The experience of Chinese immigrants at Angel Island was often harsh and discouraging. Upon arrival, many were subjected to extensive and intrusive questioning by immigration officials, who asked detailed questions about their lives, homes, and families. Immigrants had to answer questions like how many steps were in their houses, where they slept, and who lived next door. These inquiries were designed to verify their claims of American citizenship or familial connections but often felt like interrogation. If the answers given by the immigrants did not match those of “family” witnesses from San Francisco, the officials could deport them back to China.
While waiting for their immigration status to be confirmed, many Chinese immigrants were held in what they described as inhumane conditions. They were often "locked up like criminals" in cramped compartments, similar to cages in zoos. The duration of detention varied, with some immigrants spending a few weeks on the island while others remained there for months or even years, enduring uncertainty and anxiety about their futures.
To cope with the experience, immigrants passed the time by carving poems on the wooden walls of their barracks, expressing their feelings of confinement and longing for their families. The immigration process was deeply distressing and dehumanizing for many, contributing to a sense of isolation and despair as they awaited the outcome of their applications to enter the United States. Overall, Angel Island became a symbol of the discrimination and hardships faced by Chinese immigrants during this period.