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Chinese Laborers Finally on Track to Recognition

Railroad: Ceremony honors immigrants' efforts in completing the north-south line 125 years ago.

LOS ANGELES

September 06, 2001|PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

Metrolink's Frank Mendoza drove a gold-colored spike into the track Wednesday at a desolate spot in the Santa Clarita Valley.

The ceremony, commemorating the completion 125 years ago of the first north-south railway line in California, drew more than 100 politicians, schoolchildren, Chinese Americans and railroad buffs.


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Also present were the ghosts of the thousands of Chinese immigrants who built the railroad. As a historical marker erected at the site in 1976 explained: "We honor over 3,000 Chinese who helped build the Southern Pacific Railroad and the San Fernando Tunnel. Their labor gave California the first North-South railway, changing the state's history."

Nobody knows for certain how many Chinese died building the railway and the mile-long San Fernando Tunnel, then the longest tunnel west of the Appalachians, said speaker Irvin Lai, president of the Chinese Historical Society of Southern California.

"In those days, they didn't report that stuff," Lai said.

The work was completed under terrible conditions, especially the tunnel, which was built through rock weakened by water and oil and subject to cave-ins, other speakers said.

The railroad was "representative of a host of achievements by Chinese Americans at a time when the Chinese were one of the dominant labor forces in the West, involved in most public works projects," said Eugene Moy, vice president of the Chinese historical group.

Joe Bonino, vice chairman of the Southern California chapter of the Railway and Locomotive Historical Society, said Los Angeles was a "sleepy little mission town" until the railroad plugged it into the transcontinental railway system and the national economy.

Metrolink carried dozens of VIPs from downtown Los Angeles for the ceremony, held at the site of Lang Station, the depot where thousands celebrated the completion of the line on Sept. 5, 1876. At the original ceremony, the crowd cheered as railway baron Charles Crocker drove a genuine gold spike into the track, using a silver hammer.

The depot was torn down in the 1960s, despite the efforts of local conservationists to save it.

Metrolink's Mike McGinley said the original celebration was marked by a contest to see who would be first to finish the last 500 feet of track--the men working north from Los Angeles or those working south from the Tehachapi Mountains.

The Los Angeles group won, McGinley said, "and the celebration they had here then was a lot noisier than this one."

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