The John Crow Project
Documenting the history of anti-Chinese lynching, exclusion, and resistance
in the American West (1850 – 1915)
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Welcome to the John Crow Project. This site revives a neglected chapter of American history: the white supremacist violence and legal exclusion aimed at Chinese immigrants after the Gold Rush. The first attacks appeared in California’s goldfields in 1849, then rolled east along wagon roads, rail lines, and river towns. By the early 1900s the violence had crossed the Mississippi River and collided with the entrenched racism of Jim Crow. Drawing on newly compiled lynching databases, digitized newspapers, and recent scholarship, this website documents how vigilante terror and discriminatory laws worked hand-in-hand to drive Chinese communities from mines, rail camps, and towns.
In the pages of this website, you will find interactive charts and maps of more than documented lynchings and massacres, timelines that pair major exclusion laws with surges in mob violence, and primary-source newspaper articles that preserve the voices of victims, witnesses, and resisters. Our goal is to make this “red record” of the West impossible to ignore, to honor those who were lost, and to provide educators, descendants, and researchers the tools they need to confront the legacy of what we call John Crow—a western counterpart to Jim Crow that sought expulsion rather than segregation.
The term John Crow is a deliberate conceptual framework, modeled in part on Jane Crow, which was coined to name the compounded racial and gendered oppression faced by Black women. Like Jane Crow, John Crow seeks to expose a distinct but parallel regime of racial terror—in this case, one that targeted Chinese immigrants in the American West. “Crow” evokes Jim Crow, the system of white supremacist control that subjugated African Americans in the post-Reconstruction South. “John” derives from John Chinaman, the 19th-century racial caricature that dehumanized Chinese immigrants as alien and unassimilable. By merging these terms, John Crow names a system not of enforced separation, but of violent exclusion: lynchings, purges, exclusion laws, and the destruction of Chinatowns worked to erase Chinese presence from the national body. This project uses John Crow to surface that hidden history and to extend Ida B. Wells’s “Red Record” into the western landscape of American racial terror.
Explore the evidence, contribute your family's stories, and help us extend this record—what you see here is a starting point, not an endpoint. Together we can uncover, verify, and map new cases and perspectives, transforming collective memory and advancing justice through truth.