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Hear it again: The untold history of migrant labor in the PNW

caption: Megan Asaka stands outside the NP Hotel in the Chinatown International District
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Megan Asaka stands outside the NP Hotel in the Chinatown International District
Libby Denkmann

Author and historian Megan Asaka tells the story of early migrant laborers in her book "Seattle from the Margins: Exclusion, Erasure, and the Making of a Pacific Coast City."

In Seattle's Chinatown International District, a block north of Jackson, sits a multi-story brick building with a marquee that reads "NP Hotel."

This is the Northern Pacific Hotel, which was referred to as a first class hotel when it was built in 1914.

"It was one of the many hotels that would open in this area between the late 19th and early 20th century period," said Megan Asaka, a professor of history at the University of California, Riverside. "Seattle actually had among the highest concentrations of hotel rooms and other forms of short-term housing in the entire country by 1920."

Asaka said Seattle built a lot of hotels at the turn of the 20th century because the city's workforce needed them.

Seattle developed around seasonal industries and extracting natural resources. These early laborers were often indigenous or Asian immigrants.

They worked in sawmills, canneries, and on farms, industries that required a highly mobile workforce. Laborers needed to move between jobs, often not staying long in the same location.

Hotels like the NP were vital for housing those workers and most of those hotels were operated by Japanese immigrants.

"Japanese immigrants by, I think, the 1920s operated one quarter of all the hotels in the city, even though they were just a tiny percentage of the urban population," Asaka said. "So they were very over-represented in this particular occupation."

The NP Hotel shares this dense block with the Panama Hotel. Maneki is also here, a famous Japanese restaurant with a long history in the community. Hotels in the early 20th century often included barber shops, bathhouses, cafes, and restaurants.

Asaka explained that many immigrants had strong ties to wealthy white business owners because those immigrants could provide and organize labor, but there was also intense racism at the forefront of this story. There were anti-Chinese riots in Seattle. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 banned Chinese laborers from immigrating to the U.S. During World War II, the U.S. government forcibly removed and incarcerated people of Japanese ancestry from Seattle, and other parts of the country.

The city of Seattle had a fraught relationship with its laborers.

"They wanted them as workers to do the labor because no one else would do the work," Asaka said. "And this was true for Chinese, this was true for Native American workers as well. And yet, they didn't really want them here in the city."

Megan Asaka spoke to Soundside about her latest book, "Seattle from the Margins: Exclusion, Erasure, and the Making of a Pacific Coast City," and the importance of tracking the difficult-to-uncover histories of early laborers.

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