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Chinese-American Postmaster Left Indelible
Stamp on Postal Service
The nation’s first Chinese American postmaster is little-known today but
in his time was a rare role model for Asian Americans and also radically
changed what the Postal Service looked like.
New America Media, News Report, Carolyn Goosen,
Posted: Mar 12, 2007
SAN FRANCISCO -- No one really knows it, but it was Lim Poon Lee who
made the postal service look like San Francisco.
“We used to joke that you had to be an Irish Catholic from St. Anne’s
parish to become a postal worker,” retired California State Senator John
Burton says. “By the time Lim finished with it, it looked like the face
of San Francisco, with Asian, African American, Latino and female
workers. His appointment as postmaster was like a big bomb going off.”
Community
members celebrated the 30th anniversary of the first post office in San
Francisco’s dense Chinatown on Friday, March 9. Lim Poon Lee, the
first-ever Chinese American postmaster in the country, established it.
Lee passed away at the age of 91 in 2002.
But Lee’s legacy in this city is felt far beyond the walls of the
bustling, multilingual Chinatown post office. His radical transformation
of the postal service and his activism in the Chinese community make him
a little-recognized pioneer of affirmative action and immigrant rights
in this city.
“Lee was one of the underappreciated but pivotal figures in the history
of Chinatown activism,” says Doug Chan, San Francisco attorney and
former director of the Chinese American Democratic Club.
Lee, born in Hong Kong in 1911, moved to San Francisco with his family
as an infant. The son of a laundry operator, he went to college,
graduate school, and law school after serving as a U.S. Army
counterintelligence specialist during World War II.
He would often tell the story of how while he was in Hokkaido, Japan, at
the end of the war, the Chinese POWs rioted against their Japanese
captors when news of the Japanese surrender came through. As the only
U.S. Army representative there who spoke Japanese, Chinese and English,
Lee was given the role of mediator. Lee prompted his commanding officer
to say that the Chinese officers be temporarily assigned to the U.S.
Army and thus enlisted their help in quelling the riot.
All his life, Lee continued to play the role of mediator and peacemaker,
enabling real communication between various parties. He worked with the
Chinese community, WWII Veterans, and the Democratic Party. In fact, Lee
was one of the founding members of the Chinese American Democratic Club
(CADC), an organization which had a key role in securing rights for
Chinese Americans at a time when Republicans were attacking them as
foreigners to be weeded out.
“He and other members of the CADC countered the campaign against the
Chinese headed by Republican attorneys around the ‘confession program’
sponsored by the federal government,” Doug Chan says. This crackdown on
illegal immigration targeted those who used false names to enter the
country -- the “paper sons”. It was Congressman Phil Burton and the CADC
who rose to defend the Chinese community against this selective
prosecution. Lee and the CADC were also very active in lobbying against
the Chinese Exclusion Act until it was finally repealed in 1943.
Retired Senator John Burton and his brother, former Congressman Phil
Burton, were instrumental in Lee’s appointment to Postmaster in 1966.
Senator Burton attended the small gathering Friday, Mar. 9 to celebrate
the post office’s 30th anniversary, and reflected with emotion on how
his “uncle” Lee transformed the face of the postal service.
Lee was so well connected that his transformation of postal service
hiring practices met little opposition. Mel Lee, an old friend of Lee’s,
and a Chinatown resident for the past 50 years, says, “Lim was a
powerful guy. He knew how to handle people. He had many friends from
every community, including the Irish community. He knew it was very
important to maintain these relationships.”
The idea for the 30th anniversary celebration of the Chinatown post
office came out a dinner organized by the Chinese American Voter
Education Committee (CAVEC). “No one at the post office knew about Lim
Poon Lee,” says David Lee, executive director of CAVEC. “Yet he was a
very important figure in San Francisco.”
The opening of that post office in 1977 was a significant moment. And
the appointment of Lim Poon Lee was a milestone in Asian American
political history. “At a time when there were few role models, few
political leaders, Lim Poon Lee was someone Chinese Americans could look
up to,” David Lee says.
Carolyn Goossen writes on education and other
topics for New America Media. |