A fact from Madera Sugar Pine Company appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 2 September 2022 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
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Latest comment: 2 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
I posted a new article about the Madera Sugar Pine Company which was a pioneering logging company in the southern Sierra during the late 19th and early 20th century. I am thankful for other historic railroad pages helped me establish an outline and for the help from the Fresno Flats Historical Society and Yosemite Sugar Pine Railroad who helped me research this article. Guywelch2000 (talk) 02:03, 1 August 2022 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 2 years ago7 comments4 people in discussion
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
... that a Chinatown in the logging community of Sugar Pine was intentionally burned down by the Madera Sugar Pine Company in 1922? Source: "Sugar Pine's Chinatown had its revenge". The Madera Tribune. August 8, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
ALT1: ... that a Chinatown in the logging community of Sugar Pine was intentionally burned down by the Madera Sugar Pine Company in the aftermath of the Chinese Exclusion Act? Source: "Sugar Pine's Chinatown had its revenge". The Madera Tribune. August 8, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
Reviewed:
Comment: In researching this article I was surprised to learn that after Chinese immigrants played such a central role in establishing the state's logging industry following the California Gold Rush, they were virtually eliminated from the area by 1922 when the Madera Sugar Pine Company intentionally burned down the Chinatown district in Sugar Pine (Mexican workers were substituted in the following years.) Unlike the Chinese experience in the gold rush, this cruel and unfair circumstance in the lumber industry appears to be much less well known.
Not a review. I was going to review it, but my review turned into a slight copyedit, and I found enough uncited sections to tag it with {{refimprove}}. Those should be addressed before this nomination is seriously considered. Daniel Case (talk) 03:31, 9 August 2022 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for taking the time to go through the page. This is the first time I have contributed so much to a page from scratch and am still getting a feel for where and how frequently to cite. Fortunately, I still have my reference books and notes from my trip to the Sierra this summer, as well as access to the excellent newspaper archive from the University of California. Has the page improved to meet citation standards? Guywelch2000 (talk) 05:40, 10 August 2022 (UTC)Reply
Overall: Nominator is QPQ-exempt and everything checks out in the article as far as I can tell after the improvements. @Daniel Case: let me know if you still have issue with the state of the article's sourcing but everything seems adequately sourced. I do think that ALT0 is the better hook, as ALT1 mentions the Chinese Exclusion Act, something the source attached to ALT1 doesn't appear to mention, and which passed 40 years before the burning down of the Chinatown, so saying that it happened in the aftermath of the Act seems misleading. I see that a book cited does appear to mention it, but again the connection there doesn't seem particularly strong, not enough to mention it in the hook. - Aoidh (talk) 00:46, 20 August 2022 (UTC)Reply