List of Chinatowns in the United States

List of Chinatowns in the United States

This is a list of Chinatowns in the United States.

Contents

Arizona

  • Jerome - There was a small Chinatown in the 1870s[1]
  • Phoenix - Chinese immigrants working as railroad workers established the first Chinatown in downtown Phoenix at First and Adams Street in the present location of US Airways Arena. All building have been torn down except for the Sun Mercantile Building.[2]
  • Prescott - Granite Street, between Goodwin and Gurley Street was the location of a Chinatown and more than 200 Chinese during late 19th and early 20th century. The area was razed in 1934 in order to make room for new construction.[3]
  • Tucson - A Chinatown began to form in Tucson after the railroad arrived in 1880. Tucson's Chinese population was very small and never exceeded 2% of the cities population. It's remaining and partly abandoned structures were demolished in 1968. However, in 1968 researchers discovered a complex called the "Ying On compound" still contained a group of working class elderly Chinese men.[4]

California

As the first part of North America to see immigration by Chinese people, many towns in California have historic Chinatowns, some of them surviving today, while various rural communities were Chinatowns in and of themselves.

Colorado

  • Denver - along Federal Blvd. and Alameda Avenue

District of Columbia

Florida

  • Miami - NE 167th Street and 163rd Street, between NE 6th Avenue and NE 19th Avenue[10]
  • Orlando - State Route 50, on both sides of I-4 (mix of Chinese and Vietnamese)
  • Tampa - Intersection of Waters and Armenia Aves., ~1 mile radius

Georgia

Hawaii

Idaho

  • Boise - founded in 1901 and lasted until 1970s, formerly on 8th Street and Front Street

Illinois

Maryland

  • Baltimore - Park Avenue, between Saratoga and Mulberry Streets.

Massachusetts

Boston Chinatown

Michigan

  • Detroit (historic): Detroit's first Chinatown, the historic "Old Chinatown," was originally located on Third Avenue between Michigan and Bagley. Increasing in size and population between the 1920s and 1950s, "Old Chinatown" was eventually condemned for a "slum clearance" project that ultimately resulted in the construction of the John C. Lodge Freeway in 1959. In the early 1960s, residents and business owners of the Chinese American community relocated to the Cass Corridor, where "New Chinatown" was unveiled as Detroit's new ethnic and commercial district. Throughout the 1970s and 80s, high crime and unemployment rates rocked the city, leading many residents of "New Chinatown" to fear for their safety. Both the shooting of Tommie Lee at Bow Wah's Restaurant in 1976 and the killing of Vincent Chin in 1982 lead many Chinese Americans who lived in the city to move their families and businesses to the surrounding suburbs. Today, the Association of Chinese Americans' Detroit Drop-in Service Center still operates at Peterboro and Cass, providing social and welfare services to a small community of elderly Chinese immigrants who live nearby.[14] The hallmark Cantonese restaurant, Chung's, closed its doors in 2004.
  • Madison Heights: Just north of Detroit in Madison Heights, there is a small but present strip of East Asian commercial outlets along John R. Road, which include restaurants and retail managed by individuals of Chinese, Vietnamese, Thai, and Filipino descent. Also located in Madison Heights is the Association of Chinese Americans' Chinese Community Center. Although the Chinese American population of Southeast Michigan is comparatively smaller than other American cities, the Detroit chapter of the ACA is the only branch of the Organization of Chinese Americans to have a fully operational community center, as well as two satellite service centers.[14]

Minnesota

  • Nicollet Ave in Minneapolis does have a large number of Chinese and Vietnamese restaurants, especially between W 24th and W 28th Streets. This area in the urban area of the Whittier neighbourhood has been Asian-influenced since the 1970s.

Missouri

  • Chinatown, St. Louis - original Downtown St. Louis Chinatown destroyed in early 1960s; New Chinatown located in U-City at Delmar Blvd. Chinatown Designation efforts continue to create official area.

Montana

  • Butte - has a defunct Chinatown.[15]
  • Helena - the capital city of the territory and then state (1889) of Montana had a relatively large Chinatown, several blocks long and a few blocks wide, which was mostly destroyed during the urban renewal of the 1970s. This area, south of Ming Street, is now the Lewis and Clark County Library, the 'old' Federal Building, parking lots, and several parks.

Nebraska

  • Omaha, Nebraska - defunct, vicinity of 12th and Douglas Streets with the On Leong Tong based at 111 North 12th. King Fong's Cantonese at 315 South 16th Street was opened in 1921 by Gin Ah Chin with elaborate furnishings imported from Hong Kong. (Source: E Pluribus Omaha: Immigrants All by Harry Otis and Donald Erickson, 2000)

Nevada

  • Las Vegas - Asian commercial plazas along Spring Mountain Road
  • Virginia City- a historic Chinatown which had a Chinese population of over 1500 in the 1870s.[16][17]

New Jersey

New York

Queens Library in Flushing Chinatown
Manhattan Chinatown
Brooklyn Chinatown

New York City has now become the largest magnet for immigration from Mainland China and has become highly diverse, with Fujianese, Wenzhounese, Shanghainese, Cantonese, Taiwanese, Dongbei, and various other types of Chinese people:

Main articles: Chinatown, Manhattan and Manhattan's Little Fuzhou (小福州)

North Carolina

Charlotte's Asian Corner Mall
  • Charlotte - Central Avenue (near Briar Creek Rd.) is the original "Chinatown" consisting of "Saigon Square" and a pair of other Chinese shopping plazas that include "Dim Sum Restaurant" (which serves New York styled dim sum), the "Eang Hong Supermarket", "Van Loi" (which serves cha shao), and a dozen or so other stores.
    • Saigon Square has various Vietnamese (albeit not Chinese) stores including Pho Hoa (Vietnamese noodles).
    • Asian Corner Mall on North Tryon Street and Sugar Creek Road, developed from the defunct Tryon Mall in 1999, with "Dragon Court Restaurant", "Hong Kong BBQ", "International Supermarket", and "New Century Market" and several other Chinese/Vietnamese stores.

Ohio

Oklahoma

  • Oklahoma City - roughly along N. Classen Blvd from N. 22nd Street to N. West 36th
    • Old Chinatown, Downtown - In the first half of the 20th century, hundreds of Chinese immigrants lived in an historic "underground Chinatown" beneath what is now the Cox Convention Center. The chambers were rediscovered, long-abandoned, in 1969.[19]

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Old Pittsburgh Chinatown on Blvd. of the Allies
  • Pittsburgh -
    • Defunct old Chinatown around Blvd of the Allies and Grant St
      • One Chinese restaurant, Chinatown Inn, still exists from the original Chinatown in two of its original buildings.
      • Original tenants in the old original Pittsburgh Chinatown, all of which are gone today, included[20][21]:
        • Wing Hong Chinese Co., 519 Second Ave
        • Hop Ching Wing, at 527 Second Ave
        • Quong Yuen Lee Co., 505 Second Ave
        • Quong Chong Shing, 511 Second Ave
        • Sun Wing Sing Co, 507 Second Ave
        • Quong Wah Hai Co., 314 Second Ave
        • Lee Jan Fueng, 521 Second Ave
  • Harrisburg - Cameron Street

South Dakota

Tennessee

  • Memphis - Summer Avenue (east) near I-240

Texas

  • Houston - Chartres Street in East Downtown, and Chinatown at Bellaire Boulevard and Beltway 8.
  • Dallas-Fort Worth
  • Austin - prefabricated Chinatown Center on Lamar Boulevard, billed as Austin's "Chinatown" (new as of 2006)[22]

Utah

Virginia

Washington

See also


References


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