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Home > My Ancestors
> Chinese > Religion
The
Exclusion Act of 1882 insured that Chinatown remain
a virtually all male community until the repeal of 1943.
In the interim period, Chinese men tried to continue
their traditions. One tradition called for a person's
bones to be buried in their homeland. Since workers
usually did not have family to attend to their burials,
Chinese workers would often stipulate in their contracts
that their employers pay for their shipment home to
be buried. In some cases, the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent
Association would cover the cost and in the 1930s, the
Benevolent Association of Boston founded a cemetery
on Mount Hope for Chinese workers without family in
China.
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