Carte-De-Visite Mugshot of an Identified Chinese-American Man Arrested for Hydraulic Mining, 1880s
Albumen print
4 x 2 1/2 inches overall
Subject identification in the negative and affixed paper label verso.
An interesting late 19th-century mugshot showing a person of Chinese descent, identified as Lee Hock. The back of the card notes the man’s crime as, “hydraulic,” presumably referring to the...
An interesting late 19th-century mugshot showing a person of Chinese descent, identified as Lee Hock. The back of the card notes the man’s crime as, “hydraulic,” presumably referring to the practice of hydraulic mining, which was outlawed in the state in 1884.
Large- scale hydraulic mining operations began in California in the Sierra Nevadas in 1852. This practice lasted until 1882, when a wheat farmer filed suit against the North Bloomfield Mining Company on behalf of local farmers over the agricultural impact of the practice in the Central Valley of the state. The judge ruled in favor of the farmers, placing regulations on the mining industry and prohibiting the dumping of debris in waterways. The case is considered the nation’s first environmental law.