Fotografía de autor

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Richard H. Dillon

North American Indian Wars (1920) 79 copias
The Legend of Grizzly Adams (1884) 32 copias
Embarcadero (1954) 22 copias
Delta Country (1982) 12 copias
Indian Wars 1850-1890 (1984) 12 copias
The Anatomy of Library (1957) 2 copias
Napa Valley's Natives (2001) 1 copia
Sutro Library Notes (1957) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

What I Saw in California (1848) — Introducción, algunas ediciones54 copias
Utah Historical Quarterly - Vol. 34, No. 3, Summer 1966 (1966) — Contribuidor — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Dillon, Richard H.
Nombre legal
Dillon, Richard Hugh
Fecha de nacimiento
1924-01-16
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Sausalito, California, USA
Educación
University of California, Berkeley
Ocupaciones
Head Librarian, Sutro Library
Relaciones
Sutherland, Barbara Allester
Dillon, Brian D. (son)
Organizaciones
Sutro Library
University of California, Berkeley
Biografía breve
Richard Hugh Dillon (1924- ) was a librarian and the author of many articles and books on California, including California trail herd (1961), The legend of Grizzly Adams (1966), Fool's gold: the biography of John Sutter (1967), Humbugs and heroes: a gallery of California pioneers (1970), and Delta country (1982). The collection consists of ca. 300 photographs of old and new San Francisco Chinatown and the Mother Lode country, as well as photostats, captions, and signed mounts. There are also illustrative photographs used in Richard H. Dillon's Hatchet men (1962).
Background
Richard Hugh Dillon was born January 16, 1924 in Sausalito, California; AB (1948), AM (1949), and BLS (1950), UC Berkeley; assistant librarian (1950-53) and librarian (1953-79), Sutro Library, San Francisco; author of many articles and books on California, including California trail herd (1961), The legend of Grizzly Adams (1966), Fool's gold: the biography of John Sutter (1967), Humbugs and heroes: a gallery of California pioneers (1970), and Delta country (1982).

Miembros

Reseñas

Outstanding record of Oliver Hazard Perry
 
Denunciada
RobertVaughan | Oct 23, 2022 |
The book is a well researched look at the Chinese Emigrant society of the nineteenth century in San Francisco, California. As a popular work there is a tendency to sensationalize the narrative.
 
Denunciada
DinadansFriend | otra reseña | Oct 18, 2022 |
This was another book read for the sake of novel research as I delve into San Francisco as it was before the 1906 earthquake. In particular, I wanted to learn more about the Tongs: their structure, their names, how they functioned, and so on. That information isn't available online.

Hatchet Men was originally published in 1962; it has now been re-released by a small press. There were numerous typographical errors throughout the book that sometimes distracted me as I read.

Did the book supply me with the information I wanted? Yes. It was a fascinating read and gave me the insights I wanted, down to hand signals, rituals, and Chinese phrases. I had no idea that the Tongs (or anyone else a century ago) used chain mail as bullet-proof vests! I can also use key words from the text to search more on my own.

It's by no means a perfect book, typos aside. It's a book written by a white man about Chinatown. He doesn't write with intimacy of the place or the people--more with a journalist's plain prose. It's not that he's outright anti-Chinese, more that it has the definite feel of an outsider looking in. Sometimes Hatchet Men felt repetitive, but it never bored me. I also worry about accuracy. At the end of the book, he quotes the propaganda figure for the death toll from the 1906 quake--a mere 450 fatalities. This is flat out wrong. There were probably singular buildings with death tolls that high.

That kind of "fact" makes me worry about the accuracy of other points, but the problem is that there just hasn't been much written on the specific subject of Tongs in San Francisco. I'm thankful for this resource and I'll have to follow up as much as I can.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
ladycato | otra reseña | Jul 16, 2013 |
A decent introduction to some of the wild, wacky, and truly bizarre characters who populated California in the early years.
 
Denunciada
MsMixte | Dec 25, 2012 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
43
También por
2
Miembros
649
Popularidad
#38,891
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
7
ISBNs
64
Idiomas
1

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