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Gio Chan See

In 1891 he arrived in Silver City with his intended bride and was married that same evening [1]. He had lived in the United States for more than twenty years and was a big merchant in Tucson [1]. The local paper remarked that Silver City seemed to have a corner on Chinese weddings and that marriages like his helped solve "the Chinese question" by making the men remain as citizens [1].

Sources

  1. Silver City seems to have a corner on Chi-… (1891)
    Silver City seems to have a corner on Chi- nese weddings, the contracting parties coming from Arizona. Only a few weeks ago two of Tucson’s most prominent Chinese merchants brought their intended Vv^ives to this
Generated by openrouter/deepseek/deepseek-v4-flash · 71 words · 1 sentence(s) redacted for missing citations · published 2026-06-14

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