Historical Chinatowns In Nanaimo
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Nanaimo Nanaimo ( ) is a city on the east coast of Vancouver Island, in British Columbia, Canada. As of the Canada 2021 Census, 2021 census, it had a population of 99,863, and it is known as "The Harbour City." The city was previously known as the "H ...
, British Columbia had four Chinatown sites beginning in the 1800s.Introduction
"
Archive
. ''Nanaimo Chinatowns Project'', Malaspina University-College. Retrieved on February 15, 2015.


First Chinatown

The first was a dock area in Downtown Nanaimo in proximity to the
Canadian Pacific Railway The Canadian Pacific Railway (french: Chemin de fer Canadien Pacifique) , also known simply as CPR or Canadian Pacific and formerly as CP Rail (1968–1996), is a Canadian Class I railway incorporated in 1881. The railway is owned by Canadi ...
(CPR) terminal that existed in the 1860s.Willmott, W.E.
Some aspects of Chinese communities in British Columbia Towns

Archive
. ''
BC Studies ''BC Studies: The British Columbian Quarterly'' is a Canadian academic journal about British Columbia history. It has been published by the University of British Columbia (UBC) since its establishment in 1969 by its founding editors Margaret Pran ...
''. No. 1. (Winter 1968-1969). p. 27-36
See profile
-- CITED: p. 33.
This was on Victoria Crescent,


. Vancouver Island University. Retrieved on February 15, 2015.
and the Vancouver Coal Mining and Land Company (VCC) had constructed several structures that became the Chinatown housing.Lai, David Chuenyan. ''Chinatowns: Towns within Cities in Canada''. UBC Press, October 1, 2007. , 9780774844185. p
39
Tensions with Whites were minimized as the Chinatown was separated by the Commercial Inlet. 13 Chinese were in Nanaimo in 1867. There were 36 Chinese in Nanaimo by 1871. In 1874 there were 200 Chinese in the Chinatown; the city had incorporated that year. In 1877 300 people, 296 of whom were coal miners employed by the VCC, lived in the Nanaimo Chinatown and that of Wellington, which at the time was a separate community. 206 of the miners lived in Nanaimo and 90 lived in Wellington. A Chinatown appeared in South Wellington after the Dumsmuir, Diggle & Company (DDC) purchased a South Wellington coal mine in 1879. In the initial stage of the Chinatown's development Yee Kee & Company, according to David Chuenyan Lai, author of ''Chinatowns: Towns within Cities in Canada'', was "probably" the largest of the two to three stores serving Nanaimo's Chinatown. In 1882 there were now five stores. In addition the community had a tailor shop and two hand laundries, so it had a total number of eight businesses. Hong & Hing Company, an importer/exporter of Chinese goods that purchased them from Victoria and sold them to South Wellington and Wellington businesses, was the largest company.Lai, David Chuenyan. ''Chinatowns: Towns within Cities in Canada''. UBC Press, October 1, 2007. , 9780774844185. p
45


Second Chinatown

The Chinatown was relocated to an area near the Nanaimo city limits in 1884. Pamela Mar, an area historian, stated that Robert Dunsmuir's 1883 strikebreaking with Chinese scabs that had caused resentment among white miners and an influx of Chinese workers for the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway were two contributing factors behind the move. Mar also stated that the white business district needed more land and that it was going to use the land originally used for Chinatown. The second Nanaimo Chinatown became a part of the city limits in 1887. There were 228 Chinese in Nanaimo in 1891. 600 Chinese, most of whom were residents of Chinatown, resided in Nanaimo in 1901.Lai, David Chuenyan. ''Chinatowns: Towns within Cities in Canada''. UBC Press, October 1, 2007. , 9780774844185. p
73
This Chinatown became the third largest in the province, and the second largest on Vancouver Island after that of Victoria. Chinese from
Cumberland Cumberland ( ) is a historic county in the far North West England. It covers part of the Lake District as well as the north Pennines and Solway Firth coast. Cumberland had an administrative function from the 12th century until 1974. From 19 ...
,
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, South Wellington, and Wellington patronized this Chinatown. The second site had been abandoned because a fuel company that had acquired the land occupied by the second site had raised rents. Mah Bing Kee and Ching Chung Yung had purchased the site in 1908 and this resulted in the move. Currently Bayview Elementary School occupies the site of the second Chinatown.


Third and fourth Chinatowns

The third site opened along Pine Street in 1908. It opened on an site in the outlying areas of Nanaimo, and was initially purchased by the Lun Yick Company (the name in Chinese means "Together We Prosper"). Chinatown began declining in the 1920s due to a decline in the coal mining industry.Lai, David Chuenyan. ''Chinatowns: Towns within Cities in Canada''. UBC Press, October 1, 2007. , 9780774844185. p
77
A satellite Chinatown opened on MacLeary Street in the 1920s. Land Yick began failing. Rising China Holding Company (, Cantonese: Wa-Hing Shat-ip Kung-Sz), an all-Chinese, nonprofit agency, was formed. It purchased the Chinatown after receiving 4,000 shares of stock that had been purchased by ethnic Chinese. This act prevented remaining Chinese businesses from going into receivership. There were 298 Chinese in Nanaimo in 1941. On September 30, 1960 the third Chinatown was destroyed by a fire. 200 persons lost their houses, and most of those affected were senior citizens.


See also

* International Buddhist Temple *
Ling Yen Mountain Temple The Lingyen Mountain Temple () in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada is a Buddhist monastery, designed by Pacific Rim Architecture in the Chinese palatial style and completed in 1996. The temple has about 10,000 members in Greater Vancouver and s ...
* Chinatown, Victoria *
Chinese Canadians in British Columbia The history of Chinese Canadians in British Columbia began with the first recorded visit by Chinese people to North America in 1788. Some 30–40 men were employed as shipwrights at Nootka Sound in what is now British Columbia, to build the fi ...
* History of Chinese immigration to Canada *
Chinese head tax in Canada The Chinese Head Tax was a fixed fee charged to each Chinese person entering Canada. The head tax was first levied after the Canadian parliament passed the Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 and it was meant to discourage Chinese people from enterin ...
*
Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration (1885) The Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration was a commission of inquiry appointed to establish whether or not imposing restrictions to Chinese immigration to Canada was in the country's best interest. Ordered on 4 July 1884 by Prime Minister John ...
*
Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 The ''Chinese Immigration Act, 1885'' was a Canadian Act of Parliament that placed a head tax of $50 () on all Chinese immigrants entering Canada. It was based on the recommendations published in the Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration in 1 ...
* Chinese Immigration Act, 1923


References


Further reading

* Mar, Pamela. "The History of Nanaimo's Three Chinatowns." ''
British Columbia Historical News British may refer to: Peoples, culture, and language * British people, nationals or natives of the United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories, and Crown Dependencies. ** Britishness, the British identity and common culture * British English, ...
'', vol.21, no.2, Spring 1988.


External links


Nanaimo Chinatowns Project
- Malaspina University-College dead link "Directory Listing Denied This Virtual Directory does not allow contents to be listed." {{Chinatowns Chinese-Canadian culture in British Columbia
Nanaimo Nanaimo ( ) is a city on the east coast of Vancouver Island, in British Columbia, Canada. As of the Canada 2021 Census, 2021 census, it had a population of 99,863, and it is known as "The Harbour City." The city was previously known as the "H ...
Neighbourhoods in Nanaimo