AUGUST 2019
Pacific Coast Immigration Center
The history and future of Angel Island’s Public Service Hospital
Opened in 1910, the Public Service Hospital (PSH) at the Angel Island Immigration Station provided medical services for immigrants detained at the station, but also played a key role in determining who might be allowed to enter the country. New arrivals were subjected to a medical examination at the PSH and screened for any contagious diseases or physical defects.

In addition to the standard medical examination, Asian immigrants were examined for traces of parasitic diseases - for example, hookworms and liver flukes - which required blood and feces samples. In the early years, typically 10-15% of immigrants were found to have medical problems. Those with incurable conditions or who did not have the funds to pay for the cost of medical treatment at the hospital would be deported. Asian immigrants in particular described the examination process as invasive and humiliating.

The immigration station, including the PSH, was closed in 1940 and left abandoned until the site was saved from demolition by the local Asian American community. Thanks to generous funding from federal and state governments and private donations from supporters of AIISF, much of the immigration station site and the barracks building were restored and reopened in 2009. And to bookend the over 40 years of restoration efforts, AIISF is proud to announce that the restored PSH will reopen as the new Pacific Coast Immigration Center (PCIC) in 2020.
The PCIC will contain interpretative displays depicting the historical role of the PSH at the immigration station as well as exhibits covering more contemporary immigration history. A wide range of personal stories, including those of recent immigrants, will allow visitors to understand the impact of shifting policies, from the past to the present, affecting immigration across the Pacific to the United States, especially to California, where more than a quarter of the population is now foreign-born.

Mark your calendar! AIISF is planning a public opening celebration for the PCIC in Fall 2020, which will be a day to remember the legacy of Angel Island and the dynamic evolution of Pacific Coast immigration.
AIISF in the News
"Whose Country is This?"
AIISF President Buck Gee, Tenement Museum President Kevin Jennings, and Japanese American National Museum Board Chairman Norman Mineta discuss American identity in this Salon.com op-ed.

Come Listen to the World Premier of Oceanic Migrations , an Angel Island site specific musical production!
On September 14, 2019, the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players will open their 2019-2020 season with a stunning assembly of forces for the world premiere of a new, concert-length, Angel Island site-responsive work by Bang On A Can founding composer Michael Gordon . There will also be an educational installation at the Immigration Station's detention barracks from September 7 - 14. Those with ferry tickets will receive free admission to the concert.

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