Image:Ironchinkworker.png
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[edit] Summary
E. A. Smith's "The Iron Chink", a cleaning device marketed to replace Chinese fish canners using anti-immigration and racist rhetoric. A Chinese laborer stands beside the machine.
Photo first published in Pacific Fisherman annual 1906. The photo has been cropped and contrasted to emphasize the worker.
Accessed from the Digital Archive:Materials in the Freshwater and Marine Image Bank are in the public domain. No copyright permissions are needed. Acknowledgement of the Freshwater and Marine Image Bank as a source for borrowed images is requested.
Original negative and scan a part of University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections Division.
[edit] Licensing
| This image is in the public domain in the United States. In most cases, this means that it was first published prior to January 1, 1923 (see the template documentation for more cases). Other jurisdictions may have other rules, and this image might not be in the public domain outside the United States. See Wikipedia:Public domain and Wikipedia:Copyrights for more details. |
File history
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| Date/Time | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| current | 10:08, 4 April 2007 | 376×327 (84 KB) | Falsedef (Talk | contribs) | (E. A. Smith's "The Iron Chink", a cleaning device marketed to replace Chinese fish canners using anti-immigration and racist rhetoric. A Chinese laborer stands beside the machine. Photo first published in Pacific Fisherman annual 1906. The photo has been) |
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