa attended the Colorado Women's College, graduating with a business degree.[6]

Chin Lin Sou became a naturalized citizen of the United States.[6] He died on August 10, 1894[4] and was buried in Denver's Riverside Cemetery,[1] the city's oldest cemetery. He is identified as one of five influential people there.[16] Family members had his body exhumed and transferred to China.[6]

Legacy

[edit]
Old Supreme Court, Colorado State Capitol, showing a portion of the stain glass windows of historical Coloradans

Chin, as well as his children and descendants, became important figures in the city.[1] A stained glass portrait of Chin was placed in the Colorado State Capitol in the old Supreme Court room[2] in 1977 by the Ethnic Minority Council of the Colorado Centennial-Bicentennial Commission.[6][17] In the portrait he was wearing a red Chinese gown, whereas Chin generally wore business suits.[6] He is also memorialized with other pioneers on a mosaic tile wall at the Colorado Convention Center.[7]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ His eyes were discussed as grey in one source[7] and blue-grey in another.[3]
  2. ^ Lily was born in Blackhawk on December 3, 1873.[15] Willie was born in 1886 in Blackhawk.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Monnett, John H. (2004). "Sou, Chin Lin". In David J. Wishart (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. University of Nebraska Press. p. 146. ISBN 0803247877.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Chin Lin Sou" (PDF). History Colorado. Retrieved 2021-11-15.
  3. ^ a b c d e Wei 2016, p. 76.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "Chin Lin Sou (1836 - 1894)". Denver Public Library History. 2019-12-01. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Chin Lin Sou (1837-1894)". plainshumanities.unl.edu. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Whitmore, Michala (2021-02-16). "Chin Lin Sou". coloradoencyclopedia.org. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  7. ^ a b c d e "From railroad workers to Flying Tigers: a legacy of progress". www.chinainsight.info. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  8. ^ a b c "Peak to Peak". Rocky Mountain Public Broadcasting Network. Archived from the original on 2008-09-05. Retrieved 2008-11-21.
  9. ^ a b Wei 2016, p. 77.
  10. ^ "Transcontinental railway 100th anniversary". The Los Angeles Times. 2015-06-21. p. 4. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  11. ^ a b "Chin Lin Sou: A Pioneer in More Ways Than One". Colorado Virtual Library. 2015-07-13. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  12. ^ a b c "Chinese Labor". Colorado Springs Gazette. November 7, 1874. Retrieved 2021-11-16 – via Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection.
  13. ^ a b c Wei 2016, p. 78.
  14. ^ a b c "Denver Chinatown Loses Its Mayor; Served 25 Years". Clarion-Ledger. 1939-12-01. p. 17. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  15. ^ a b c "Women of the West Museum: The LoDo Mural Project". www.his.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  16. ^ "5 Influential Figures Buried In Denver's Oldest Operating Cemetery, Riverside Cemetery". Secret Denver. 2021-09-28. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  17. ^ "Minority stained glass window dedication set". The Douglas County News. January 6, 1977. Retrieved 2021-11-16 – via Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection.

Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Jung, William (1990). Biography of Chin Lin Sou. OCLC 47932420.
  • Lee, Sue; Yu, Connie Young (2019). Voices from the Railroad: Stories by Descendants of Chinese Railroad Workers. Chinese Historical Society of America. ISBN 978-1-885864-60-4.
  • Taggart, Janet L. (2013). Chin Lin Sou: Chinese-American Leader. Filter Press, LLC. ISBN 978-0-86541-155-5.
[edit]