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{{Short description|none}} <!-- This short description is INTENTIONALLY "none" - please see WP:SDNONE before you consider changing it! -->
{{Mergefrom|List of Canadian cities with large Chinese populations|date=June 2009}}
{{Mergefrom|Chinatown patterns in North America|date=June 2009}}
{{use mdy dates|date=July 2014}}
{{Infobox Chinese
{{Refimprove|date=September 2008}}
|pic= Chinatown - East Broadway.jpg
{{Original research|date=November 2008}}
|piccap=[[Chinatown, Manhattan]], the highest concentration of [[Chinese people in New York City|Chinese people]] outside [[Asia]].<ref name=ManhattanChinatownLargestConcentrationChineseWesternHemisphere>{{cite web|url=https://www.introducingnewyork.com/chinatown|title=Chinatown New York|publisher=Civitatis New York|quote=As its name suggests, Chinatown is where the largest population of Chinese people live in the Western Hemisphere.|access-date=November 30, 2020}}</ref><ref>
* {{cite web
|url=http://www.explorechinatown.com/PDF/FactSheet.pdf
|title=Chinatown New York City Fact Sheet
|website=Explore Chinatown
|access-date=March 2, 2019
}}
* {{cite web
|url=http://www.ny.com/articles/chinatown.html
|title=The History of New York's Chinatown
|author=Sarah Waxman
|publisher=Mediabridge Infosystems, Inc
|access-date=March 3, 2019
}}a

* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NagJFMxtkAcC&q=Flushing+Chinatown+Little+Taiwan&pg=PA104 |title=Still the golden door: the Third ...&nbsp;– Google Books |author=David M. Reimers |access-date=April 11, 2016|isbn=9780231076814 |year=1992 |publisher=Columbia University Press }}
* {{cite web
|url=http://gizzeographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf
|title=Beyond Chinatown: Dual immigration and the Chinese population of metropolitan New York City, 2000, Page 4
|author=Lawrence A. McGlinn, Department of Geography SUNY-New Paltz
|publisher=Middle States Geographer |year=2002 |volume=35 |pages=110–119 |work=Journal of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers
|access-date=March 3, 2019
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121029075400/http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf
|archive-date=October 29, 2012
}}
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NagJFMxtkAcC&q=Flushing+Chinatown+Little+Taiwan&pg=PA104 |title=Still the golden door: the Third ...&nbsp;– Google Books |author=David M. Reimers |access-date=April 11, 2016|isbn=9780231076814 |year=1992 |publisher=Columbia University Press }}</ref><ref name=NycTwelveChinatowns>{{cite web|url=https://ny.eater.com/2019/2/25/18236523/chinatowns-restaurants-elmhurst-homecrest-bensonhurst-east-village-little-neck-forest-hills-nyc|title=Believe It or Not, New York City Has Nine Chinatowns|author=Stefanie Tuder|publisher=EATER NY|date=February 25, 2019|access-date=November 30, 2020}}</ref>
|c=唐人街
|p=Tángrénjiē
|l="Chinese Street"
|j=Tong<sup>2</sup> jan<sup>2</sup> gaai<sup>1</sup>
|y=Tòhngyàhngāai
|wuu=Daon<sup>平</sup> nin<sup>平</sup> ka<sup>平</sup>
|poj=Tông-jîn-ke
|buc=Tòng-ìng-kĕ
|s2=中国城
|t2=中國城
|p2=Zhōngguóchéng
|l2="Chinatown"
|j2=Jung<sup>1</sup> gwok<sup>3</sup> sing<sup>4</sup>
|y2=Jūnggwoksìhng
|wuu2=Tson<sup>平</sup> koh<sup>入</sup> zen<sup>平</sup>
|poj2=Tiong-kok-siânn
|buc2=Dŭng-guók-siàng
|s3=华埠
|t3=華埠
|p3=Huábù
|l3="Chinese District"
|j3=Wa<sup>4</sup> fau<sup>6</sup>
|y3=Wàhfauh
|wuu3=Gho<sup>平</sup> bu<sup>去</sup>
|poj3=Hôa-bú
|buc3=Huà-pú
}}
{{Chinatown}}
{{Chinatown}}
This article discusses '''[[Chinatown]]s in the [[Americas]]''', urban areas with a large population of people of Chinese descent. The regions include: Canada, the United States, and Latin America.
In general, there are three types of '''Chinatowns in North America''':{{Citation needed|date=November 2008}}
# [[frontier]] and [[rural]] Chinatowns
# [[urban area|urban]] Chinatowns
# [[suburb]]an Chinatowns


==Locations==
The first two types of Chinatowns were typically pioneered by early Chinese immigrants in the 19th to the mid-20th centuries. Suburban quasi-"Chinatowns" – altogether replacing the functions of their original counterparts – were developed due to the arrival of later waves of new ethnic Chinese immigrants as well as the in flow of investments, mostly during the 1970s and 1980s (these are not considered Chinatowns in the usual sense of the word).
===Canada===
{{Main|Chinatowns in Canada|Chinatowns in Toronto}}
Chinatowns in Canada generally exist in the large cities. [[Chinatown, Calgary|Calgary]], [[Chinatown, Edmonton|Edmonton]], [[Chinatown, Montreal|Montreal]], [[Chinatown, Ottawa|Ottawa]], [[Chinatown, Toronto|Toronto]], [[Chinatown, Vancouver|Vancouver]], [[Chinatown, Victoria|Victoria]], and [[Chinatown, Winnipeg|Winnipeg]] have Chinatowns.


Chinatowns have existed in some smaller towns throughout the history of Canada. Prior to 1900, almost all Chinese were located in [[British Columbia]], in towns such as [[Nanaimo]], [[New Westminster]], [[Mission, British Columbia|Mission]], [[Lillooet, British Columbia|Lillooet]], [[Barkerville]], and [[Penticton]]. Some British Columbia towns that were majority Chinese for years, such as [[Stanley, British Columbia|Stanley]], [[Rock Creek, British Columbia|Rock Creek]], and [[Richfield, British Columbia|Richfield]] were not known as Chinatowns.
[[Image:SFO-Chinatown.jpg|right|thumb|Distinctive Chinese-style architecture characterizes the streets of San Francisco's historic Chinatown, one of the largest in the [[United States]].]]


From 1923 to 1967, immigration from China was suspended due to exclusion laws. In 1997, the handover of Hong Kong to China caused many from there to flee to Canada due to uncertainties. According to an article from the Globe and Mail, Canada had 25 Chinatowns total across the entire country between the 1930s to 1940s, some of which had become extinct.<ref>{{cite web |date=June 18, 2006 |url=http://hogtownfront.blogspot.com/2006/06/quebec-citys-chinatown-gone-but-not.html |title=Quebec City's Chinatown - gone but not forgotten |publisher=Hogtown Front |access-date=July 13, 2014}} which in turn references {{cite news |newspaper=The Globe and Mail |title=Chinatown is gone, gone to heaven |author=Ingrid Peritz |date=June 17, 2006}}</ref>
==Chinatowns in Canada==
===Alberta===
====Edmonton====
{{main|Chinatown and Little Italy, Edmonton}}
There are actually two Chinatowns in [[Edmonton]]: the newer Chinatown North (dominated by Hong Kong Chinese emigrants) and the older Chinatown South. Chinatown North stretches on 97 St from 107A Ave to 105 Ave and boasts mostly of shops, restaurants, and supermarkets. The Chinatown North has some strip malls including Lucky 97 Supermarket, Asia Square or Pacific Rim Mall.
Chinatown South stretches on 102 Ave (Harbin Road) from 97 St to 95 St and south to [[Jasper Avenue]], contains some restaurants, shops, residential buildings, and a multicultural centre. The older Chinatown south features a [[paifang]] from Edmonton's sister city, [[Harbin]].


[[West Edmonton Mall]] has a themed street named Chinatown, with a lion's gate entrance, a koi pond, and a festive dragon. Asian-themed shops and services are available, anchored by a [[T & T Supermarket]].

====Calgary====
{{Main|Chinatown, Calgary}}
The Chinatown in [[Calgary]] is the largest in Alberta. It spans 1 St E westward to 10 St W and from the Bow River southward to 4 Ave SW. This Chinatown consists of a large shopping centre called [[Dragon City Mall]] and a Calgary Chinese Cultural Centre located at 1 St SW. Nearly all of this is post-1930s, as Calgary's original Chinatown was little more than a handful of [[Chinese Canadian cuisine|"Chinese and Western" restaurant]]s in the same area, without the historic Chinese-ethnic residential-commercial quality of more historic Chinatowns like those in Vancouver.

===British Columbia===
====Vancouver====
====Vancouver====
[[File:Harmonious Gate of Interest, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada 02.jpg|thumb|Entrance to Victoria's Chinatown in British Columbia]]
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Vancouver Chinatown Gate.jpg|right|framed|Old Gate of Chinatown, Vancouver.]] -->
[[Chinatown, Vancouver|Vancouver's Chinatown]] is the largest in Canada.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://vancouverchinatown.ca/ |title=Chinatown Vancouver Online |publisher=Vancouverchinatown.ca |date= |access-date=2011-09-11}}</ref> Dating back to the late 19th century, the main focus of the older Chinatown is Pender Street and Main Street in downtown Vancouver, which is also, along with [[Victoria, British Columbia|Victoria's]] [[Chinatown, Victoria|Chinatown]], one of the oldest surviving Chinatowns in North America. Vancouver has been the setting for a variety of modern Chinese Canadian culture and literature. Vancouver's Chinatown contains numerous galleries, shops, restaurants, and markets, in addition to the [[Chinese Cultural Centre, Vancouver|Chinese Cultural Centre]] and the [[Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden]] and park; the garden is the first and one of the largest [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]] era-style [[Chinese garden]]s outside [[China]]. Although only one neighborhood is designated as Chinatown in modern [[Greater Vancouver]],<!--as New Westminster, Port Moody and Port Hammond all had Chinatowns in the past...--> the high proportion of Chinese people living in the region (the highest in North America) has created many commercial and residential areas that while Chinese-dominated are not called "Chinatown". In Greater Vancouver that term refers ''only'' to the historic Chinatown in the city core. There is an abundance of Chinese- and Asian-themed malls in the region, with the highest concentration in the [[Golden Village (Richmond, British Columbia)|Golden Village]] district of [[Richmond, British Columbia|Richmond]].
{{Main|Chinatown, Vancouver}}
[[Vancouver]]'s Chinatown is the largest in Canada. Dating back to the late 19th century, the main centre of the older Chinatown is Pender and Main Streets in downtown Vancouver, which is also, along with [[Victoria, British Columbia|Victoria]]'s ([[Chinatown, Victoria]]), one of the oldest surviving Chinatowns in North America, and has been the setting for a variety of modern [[Chinese Canadian]] culture and literature and innumerable Hollywood movies.


===United States===
Vancouver's Chinatown contains numerous galleries, shops, restaurants, and markets, in addition to the Chinese Cultural Centre and the [[Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden]] and park; the garden is the first and one of the largest [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]] era-style Chinese gardens outside [[China]].
{{Main|Chinatowns in the United States}}
Chinatowns in the [[United States of America]] have existed since the 1840s on the [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] and the 1870s on the [[East Coast of the United States|East Coast]]. The Chinese were one of the first Asian groups to arrive in large numbers. Circumstances caused by the [[Korean War|Korean]] and [[Vietnam War|Vietnam wars]], the [[1965 Immigration Act]], in addition to the desire for skilled workers caused more immigration from China and the rest of Asia. As of the early 21st century the Chinese are the largest of the Asian immigrant groups; and have been so for most of the history of the United States. As other immigrants of other countries arrive, [[Chinatown]], the oldest of the Asian ethnic enclaves has become a pattern for other Asian enclaves such as [[Japantown]], [[Koreatown]], and [[Little India (location)|Little India]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.infoplease.com/spot/chinatowns1.html |title=Chinatowns and Other Asian-American Enclaves |author=David Johnson |publisher=Infoplease |access-date=2012-12-30}}</ref> The [[Flushing Chinatown]] in [[New York City]] is now home to the largest Chinese population outside of Asia, while the Chinatown in [[San Francisco]] is the oldest in the United States.


During the early 1990s, the cultural centre and destination point for Chinese Canadians had begun to shift away from the old Chinatown in downtown Vancouver, moving southward into the suburbs of the [[Lower Mainland]], particularly around 41st Avenue and Victoria Drive in the [[Kensington-Cedar Cottage]] neighbourhood in Vancouver and the [[Golden Village (Richmond, British Columbia)|Golden Village]] area in [[Richmond, British Columbia|Richmond]]. In addition to Richmond, there are other Chinese immigrant communities developing in [[Burnaby, British Columbia|Burnaby]] and [[Coquitlam, British Columbia|Coquitlam]]. The malls of the Metrotown district of South Burnaby are heavily Asian-oriented, and comprise yet another suburban quasi-Chinatown, although less so than Golden Village.

[[International Village]], which is an outgrowth of the [[Expo Lands development]], is a newer apartment tower enclave next to Chinatown which includes an Asian mall and numerous upscale shoppes and restaurant developments that are intended to rejuvenate Chinatown.

====Richmond====
[[Image:Pres-ext1.jpg|thumb|Richmond's [[Golden Village (Richmond, British Columbia)|Golden Village]], the "new Chinatown" of [[Metro Vancouver]].]]
{{Main|Golden Village (Richmond, British Columbia)}}

The [[Golden Village (Richmond, British Columbia)|Golden Village]] neighbourhood of [[Richmond, British Columbia|Richmond]], a suburb of Vancouver, is the exception to North American Chinatown trends described above.{{Or|date=December 2009}} Unlike the Mandarin-dominated or the pan-Chinese new "Chinatowns" in the U.S., the shops and services in Richmond are mostly Hong Kong-centric. In local usage, Chinatown refers exclusively to downtown Vancouver's historic Chinatown district.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}}<!--this is so obvious to locals it's annoying to see this citation template; it's the reason why Golden Village is called what it is, in fact-->

The Richmond area is 10&nbsp;km south of Chinatown in downtown Vancouver near Highway 99 and Westminster Highway; the main corridor of the Chinese retailers is No. 3 Road. The [[Aberdeen Centre]] and [[Yaohan Centre]] are prominent malls for Chinese retailing.

====Burnaby====
Increasing Chinese and Taiwanese migration to Burnaby (among other suburbs in the Metropolitan Vancouver Lower Mainland) has led to the development of the Crystal Mall, a major pan-Asian mall in the [[Metrotown]] area of [[Kingsway (Vancouver)|Kingsway]], although the other malls and plazas in the area also have a marked Taiwanese clientele.

====Victoria====
[[Image:ChinatownVictoriaBCGate.jpg|thumb|Entrance to Victoria's Chinatown.]]
{{Main|Chinatown, Victoria, British Columbia}}

A very small Chinatown can be found in the provincial capital of [[Victoria, British Columbia|Victoria]], and as with most North American Chinatowns it is mostly touted as a tourist attraction. Chinatown is located within minutes walking distance of other [[Downtown Victoria]] shopping, entertainment, and cultural venues such as: [[Save On Foods Memorial Centre]] Arena, [[Bay Centre]] Mall, [[Market Square, Victoria]], [[Centennial Square]], [[Bastion Square]]. It is centred on Fisgard Street and is, along with the much larger one in downtown [[Vancouver]], one of the oldest surviving historic Chinatowns in North America. There are about two dozen Chinese-oriented businesses in this area.

Despite its small size, it was once the largest and oldest Canadian Chinatown on the West Coast of North America. It is the second oldest Chinatown after San Francisco's and it played an important part in local history, including the [[British Columbia Gold Rushes]]. Companies based here were the contractors for railway labour on the [[Canadian Pacific Railway]] (CPR) and [[Canadian National Railway]] (CNR). During the 20th Century, the second floor of the building on the southwest corner of Government and Fisgard Streets was the International Headquarters of the Chinese Communist Party. Records of Victoria's [[Chinese Benevolent Association]],<ref>[http://multiculturalcanada.ca/node/1524 Chinese Benevolent Association]</ref> the oldest Chinese-Canadian organization, display a wide range of pursuits including advocacy for full political equality as well as self-help and mutual aid activities.

The Victoria, BC Chinatown was made up of several streets (about 6 square city blocks, [[Chinatown, Victoria]]) at its highest population in around 1910–1911.

====Other Chinatowns in British Columbia====
*[[New Westminster, British Columbia#Chinatown|New Westminster's Chinatown]]
*[http://www.explorasian.org/2006/07/new-westminster-museum-and-archives.html New Westminster Museum and Archives Chinatown Project]
*[http://www.cayoosh.net/chinatown.html Lillooet's Chinatown] – the BC Interior's first Chinatown
*[http://collections.ic.gc.ca/generations/community/barkerville.html Barkerville's Chinatown] – although ostensibly about Barkerville ''per se'', content here is all Chinese-related.
*[http://www.barkerville.com/mapbv.htm Map of Barkerville, explaining location and circumstances of Chinatown]
*[http://collections.ic.gc.ca/yale/tour/china.htm Yale's Chinatown] – the first Chinatown on the BC Mainland
*[http://collections.ic.gc.ca/yale/tour/onlee.htm Yale's On Lee House] – a surviving structure of Yale's Chinatown
*[[Cumberland, British Columbia|Cumberland's Chinatown]] – once the second-largest on the West Coast of North America (c.1910)
*[http://collections.ic.gc.ca/kingcoal/10/bigstrike/chinese.html Cumberland's Chinese Strikebreakers, from Digital Collections "King Coal" series]
*[http://www.cumberlandforest.com/photos/Chinatown.gif Picture of Cumberland's Chinatown, 1910]
*[[Stanley, British Columbia]] – a gold-mining community near Barkerville which became the largest town in the Cariboo goldfields after Barkerville's decline. In 1900 well over half its population was Chinese. Other towns in the Cariboo goldfields were also noticeably Chinese in composition – Richfield, Antler and others. Settlements in other areas which had Chinatowns, or which became predominantly Chinese for some of their lifespan, were [[Hazelton, British Columbia|Hazelton]], [[Boston Bar]], [[Rock Creek, British Columbia|Rock Creek]], [[Granite Creek, British Columbia|Granite Creek]] and [[Fisherville, British Columbia|Fisherville]] (Wild Horse Creek). Cities which had now-vanished Chinatowns included [[Nanaimo]] and [[Penticton]].

===Manitoba===
The Chinatown in [[Winnipeg]] was formed in 1909. It is on King Street between James and Higgins Avenues, and was officially designated in 1968. Some 20,000 Chinese live in the Winnipeg area.

===Ontario===
====Ottawa====
[[Ottawa]]'s Chinatown area is in the [[Centretown West]] neighbourhood. It is centered on [[Booth Street]] and [[Somerset Street]].{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}}

====Toronto====
{{Main|Chinatown, Toronto}}
[[Image:DundasWest1.jpg|thumb|Chinatown, Toronto]]
[[Toronto]]'s historic Chinatown is centered on Spadina Avenue and Dundas Street. More recently the enclave has come to reflect a more diverse set of East Asian cultures, including Chinese, Vietnamese, and Thai. A smaller enclave known as East Chinatown is located in the Riverdale neighbourhood, centered at the corner of Broadview Avenue and Gerrard Street. Chinese-Vietnamese and mainland Chinese immigrants dominate that district.

====Markham====
Markham is typical suburban Chinatown, lying north of Toronto. Markham has some large Chinese shopping malls on Kennedy Road and Steeles Avenue East. The most famous strip malls are Pacific Mall, Market Village Mall and Splendid China Tower. Chinese are the largest minority in Markham with almost 64'000 people, about 25% of the population.

====Richmond Hill====
Another suburban "Chinatown" of Toronto. About 21% of the population is of Chinese origin. There are some large Chinese strip malls along Highway 7: Golden Plaza and Times Square Mall.

===Quebec===
[[Image:Chinatown-gate.thumb2.jpg|thumb|right|The gate on boulevard Saint-Laurent, Montreal]]
====Montreal====
{{Main|Chinatown, Montreal}}

[[Montreal, Quebec|Montreal]]'s small, but well-frequented Chinatown is on rue De La Gauchetière and around rue Saint-Urbain and boulevard Saint-Laurent, between boulevard René-Lévesque and rue Viger (Place-d'Armes [[Montreal metro|metro]] station), just a stone's throw away from the touristy [[Old Montreal]] (''Vieux-Montreal''). It was originally formed in the 1890s and has been the centrepiece for Chinese residing in the Montreal area.

The Chinatown is known as ''Quartier chinois'' in [[French language|French]].

Chinese businesses in Quebec enjoy a rare exception to that province's notorious language laws. When ''l'office de la langue française'' ordered restaurants and other businesses to replace their Chinese signs with signs where the French text is at least twice as large as Chinese, and without any English, Chinese businessmen protested that this was unlucky and bad for business. They were granted exemption from the province's strict sign laws on cultural grounds (which is not allowed other ethnic and cultural groups).

====Quebec City====

There was once a Chinatown on Côte d'Abraham in [[Quebec City]], but [[Autoroute Dufferin-Montmorency]] cuts through what was once its location. Historically, it paled in size in contrast to its somewhat larger counterpart in Montreal. The first Chinese residents arrived in the late 19th Century. Most Chinese in the area operated business catering to their own: opium dens, mah-jongg, and Chinese laundries. The area peaked in the 1940s and 1950s. The separatist movement caused many to leave in the 1980s and 1990s. Some restaurants and a few Chinese residents remain. Most have moved to [[Montreal]] or [[Toronto]].

The city has made attempts to re-establish a link to the past:

* a street was renamed Rue de Xi’an in 2006
* archway and park to be added shortly to commemorate the Chinese community of the past

=== Saskatchewan ===
====Regina====

[[Regina, Saskatchewan|Regina]]'s Chinatown is found on 11th Avenue between Broad Street and Winnipeg Street. It features red bilingual street signs (in contrast to the standard English-only blue signs) and a few Asian groceries.

====Saskatoon====

In [[Saskatoon, Saskatchewan|Saskatoon]], the Chinatown can be found in the Riversdale district of that city.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}}

==Chinatowns in the United States==
===Arizona===
=====Phoenix=====
[[Phoenix, Arizona|Phoenix]] once had a Chinatown around what is now US Airways Center. It was defunct long before US Airways Center was built. Some artifacts from the Chinatown were uncovered in an archaeological dig on the site, and are exhibited at the Center.

A Chinatown-themed shopping center built to traditional Chinese architecture was opened in 1997 near the [[Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport]]. It is called the Chinese Cultural Center and the offices are located at 668 N. 44st, a bit north of Van Buren St.

===California===
Given its relative proximity to East Asia and Southeast Asia, [[California]] has the largest number of historic in North America, including the well-known Chinatown in San Francisco, the first all-Chinese rural town of [[Locke, California|Locke]] to be built by Chinese immigrants, and Chinatowns in various cities throughout the state.

====Northern California====<!-- This section is linked from [[Chinatown]] -->
=====San Francisco=====
{{Main|Chinatown, San Francisco, California}}
The first, and one of the largest, most prominent and highly visited Chinatowns in North America is [[Chinatown, San Francisco, California|San Francisco's Chinatown]], which is predominantly [[Yue Chinese|Cantonese]]-speaking, though many immigrants from Mainland China (mostly hailing from [[Guangdong]] province) are also fluent in [[Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin]]. Its main entrance is at Grant Avenue at Bush Street, but the center of Chinese commercial activities is on Stockton Avenue, whereas the section mostly oriented towards tourists is on Grant Avenue.

[[Image:Sf chinatown gate.JPG|right|thumbnail|[[Paifang|Arch]] to San Francisco's Chinatown.]]
Founded around 1850, Chinatown was destroyed in the [[1906 San Francisco earthquake]] and was later rebuilt and re-realized, using a Chinese-style architecture that has been criticized as garish and touristy. According to ''[[Sunset Magazine]]'', Chinatown receives millions of tourists annually, making the community, along with [[Alcatraz]] and [[Golden Gate Bridge]], one of the prime attractions and highlights of the city of San Francisco, as well as the centerpiece of Chinese-American history. With its Chinatown as the landmark, the city of San Francisco itself has one of the largest and predominant concentrations of Chinese-American population centers, representing 20% of total population as of the [[2000 US Census|2000 Census]], even more than New York City in terms of proportional numbers according to [[anthropologist]] Bernard Wong. While many ethnic Chinese do not reside in Chinatown today, but instead throughout the city of San Francisco as well as the surrounding [[Oakland]] and [[San Jose, California|San Jose]] areas, Chinatown remains the historical anchor. It has also remained the symbolic center as city politicians and candidates have made it a ''de rigueur'' stop during election campaigns. Historically and today, Chinese in America refer to San Francisco in Cantonese as ''Die Foul'' (大埠, which can be translated as 大城, ''da cheng'' in [[Mandarin Chinese]] or ''the Big City'' in [[English language|English]].)

Besides the main thoroughfare of Grant Avenue and various side streets, Chinatown has several side alleys, including [[Ross Alley]]. Contained within this alley is a mix of touristy stores, tiny barber shop (once patronized by famous singer [[Frank Sinatra]]) as well as a [[fortune cookie]] factory. Ross Alley used to have [[brothel]]s, but they no longer exist.
[[Image:San Francisco Chinatown 1993.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Chinatown in San Francisco]]
Also within the confines of Chinatown is the Woh Hei Yuen Recreation Center and Park on Powell Street. Many Chinese-speaking old-timers are frequent patrons this park because their lodgings – generally intended for low-income persons – tend to be tiny and cramped. Many elderly people gather to play ''[[mahjong]]'', [[Chinese poker]], perform ''[[Tai Chi Chuan|tai chi]]'' exercises in the morning, read a Chinese [[newspaper]], or simply to lounge around.

The San Francisco Chinatown hosts the largest [[Chinese New Year]] parade in North America, with corporate sponsors such as the [[Bank of America]] and the award-winning and widely praised dragon dance team from the [[San Francisco Police Department]], composed solely of Chinese-American SFPD officers (the only such team in existence in the United States). In its founding, it received the grant from the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, otherwise known as the Chinese Six Companies. As Chinatown and many Chinese-Americans in the San Francisco Bay Area have historical or current roots in province of [[Guangdong]], China (particularly [[Taishan County]]) and in Hong Kong, these dances mostly are performed in the southern Chinese style.

The first Chinese-American police chief in the United States, [[Fred Lau]], of the [[San Francisco Police Department|SFPD]], grew up in San Francisco Chinatown. The current SFPD Chief of Police, [[Heather Fong]], was also born and raised in Chinatown. At the start of her police career, Fong was a key investigator of the notorious 1977 [[Golden Dragon massacre]] in Chinatown.

San Francisco Chinatown has been shown in numerous movies and television shows, and boasts a number of firsts, including the invention of [[chop suey]], being the site of printing currency for the then-newly emerged [[Republic of China]], and the first [[Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association]]. During the [[civil rights movement]] of the 1960s, San Francisco's Chinatown was also at the center for Chinese-American activism and radical politics, some of which was militant, as well as major [[gang]] activity with the emergence of the notorious [[Wah Ching]] in North America. Currently, the historic Chinatown shows some signs of decline.

After President [[Richard M. Nixon]]'s historic 1972 visit to the People's Republic of China, the arrival of new Chinese immigrants to the San Francisco area helped diversify and introduce new Chinese cuisine from many regions throughout mainland China in its Chinatown — the restaurants previously served mainly Cantonese and unauthentic Chinese-American fare.

Today, as with most Chinatowns in or near congested urban centers, parking problems still continue to plague the area, which has implications on the economy of the enclave. Due to the aging [[infrastructure]] which pre-dated the advent of the [[motor vehicle]], it has been said nothing could be done by the municipal government of San Francisco to alleviate such problems. Many principal ethnic Chinese residents and frequenters of Chinatown are elderly and do not speak much English and in terms of transportation have very limited mobility and remain in Chinatown for shopping and social services through the local associations.

=====Oakland=====
{{Main|Chinatown, Oakland}}
[[Image:Chinatown's Signs in Chinese.jpg|thumb|200px|Chinatown, Oakland]]
[[Oakland]]'s Chinatown is frequently referred to as "Oakland Chinatown" in order to distinguish it from nearby San Francisco's Chinatown. Originally formed in the 1860s, the Chinatown of Oakland – centering upon 8th Street and Webster Street – shares a long history as its counterpart in the city of San Francisco as Oakland's community remains one of the focal point of Chinese American heritage in the San Francisco Bay Area. However, the major difference with San Francisco's Chinatown is that Oakland's version is not as touristy as its local economy tends not to rely on tourism as much. But the local government of [[Oakland]] has since promoted it as such as it is considered one the top sources of sales tax revenue for the city. The Chinatown does not have an ornamental entrance arch ([[paifang]]) but the streets of the community are adorned with road signs in English with Chinese rendering.

Today, while it remains a Cantonese-speaking enclave "Chinatown" is not exclusively Chinese anymore, but a vibrant pan-Asian neighborhood which reflects Oakland's rich diversity of Asian community of Chinese, [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]], [[Koreans|Korean]], [[Filipino people|Filipino]], [[Japanese people|Japanese]], [[Khmer people|Cambodian]], [[Lao people|Laotian]], [[Mien]], [[Thai people|Thai]], and others. In a matter of 12 city blocks, one can expect to find in this Chinatown a collection of groceries, restaurants, stores (offering products such as [[ginseng]] and herbs, [[jewelry]], and so on), clinics, the [[Oakland Asian Cultural Center]] (9th Street), and habitations for elderly immigrants, as well as a local branch of the [[Oakland Public Library]] filled with Asian materials and collections. In addition to the standard Chinese New Year festivities, the Oakland Chinatown Streetfest (as held by the Oakland Chinatown Chamber of Commerce) is also held yearly in August and it features Chinese lion dances, parades, music, cooking demonstrations and contests, a food festival, and various activities.

=====San Jose/Silicon Valley=====
While the city of [[San Jose, California|San Jose]] proper did have several Chinatowns in the past, they are all extinct today.

=====Sacramento=====
[[Sacramento, California|Sacramento]] has a relatively small urban Chinatown, which dates back to the early days of the [[California Gold Rush]]. Mostly, it serves more a as museum than anything else.

Nowadays, the southern area of city consists mostly of [[Vietnam]]ese businesses owned by Chinese from Vietnam. On Stockton Boulevard, there are Asian strip malls with Chinese and Vietnamese restaurants, and shopping at [[Pacific Rim Plaza]] and major [[Asian supermarket]]s.

In the past decade, Sacramento has seen a booming ethnic Vietnamese population with a large migration from other parts of California.

=====Stockton=====
In [[Stockton, California]] still exists a small Chinatown on Chung Wah Lane, East Market Street and East Washington Street. Although it is a very small area, there are some Chinese stores in it as well as restaurants such as On Lock Sam, the city's oldest restaurant, founded in 1898. The community was once quite large but, after development in the 1950s and 1960s and the construction of the Crosstown freeway, businesses moved, buildings were demolished, new buildings were built, and the community changed forever. There is still a Chinese New Year Parade merged with the Vietnamese New Year celebrations.
=====Locke=====
Just beyond the Sacramento and [[Stockton, California|Stockton]] areas, the small town of [[Locke, California|Locke]] is an example of an early rural "Chinatown" completely built by Chinese immigrants in 1915. Consisting of only three streets in town (Main Street, River Road, and Key Street), it was a thriving community with various merchants and associations as its economy based mostly on the agriculture. Very few ethnic Chinese live there these days. The Dai Loy Museum – ''dai loy''(大來) literally renders as "big come" in Cantonese – as well as one Chinese restaurant offering a mixture of traditional Cantonese and Americanized Chinese food are features in Locke. In the early 1980s, a 30-minute documentary from the [[UC Berkeley|University of California, Berkeley]] called ''[[American Chinatown]]'', which documented the last surviving immigrant old-timers as well as battles with land developers and the touristification of the community.

=====Fresno and Central Valley=====
Work is underway to revitalize [[Fresno, California|Fresno's]] once-moribund Chinatown, founded in 1885 at F Street in the [[San Joaquin Valley]] city. It is undergoing a massive beautification project. However, currently the area is not exclusively Chinese. One of the major problems is that there are fewer Chinese businesses there. But the area already holds an annual Chinese New Year celebration. The Chinatown Revitalization Inc has been making several efforts to support the Chinatown of Fresno.

The town of [[Hanford, California|Hanford]], about 30 miles distance from Fresno, features a ramshackle Chinatown from the 19th century era, mostly contained within a small street block known as China Alley. Many early immigrants arrived from the ''Sam Yup'' region (or [[Sanyi]] in modern pinyin) in the province of Guangdong, China. Many of its multigeneration American-born Chinese descendants of original settlers have since moved on. Chinatown had its early share of opium dens and brothels. In modern times, all that still stands of China Alley is a [[Taoist]] temple (a monument officially recognized by the [[National Register of Historic Places]]) and a special museum.

====Southern California====
[[Image:Los angeles chinatown0001.jpg|thumbnail|right|Entryway to Los Angeles's Chinatown, where ethnic Chinese from Vietnam and Cambodia live and own businesses]]

=====Inland Empire=====
Several cities of the [[Inland Empire (California)|Inland Empire]] region once had standing Chinatowns, including the former farming communities of [[San Bernardino, California|San Bernardino]], [[Riverside, California|Riverside]], and [[Redlands, California|Redlands]].

San Bernardino's Chinatown, pioneered in the late 1870s, occupied Third Street between Arrowhead and Mountain View. During its peak in the 1890s, the community flourished with several Chinese habitations and community trades, such as shops. By the 1920s, Chinatown experienced decline and the last remnants of Chinatown fell into obscurity in 1959.

The Chinatown in Redlands was on what is now Oriental Avenue and Texas Street. It is no longer extant.

The Chinatown of Riverside was established in 1885. The remaining Chinese American survivor of Riverside's Chinatown died off in 1974. He attempted to preserve Chinatown, but his efforts were in vain because the last remnant of Riverside's Chinatown was razed in 1978. As with many early Chinatowns in the small and medium-sized towns of California, the once vibrant Chinese American history has faded into obscurity.

=====Los Angeles=====
{{Main|Chinatown, Los Angeles}}
In the city of [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] proper, the old inner-city Chinatown was built during the late 1930s–the second Chinatown to be constructed in Los Angeles. Formerly a "[[Little Italy]]," it is presently located on Broadway Avenue and Spring Street near [[Dodger Stadium]] in [[downtown Los Angeles]] with still several restaurants, grocers, and tourist-oriented trinket shops. A statue honoring the [[Kuomintang]] founder Dr. [[Sun Yat-sen]] adorns the more touristy area in the northeast section. Chinatown is home to several family and regional associations and general service organizations for old-timer immigrants (called in Cantonese lo wah cue) as well as ones founded by and for the new immigrants from Southeast Asia. The enclave contains Buddhist temples, Chinese Christian church (with services conducted in Cantonese), and a temple devoted to the Chinese Goddess of the Sea.

=====San Diego=====
[[San Diego, California|San Diego]] had a historic Chinatown founded in the 1870s, formerly around Market Street and Third Avenue, that has faded over time. In 1987, due to its historic and cultural value, the city council of San Diego sought to preserve the area and officially designated it the Asian Pacific Thematic Historic District, which overlaps the burgeoning and gentrified [[Gaslamp Quarter]] (the center of the San Diego's trendy nightlife scene). The annual San Diego Chinese New Year Food and Cultural Faire is presented in this particular district.

=====San Luis Obispo =====
There is a nearly forgotten "Chinatown" from the middle 1870s on Chorro Street and Palm Street in the [[Central Coast of California|Central Coast]] town of [[San Luis Obispo]]. An early Chinese store was owned by early Chinese immigrant pioneer and influential community leader [[Ah Louis]]. It is now considered a historic relic. Also, many Chinese artifacts of the community have since been discovered during excavations. [[Railroad Square]] features a statue that honors the Chinese immigrant laborers who worked on the railroads in the vicinity of San Luis Obispo.

===Florida===
=====Miami=====
{{Unreferenced section|date=June 2008}}
Miami has a relatively new and informal ''Chinatown located'' at NE 167th Street and 163rd Street, between NE 6th Avenue and NE 19th Avenue in [[North Miami Beach]]. The location of the area right next to the sea on an inlet and in a central location in South Florida is said to be the reason for its emerging prominence in the Asian community. It is known as the business center of Miami–Dade's growing Indian American, Indo-Caribbean American and Chinese American communities. In recent years the whole Miami area has seen a huge increase in Chinese immigrants amongst other Asian communities and North Miami Beach has been the most affected by this. While called "Chinatown," the area is also the center of other Asian communities such as [[India]]n, [[Japanese people|Korean]], [[Filipino people|Filipino]], [[Korean people|Korean]] and [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]].

===Hawaii===
=====Honolulu=====
The official and historic Chinatown of [[Honolulu, Hawaii|Honolulu]], on North Hotel Street and Maunakea Street, contains traditional ethnic Chinese businesses. Unlike Chinatowns in the continental United States which were largely pioneered and dominated by [[Taishan]] immigrants, Honolulu's Chinatown was started by early settlers from [[Zhongshan]], [[Guangdong province]] in the 1890s. They migrated to [[Hawaii]] for work in the island's cane sugar plantations as well as rice fields and then as they became successful eventually relocating to the city of Honolulu. As with other Chinatowns in the United States, it was noted for its unsanitary conditions. In the 1940s, it degenerated into a red-light district.

Today, it is also diverse with Pan-Asian and [[Pacific Islander]] businesses and the ethnic Chinese from Vietnam are largely demographically represented in Honolulu's Chinatown. Businesses include markets, bakeries, [[Chinese porcelain]] shop, and shops specializing with gingseng herbal remedies). In Chinatown, there are also bazaars and street peddlers in the Kekaulike Mall (located on Kekaulike Street) bringing it unique bustling ambiance to the community. The variety of restaurants serving Hong Kong-style dim sum and others in Vietnamese beef noodle soup are frequent in Chinatown. The history of Chinese revolutionary Dr. Sun Yat-sen – himself hailing from the [[Zhongshan]] region of Guangdong province of Mainland China – is tied to Hawaii, having receiving his Western education there. Chinatown, Honolulu was once served as the base of operations in a series of crusades against ruling [[Qing Dynasty]] in China that culminate in the Revolution of 1911. There is a monument in his honor in Honolulu's Chinatown. Recent development and planning has dramatically transformed the once decaying and unsafe Chinatown, Honolulu from its red-light past to an upscale Asian inspired arts district blended with the traditional Chinese bazaars and family owned stores.

===Illinois===
=====Chicago=====
[[Image:Chinatown Chi 1.JPG|thumbnail|250px|Chicago's Chinatown]]
{{Main|Chinatown, Chicago, Illinois}}
The Chinatown in [[Chicago]] is a traditional urban Chinatown occupying the area along Wentworth Avenue at [[Cermak Road]] south of downtown. This area has historically been dominated by commerce, though in recent years, residential developments have greatly increased the number of people living in the area. With restaurants, markets, shops, associations, and community services, this original Chinatown particularly attracts Chinese emigres hailing from China. The annual Chinese New Year and Chinese Double Ten Day Parade are held in Chinatown.

[[Image:Little Saigon Chicago.jpg|thumb|Argyle Street in "New Chinatown", Chicago]]
Chicagoans also refer to a Southeast Asian community on Argyle Street in the north side as the "[[Uptown, Chicago#New Chinatown|New Chinatown]]", or alternately, as "Little Chinatown". But at this point, this "new" chinatown still pales in size and scope to the more traditional chinatown. This so-called "Chinatown" is actually inhabited by the minority ethnic Chinese who were born in Vietnam and Cambodia.

===Louisiana===
=====New Orleans=====
The first original Chinatown of [[New Orleans]] existed on Tulane Avenue and South Rampart Street in the [[Faubourg Ste. Marie]] quarter from the 1870s until the 1930s and most of the original Chinatown buildings were razed in the late 1950s. A newer, synthetic "Chinatown" was developed in 2003 on Behrman Highway in suburban Terrytown.

===Maryland===
=====Baltimore=====
There existed a "Chinatown" on Park Ave. in [[Baltimore, Maryland|Baltimore]], which was dominated by laundries and restaurants. There have been remaining several Chinese restaurants of the community these days on Park Ave. between West Franklin Street and West Saratoga Street although in this neighbourhood are many abandoned buildings. This happened because many of the Asians in Baltimore traded in urban living for a suburb of Baltimore named Columbia. But there has been some talk about a new asiatown in a neighbourhood named Charles Village, Baltimore, due to a significant Korean and Indian populations. Also it will be developed by Washington D.C. businessman Tony Cheng who will be trying to attract Asian restaurants.

Also, an extension of Washington, D.C.'s Chinatown exists in [[Rockville, Maryland]], near [[Maryland State Highway 355|Maryland Route 355]] (Rockville Pike) with Taiwanese businesses.

===Massachusetts===
=====Boston=====
{{Main|Chinatown, Boston}}
[[Image:Paifang Boston Chinatown 1.jpg|thumb|300px|right|A view from within [[Chinatown, Boston]] looking towards the ''[[paifang]]'']]
The sole established Chinatown of [[New England]] is in [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], on Beach Street and Washington Street near [[South Station]] between [[Downtown Crossing]] and [[Tufts Medical Center]]. There are many [[Chinese food|Chinese]], [[Japanese people|Japanese]], [[Khmer people|Cambodian]] and [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]] restaurants and markets.

In the pre-Chinatown era, the area was settled in succession by [[Ireland|Irish]], [[Jewish]], [[Italy|Italian]] and [[Demographics of Syria|Syrian]] immigrants as each group replaced another. Syrians were later succeeded by Chinese immigrants, and Chinatown was established in 1890. From the 1960s to the 1980s, Boston's Chinatown was located in the [[Combat Zone (Boston)|Combat Zone]], which served as Boston's [[red light district]], but sandwiched between the dual expansions of Chinatown from the East and [[Emerson College]] from the West, the Combat Zone has shrunk to almost nothing.{{Citation needed|date=November 2009}}

Currently, Boston's Chinatown is experiencing a threat from [[gentrification]] policies as large luxury residential towers are built in and surrounding an area that was overwhelmingly three, four, and five-story small apartment buildings intermixed with retail and light-industrial spaces.<ref>[http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2006/03/01/hotel_project_revived/]</ref><ref>[http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0710/p03s03-ussc.html]</ref>

===Michigan ===
=====Detroit=====
[[Image:Sm2000.jpg|thumb|right|One of several Chinese strip malls on John R Road in Madison Heights.]]
[[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit's]] Chinatown was originally located at Third Avenue, Porter St and Bagley St, now the permanent site of the MGM Grand Casino.<ref>Chinatown, Burton collection, Detroit Public Library</ref> In the 1960s, urban renewal efforts, as well as the opportunity for the Chinese business community to purchase property led to a relocation centered at Cass Avenue and Peterboro.<ref>Detroit News, Feb 19, 1960</ref> However, Detroit's urban decline and escalating street violence, primarily the killing of restaurateur, Tommie Lee, led to the new location's demise, with the last remaining Chinese food restaurant in Chinatown finally shut its doors in the early 2000s. Although there is still a road marker indicating "Chinatown" and a mural commemorating the struggle for justice in the [[Vincent Chin]] case, only one Chinese American establishment still operates within the borders of the City of Detroit. The Association of Chinese Americans Detroit Outreach Center<ref>[http://www.acadetroit.org/main.php?p=home Association of Chinese Americans Detroit Outreach Center]</ref>, a small community center, serves a handful of new Chinese immigrants who still reside in the Cass Corridor.

=== Missouri ===
=====St. Louis=====

St. Louis' original Chinatown, also called "Hop Alley", was in the city of [[St. Louis, Missouri]] <ref>[http://www.temple.edu/tempress/chapters_1400/1745_ch1.pdf]</ref> before it was eventually replaced by [[Busch Stadium II|Busch Stadium]] in the 1960s. During its prime, it had a plethora of hand laundries, but later Chinese restaurants became the primary economic source. By that time, attempts at establishing another Chinatown largely met with failure. This partly attributed to the fact that American-born Chinese descendants of the original settlers were fanning out throughout St. Louis and taking on mainstream careers than to slave away in their families' businesses.

===Nevada===
=====Las Vegas=====
{{Main|Chinatown, Las Vegas}}
The only Chinatown in [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]] was initially just a large shopping center called "Chinatown Plaza." It is the so-called "first master-planned Chinatown in America" with the Chinese American supermarket chain [[99 Ranch Market]] serving as its anchor. The plaza location is west of the [[Las Vegas Strip]] and [[Interstate 15 in Nevada|Interstate 15]] at 4255 Spring Mountain Road, just outside the casino areas in what is a typical American neighborhood. The area has been officially officially designated "Chinatown" by Nevada governor [[Kenny Guinn]] and by city of Las Vegas with parking areas allotted for [[bus]]es as well. (The Chinatown has its own designated exit off-ramp sign on [[Interstate 15 in Nevada|Interstate 15]].) Furthermore, the Chinese American population tends to be somewhat more dispersed throughout Las Vegas than in [[Southern California]].

=== New Jersey ===
=====Newark=====
[[Chinatown, Newark]], was a Chinese enclave in [[Downtown Newark]], [[New Jersey]], that thrived in the late 19th century and the first half of the 20th century and was centered around Mulberry Arcade.

===New York===
====New York City====
====New York City====
{{Main|Chinatown, Manhattan|Chinatowns in Queens|Chinatowns in Brooklyn}}
The [[New York metropolitan area]] now contains at least 6 Chinatowns, including the original Chinatown in [[Manhattan]], as well as two successors in [[Queens]] (the [[Flushing, Queens|Flushing]] Chinatown and the [[Elmhurst]] Chinatown), two in [[Brooklyn]] (the [[Sunset Park]] Chinatown and the [[Avenue U]] Chinatown), and one in [[Edison, New Jersey]].
{{See also|Chinese people in New York City}}
=====Manhattan=====
[[File:On Leong building, Canal & Mott.JPG|thumb|right|upright=1.2|[[On Leong Tong|On Leong]] building in [[Chinatown, Manhattan]]]]
{{Main|Chinatown, Manhattan}}
[[File:Chinatown 1.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.2|Intersection of [[Main Street (Queens)|Main Street]] and [[Roosevelt Avenue]] in [[Flushing Chinatown|Flushing]], home to the world's largest Chinatown]]
The Manhattan Chinatown is one of the largest Chinese communities outside of Asia. The old Chinatown of New York City is centered around the junction of [[Canal Street (Manhattan)|Canal Street]] and Mott Street in [[Manhattan]], but at least four other Chinatowns have cropped up in other parts of New York City. Manhattan's Chinatown is home to mostly Cantonese and Fuzhou immigrants. During the late 1980s and 1990s, an influx of Fuzhou immigrants moved in and the ''Little Fuzhou'' community emerged on the East Broadway portion and Eldridge street portion within Manhattan's Chinatown after the waves of Cantonese immigrants settled and formed their community in Manhattan's Chinatown. However, by the 2000s, the Fuzhou population growth slowed. The second Chinatown is on Roosevelt Avenue and Main Street in [[Flushing, New York|Flushing]], [[Queens]], and the third Chinatown is in the [[Sunset Park, Brooklyn|Sunset Park]] neighborhood of [[Brooklyn, New York|Brooklyn]] around 50th to 65th Streets along 8th Avenue. A fourth and rapidly growing Chinatown is in Elmhurst, Queens, north of Queens Blvd on Broadway, and the fifth and newest one is cropping up in Brooklyn, see below. The original Chinatown of NY began in the middle 1800s along Mott Street south of Canal Street.
[[File:Brooklyn_Chinatown.png|thumb|upright=1.2|[[Eighth Avenue (Brooklyn)#Chinese community|Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn]] [[Chinatowns in Brooklyn|Chinatown]]]]
The [[New York metropolitan area]] contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside of [[Asia]],<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/23/nyregion/in-new-york-indictment-of-officer-peter-liang-divides-chinese-americans.html |title=Indictment of New York Officer Divides Chinese-Americans|author=Vivian Yee|newspaper=The New York Times|date=February 22, 2015|access-date=February 23, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.queensbuzz.com/flushing-neighborhood-corona-neighborhood-cms-302|title=Chinese New Year 2012 in Flushing|publisher=QueensBuzz.com|date=25 January 2012|access-date=February 23, 2015}}</ref> comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/ACS/17_1YR/S0201/330M400US408/popgroup~016|title=Selected Population Profile in the United States 2017 – American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA Chinese alone|publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]|access-date=January 27, 2019|archive-url=https://archive.today/20200214002005/https://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/ACS/17_1YR/S0201/330M400US408/popgroup~016|archive-date=February 14, 2020|url-status=dead}}</ref> including at least 12 Chinatowns - six<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/24/nyregion/asian-new-yorkers-asian-new-yorkers-seek-power-to-match-surging-numbers.html?scp=1&sq=asians&st=cse |title=Asian New Yorkers Seek Power to Match Numbers |author=Kirk Semple |newspaper=The New York Times |date=June 23, 2011 |access-date=2014-10-03}}</ref> (or nine, including the emerging Chinatowns in [[Corona, Queens|Corona]] and [[Whitestone, Queens|Whitestone]], [[Queens]],<ref name=McGlinn>{{cite journal|url=http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf |title=Beyond Chinatown: Dual Immigration and the Chinese Population of Metropolitan New York City, 2000 |page=4 |author=Lawrence A. McGlinn |journal=Middle States Geographer |year=2002 |volume=35 |issue=1153 |access-date=2014-10-03 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121029075400/http://geographyplanning.buffalostate.edu/MSG%202002/13_McGlinn.pdf |archive-date=October 29, 2012 |df=mdy }}</ref> and [[East Harlem, Manhattan]]) in [[New York City]] proper, and one each in [[Nassau County, New York|Nassau County]], [[Long Island]]; [[Edison, New Jersey|Edison]], [[New Jersey]];<ref name=McGlinn/> and [[Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey]], not to mention fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York City metropolitan area. [[Chinese Americans]], as a whole, have had a (relatively) long tenure in New York City. The Manhattan Chinatown is home to the highest concentration of Chinese people in the [[Western Hemisphere]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ny.com/articles/chinatown.html|title=The History of New York's Chinatown|author=Sarah Waxman|publisher=Mediabridge Infosystems, Inc.|access-date=November 10, 2019|quote=Manhattan's Chinatown, the largest Chinatown in the United States and the site of the largest concentration of Chinese in the Western Hemisphere, is located on the Lower East Side.}}</ref>


The first [[Chinese people|Chinese]] immigrants came to [[Lower Manhattan]] around 1870, looking for the "golden" opportunities America had to offer.<ref name="historychinatown">{{cite web |url=http://www.ny.com/articles/chinatown.html|title=The History of New York's Chinatown|last=Waxman|first=Sarah |publisher=ny.com |access-date=2014-10-03}}</ref> By 1880, the enclave around [[Five Points, Manhattan|Five Points]] was estimated to have from 200 to as many as 1,100 members.<ref name=historychinatown/> However, the [[Chinese Exclusion Act]], which went into effect in 1882, caused an abrupt decline in the number of Chinese who immigrated to New York and the rest of the United States.<ref name=historychinatown /> Later, in 1943, the Chinese were given a small quota, and the community's population gradually increased until 1968, when the quota was lifted and the Chinese American population skyrocketed.<ref name=historychinatown /> In the past few years, the [[Cantonese]] dialect that has dominated Chinatown for decades is being rapidly swept aside by [[Standard Chinese|Mandarin Chinese]], the national language of China and the [[lingua franca]] of most of the latest [[Chinese immigrants]].<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/22/nyregion/22chinese.html |title=In Chinatown, Sound of the Future Is Mandarin |date=October 21, 2009 |access-date=2011-06-29 | work=The New York Times | first=Kirk | last=Semple}}</ref> While the [[Flushing Chinatown]] in [[Queens]] has become the largest Chinatown in the world, it has also become the epicenter of [[prostitution|organized prostitution]] in the United States.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/behind-illicit-massage-parlors-lie-a-vast-crime-network-and-modern-indentured-servitude/ar-BBUhZgJ?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=mailsignout|title=Behind Illicit Massage Parlors Lie a Vast Crime Network and Modern Indentured Servitude|author=Nicholas Kulish, Frances Robles, and Patricia Mazzei|newspaper=The New York Times|date=March 2, 2019|access-date=March 2, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190306043138/http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/behind-illicit-massage-parlors-lie-a-vast-crime-network-and-modern-indentured-servitude/ar-BBUhZgJ?li=BBnb7Kz&ocid=mailsignout|archive-date=March 6, 2019|url-status=dead}}</ref> Flushing is undergoing rapid [[gentrification]] by Chinese transnational entities.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/13/flushing-queens-gentrification-luxury-developments|title='Not what it used to be': in New York, Flushing's Asian residents brace against gentrification|author=Sarah Ngu|newspaper=[[The Guardian US]]|date=January 29, 2021|access-date=August 13, 2020|quote=The three developers have stressed in public hearings that they are not outsiders to Flushing, which is 69% Asian. 'They’ve been here, they live here, they work here, they’ve invested here,' said Ross Moskowitz, an attorney for the developers at a different public hearing in February...Tangram Tower, a luxury mixed-use development built by F&amp;T. Last year, prices for two-bedroom apartments started at $1.15m...The influx of transnational capital and rise of luxury developments in Flushing has displaced longtime immigrant residents and small business owners, as well as disrupted its cultural and culinary landscape. These changes follow the familiar script of gentrification, but with a change of actors: it is Chinese American developers and wealthy Chinese immigrants who are gentrifying this working-class neighborhood, which is majority Chinese.}}</ref> The growth of the business activity at the core of [[Downtown Flushing]], dominated by the Flushing Chinatown, has continued despite the COVID-19 pandemic.<ref name=FlushingChinatownContinuesGrowth>{{cite web|url=https://www.curbed.com/2022/12/new-new-york-report-review-hochul-adams-doctoroff.html|title=Can the Hochul-Adams New New York Actually Happen?|author=Justin Davidson|publisher=Curbed - New York magazine|date=December 15, 2022|access-date=December 18, 2022}}</ref>
=====Queens=====
{{Main|Flushing, Queens}}
The intersection of Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue, the business center for Flushing located at the terminus of the [[7 (New York City Subway service)|Number 7 subway line]] on the westernmost edge of the neighborhood has a concentration of Chinese and Korean small businesses, among others. Chinese-owned businesses in particular predominate in the area along Main Street and the immediate area west of it.<ref name="Zhou">{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ghKia5k6hXUC&pg=PA57#v=onepage&q=&f=false|title=Contemporary Chinese America: Immigration, Ethnicity, and Community|author=[[Min Zhou]]|publisher=[[Temple University Press]]|year=2009|pages=57–59}}</ref><ref name="Foner">{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=MR4iVnvulMQC&pg=PA158#v=onepage&q=&f=false|title=New immigrants in New York|author=Nancy Foner|publisher=[[Columbia University Press]]|year=2001|pages=158–161}}</ref><ref name="Montefinise">{{cite news|url=http://www.queenstribune.com/anniversary2002/koreans.htm|title=Koreans In Queens: Finding A Second Home In The Borough Of Queens|author=Angela Montefinise|publisher=[[Queens Tribune]]|year=2002}}</ref>


====San Francisco====
[[Image:Brooklynchinatown.JPG|thumb|250px|right|"Brooklyn Chinatown": 8th Avenue in Sunset Park]]
[[File:San Francisco - Chinatown & California Street Cable Car (1098847880).jpg|thumb|right|Sing Chong building in [[Chinatown, San Francisco]] with a [[California Street Cable Railroad|California Street]] [[San Francisco cable car system|cable car]]]]
{{Main|Chinatown, San Francisco|Richmond District, San Francisco|Sunset District, San Francisco}}
{{See also|History of Chinese Americans in San Francisco}}
A Pacific port city, [[Chinatown, San Francisco|San Francisco]] has the oldest and longest continuous running Chinatown in the Western Hemisphere.<ref name="Bacon, Daniel page 50">Bacon, Daniel: ''Walking the Barbary Coast Trail'' 2nd ed., page 50, Quicksilver Press, 1997</ref><ref name="Richards, Rand page 198">Richards, Rand: Historic San Francisco, 2nd Ed., page 198, Heritage House Publishers, 2007</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">
Morris, Charles: ''San Francisco Calamity by Earthquake and Fire'', pp. 151–152, University of Illinois Press, 2002</ref> It originated circa 1848 and served as a gateway for incoming immigrants who arrived during the [[California gold rush]] and the construction of the North American [[transcontinental railroad]]s. Chinatown was later reconceptualized as a tourist attraction in 1910.<ref name="look tin eli">{{cite book |last1=Look Tin Eli |title=Our New Oriental City: Veritable fairy palaces filled with the Chinese treasures of the Orient |date=1910 |publisher=San Francisco: The Metropolis of the West |pages=90–93}}</ref>


San Francisco's Chinatown was almost completely destroyed by the [[1906 San Francisco earthquake|1906 earthquake and fire]], but some of its inhabitants did not relocate elsewhere.<ref name="Pan 1995">{{cite book |last1=Pan |first1=Erica Y.Z. |title=The Impact of the 1906 Earthquake on San Francisco's Chinatown |date=1995 |publisher=Peter Lang |isbn=0-8204-2607-5 |edition=American University Studies: Ser. 9, Vol. 173}}</ref> Looming large were proposals by real estate speculators and politicians to expand the Financial District's influence into the area, by displacing the Chinese community to the southern part of the city. In response, many of Chinatown's residents and landlords defiantly stayed behind to stake their neighborhood's claim, sleeping out in the open and in makeshift tents. Numerous businesses and housing based in brick buildings survived with moderate damage and continued functioning, if only in a limited capacity. In just two years after the earthquake, the landmark Sing Fat and Sing Chong buildings were completed as a statement of the Chinese community's resolve to remain in the area. As a result of this action, Chinatown remains the longest, continuously occupied Chinese community outside of Asia.<ref name="Bacon, Daniel page 50"/><ref name="Richards, Rand page 198"/><ref name="ReferenceA"/>
=====Brooklyn=====
{{Main|Sunset Park, Brooklyn}}
A relatively new Chinatown, perhaps only 15 years old, is in [[Sunset Park, Brooklyn#Brooklyn Chinatown|Sunset Park]] and has grown from a seedy, drunken neighborhood that had been virtually abandoned by its earlier immigrant settlers into a vibrant Chinese immigrant community with numerous businesses. "Brooklyn Chinatown" now extends for 20 blocks along 8th Avenue, from 42nd to 62nd Streets. Like Manhattan's Chinatown, Brooklyn's Chinatown was an all Cantonese community as well, however in the 2000s, Brooklyn's Chinatown has been experiencing an increasing influx of Fuzhou immigrants and is replacing the Cantonese at a fast significant rate than Manhattan's Chinatown and is now home to mostly Fuzhou immigrants. In the past during the late 1980s and 1990s, the ''Little Fuzhou'' within Manhattan's Chinatown was the first Fuzhou community/population being established in NYC after waves of Cantonese settled in and formed their community in Manhattan's Chinatown, but by the 2000s, the Fuzhou growth slowed. As the Fuzhou population/community growth slowed within Manhattan's Chinatown, the Fuzhou immigrant growth began to increase in Brooklyn's Chinatown and today Brooklyn's Chinatown is home to the fastest growing Fuzhou population than Manhattan's Chinatown and all other Chinese communities in NYC. Since Brooklyn's Chinatown is overall smaller than Manhattan's Chinatown, including experiencing the fastest growing Fuzhou population currently in NYC, all of Brooklyn's Chinatown is quickly becoming the new ''Little Fuzhou'' and is replacing the ''Little Fuzhou'' within Manhattan's Chinatown as being the largest Fuzhou population/community in NYC at a very tremendous rate. Unlike Manhattan's Chinatown still successfully continues to carry a large Cantonese population and the large Cantonese community identity in the western portion/core section of Manhattan's Chinatown established decades ago where the Cantonese residents have a place of gathering for shopping and working, Brooklyn's Chinatown is now experiencing the fastest declining Cantonese population in NYC and is quickly failing on retaining the Cantonese community identity.


Still a community of predominantly [[Taishanese]]-speaking inhabitants, San Francisco's Chinatown became one of the most important Chinese centers in the United States.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chinatownology.com/usa.html |title=USA |publisher=Chinatownology.com |date= |access-date=2011-09-11}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.inetours.com/Pages/SFNbrhds/Chinatown.html |title=Chinatown San Francisco Pictures and History |publisher=Inetours.com |date=2007-03-11 |access-date=2011-09-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140328203921/http://www.inetours.com/Pages/SFNbrhds/Chinatown.html |archive-date=March 28, 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
===North Carolina===
North Carolina does not have a "Chinatown" as such, but the state capital [[Raleigh, North Carolina|Raleigh]] is home to the North Raleigh Chinese Language School and to a [[Confucius Institute]] based at [[North Carolina State University]]. Both schools focus on language classes but also offer classes on Chinese culture and art. In addition, there are also Chinese preschools and a dance troup in the broader [[Research Triangle Park|Triangle]] area, encompasing the city of Durham and the towns of Cary and Chapel Hill. Similarly, the area surrounding the state's largest city [[Charlotte, North Carolina|Charlotte]] has some Chinese schools.


===Ohio===
===Latin America===
{{Main|Chinatowns in Latin America and the Caribbean}}
=====Cleveland=====
Chinatowns in Latin America ({{langx|es|barrios chinos}}, singular ''barrio chino'' / {{langx|pt|bairros chineses}}, singular ''bairro chinês'') developed with the rise of [[Overseas Chinese|Chinese immigration]] in the 19th century to various countries in [[Latin America]] as contract laborers (i.e., [[indentured servant]]s) in [[agricultural]] and [[fishing]] industries. Most came from [[Guangdong Province]]. Since the 1970s, the new arrivals have typically hailed from [[Hong Kong]], [[Macau]], and [[Taiwan]]. Latin American Chinatowns may include the descendants of original migrants &mdash; often of mixed Chinese and [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Latino]] parentage &mdash; and more recent immigrants from [[East Asia]]. Most [[Asian Latin American]]s are of [[Cantonese people|Cantonese]] and [[Hakka people|Hakka]] origin. Estimates widely vary on the number of Chinese descendants in Latin America. The oldest Chinatown in Latin America is in [[Mexico City]], dating back to at least the early 17th century.<ref name="Mann2012">{{cite book|last=Mann|first=Charles C.|authorlink=Charles C. Mann|title=1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created|url={{GBurl|-lB3sy0aH4AC|page=416}} |access-date=12 October 2012|year=2012|publisher=Random House Digital, Inc.|isbn=978-0-307-27824-1|page=416}}</ref> Two notable Chinatowns exist in [[Chinatown, Lima|Lima]], [[Peru]].
[[Cleveland]]'s Chinatown (often referred to as Asiatown) is one of several ethnic communities within the city proper, along with [[Little Italy, Cleveland|Little Italy]] and [[Slavic Village]]. The neighborhood is centered around St. Clair, Superior, and Payne Avenues just east of the [[downtown Cleveland|central business district]]. The area also falls into the district limits of the [[Quadrangle District|Quadrangle]] which includes several colleges and mid-rise offices and light industrial areas. Several large Asian markets have opened in recent years, with at least two more under construction in 2007. Recently, the neighborhood has become a hot spot for warehouse conversions into [[loft#Loft apartment|residential lofts]].


In [[Brazil]], the [[Liberdade (district of São Paulo)|Liberdade]] neighborhood in [[São Paulo]] has, along with a large Japanese community, an important Chinese community.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://portal.sescsp.org.br/online/artigo/9036_A+CHINATOWN+BRASILEIRA | title=A Chinatown brasileira | date=12 May 2015 }}</ref> There is a project for a Chinatown in the [[Mercado (neighbourhood of São Paulo)|Mercado]] neighborhood, close to the [[Municipal Market of São Paulo|Municipal Market]] and the commercial [[Rua 25 de Março]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.apecc.com.br/revitalizacao-do-centro-de-sp-conheca-o-projeto-chinatown/ | title=Revitalização do Centro de SP: Conheça o projeto Chinatown | date=4 January 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.ibrachina.com.br/o-globo-destaca-projeto-da-chinatown-sao-paulo/ | title=O Globo destaca projeto da Chinatown São Paulo | date=5 June 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.apecc.com.br/folha-de-sao-paulo-fala-sobre-a-chinatown-paulistana/ | title=Opinião - José Ruy Gandra: A Chinatown paulistana | date=11 November 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.newyorkerlife.com/new-yorkers-photography-xiangqi-players-of-chinatowns-columbus-park/ | title=Xiangqi Players of NYC Chinatown's Columbus Park - photo essay | date=21 January 2024 }}</ref>
===Oklahoma===
=====Oklahoma City=====
[[Oklahoma City, Oklahoma|Oklahoma City]]'s Chinatown, known as Asia District (or also the Asian District), represents a new trend in major cities in the United States that traditionally did not have a concentrated Asian population. Today's [[Asia District]] has transformed a once blighted urban area near [[Oklahoma City University]] north of downtown into a myriad of restaurants, Asian supermarkets, shoppes, and galleries popular with the rapidly growing mosaic of Asian residents of the city. Most of the businesses in the area, such as markets and restaurants, tend to be run by Vietnamese or Chinese American immigrants.


{{Gallery |align=center |title=Latin American Chinatowns
The area began as a [[Little Saigon]] back in the mid-1980s due to the more than 17,000 Vietnamese refugees that inhabited the area at that time, but was recently renamed by the city to '''Asia District''' to better reflect the true colors of the neighborhood.
|Image:EntranceBarrioChinoDF.JPG|Entering Barrio Chino on Dolores Street
|Image:DoloresStreetBarrioChinoDF.JPG|Dolores Street in Barrio Chino
|Image:SupermarketBarrioChinoDF.JPG|Asian food supermarket on Dolores Street
|Image:ChineseArchMexicoCity.JPG|Arch honors Chinese-Mexican community of Mexico City, built in 2008, Articulo 123 Street
|Image:Mexico.DF.BarrioChino.01.jpg|Store in Barrio Chino, Mexico City
}}


There was once a historic Chinatown located in [[Downtown Oklahoma City]], in tunnels under what is now the Cox Convention Center. The area was inhabited by the first Chinese immigrants who came to the area via the railroad around the 1950s.


===Oregon===
=====Portland=====
{{Main|Old Town Chinatown, Portland, Oregon}}
There is a Chinatown, on NW 4th Ave. just north of W Burnside St., in the Old Town Chinatown district of [[Portland, Oregon|Portland]]. It is not very active and contains no actual Chinese markets. Unfortunately, many storefronts have remained abandoned for some time and not many Chinese restaurants remain. Some of the restaurants are the historic chop suey restaurant, Good Taste which serves [[Cantonese cuisine|Cantonese]] BBQ and noodle soups, Golden Horse which serves a variety of dishes but specializes in seafood dishes, Fong Chong which serves [[dim-sum]], and House of Louie which also serves [[dim-sum]] and other Chinese dishes. The building of the Portland chapter of the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association still remains in Chinatown and it is open to the public. Unlike other Chinatowns in other cities, the population of Chinatown has not been renewed by later waves of immigration.

The [[Portland Classical Chinese Garden]], located on NW 3st Ave. and NW Everett St., is also a major feature in Chinatown. It was designed by artisans from [[Suzhou]], China.

Given the expensive rents and tourist orientation of Chinatown and following the dual Chinatown pattern as present in several major metropolitan areas of North America, the thoroughfare of SE 82nd Ave. in [[Montavilla, Portland, Oregon|Montavilla]] neighborhood of Portland is home to the city's newer Chinese business district, already with immigrant-oriented markets, Chinese seafood restaurants, and Vietnamese noodle eateries. It has been already picked up by the media as a "new chinatown". The Montavilla area has moderate drug problems.<ref>[http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/front_page/1121075803125670.xml&coll=7]</ref>

===Pennsylvania===
=====Philadelphia=====
[[Image:China Gate, Philadelphia.jpg|thumb|[[Chinatown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]]]]
{{Main|Chinatown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania}}
There is a Chinatown centered around 10th and Race Streets in [[Philadelphia]]. Over the years, several blocks were lost to the [[Pennsylvania Convention Center]], and the [[Vine Street Expressway]]. For the past few years, city officials have restricted redevelopment in [[Chinatown]], particularly as a result of efforts by a coalition of grassroots groups (pan-ethnic, labor groups) working together to preserve Chinatown. Today the lost blocks have been regained by the expansion of Chinatown to Arch Street and north of Vine Street. Asian restaurants, funeral homes, and grocery stores are common sights. [[Philadelphia]]'s [[Chinatown]] residents are mostly of [[Chinese people|Chinese]], [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]], [[Thai people|Thai]], and [[Khmer people|Cambodian]] peoples. [[Korean people|Korean]], [[Japanese people|Japanese]], and [[Filipino people|Filipino]] are also residents. Chinatown contains a mixture of businesses and organizations owned by the pan-Chinese diaspora, as Mainland Chinese, Vietnamese Chinese, Hong Kong Chinese, and [[Malaysian Chinese]] residing in the Philadelphia area call Chinatown home.

=====Pittsburgh=====
[[Image:PittsburghPaChinatown2.jpg|thumb|right|Built in 1922]]
A now defunct Chinatown was located on Grant Street and Boulevard of the Allies in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|Pittsburgh]], where two Chinese restaurants remain. The ''[[Pui Tak Center|On Leong Society]]'' was located there. The Chinese population in Pittsburgh has grown recently . Newer stores exist on Penn Avenue near 18th Street in the Strip District. Chinese live in various neighborhoods throughout the city and suburbs.

===Texas===
====Austin====

A brand new Chinatown was constructed in 2006 on Lamar Boulevard, featuring a supermarket and 40 stores. The ribbon cutting ceremony was attended by Texas Lt. Governor [[David Dewhurst]]. Chinatown has proven to be a valuable addition to [[Austin, Texas|Austin]] and its Asian American communities. Asian grocer My Thanh Supermarket is the feature anchor of this special retail complex. It also hosts a variety of Chinese and Vietnamese restaurants and specialty shops. A grand Chinese-style arch, [[paifang]], will be built to mark its entrance. As of October 2006, not every store was open yet.<ref>(Source: http://www.chinatownaustin.com Chinatown Austin.com)</ref>

====Houston====
{{Main|Chinatown, Houston}}
Yet another example of the new-Chinatown/old-Chinatown contrast is [[Houston, Texas|Houston]], where there is an old and largely disappearing [[Chinatown, Houston|Chinatown near the Convention Center]] on Chartre Street and McKinney Street in [[Downtown Houston]].

Houston's Chinatown is not as high-profile as others like it around North America. Chinatown in eastern downtown retains a few restaurants but no habitations. To reverse the decline of Chinatown in Downtown Houston, business leaders have attempted to lure tourists as plans have been drawn up to develop a Chinese [[paifang]] on McKinney Street as its entryway.

====El Paso====

[[Archaeological]] work has been done to uncover the long history of [[El Paso, Texas|El Paso]]'s Chinatown, which stood from 1881 to around the 1920s. The area is significant in which it attracted a large number of Chinese workers in the [[U.S. Southwestern states|American Southwest]] and there a Chinatown sprung up.

===Washington===
{{Main|International District, Seattle, Washington}}
=====Seattle=====
[[Seattle, Washington|Seattle's]] current Chinese neighborhood came into being around 1910 when much of the former Chinatown along Washington Street was condemned for street construction. The Chinese population began rebuilding along King Street, south of Seattle's [[Nihonmachi]]. Chinese investors pooled their resources to build several substantial buildings to house businesses, organizations and residences, such as the [[East Kong Yick Building]].

In the 1950s Seattle officials designated Chinatown as part of the [[International District, Seattle|International District]] (I.D.) due to the diverse Asian population that, by then, included [[Chinese people|Chinese]], [[Japanese people|Japanese]], [[Filipinos]], and [[Koreans]]. By the late 1970s, [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]] immigrants also formed a [[Little Saigon]] next to Chinatown, within the ID.

There has been some controversy over the name "International District." Some local Chinese Americans reject the term, preferring the historic designation "Chinatown" for the area as a source of pride. Others, especially American born generations of Asians, accept the ID designation as more appropriate due to their embrace of a more "[[pan-Asian]]" identity. Subsequently, the city redesignated the area the Chinatown-International District.

=====Olympia=====
[[Olympia, Washington|Olympia's]] small Chinatown is no longer extant. It formed initially on Fourth Avenue near Capital Way, not long after Olympia was founded. It moved in the 1880s to Fifth Avenue and then to Water Street in the 1910s. The remaining buildings were razed in 1943 after the last few residents departed. The city placed an historical marker at the site of Olympia's last Chinatown at the north end of [[Capitol Lake]] in 2004.

=====Spokane=====
A fair sized Chinatown existed in [[Spokane, Washington|Spokane]] for years that started when the railroad came through in 1883. It consisted of a network of alleys between Front Avenue (today's Spokane Falls Boulevard) and Main Avenue that stretched east from Howard Avenue to Bernard Street about four blocks. The Chinese population gradually thinned out until the alley became practically abandoned by the 1940s. All the remains of Chinatown were demolished for parking for Spokane's [[Expo '74]].

=====Tacoma=====
There was also a significant historic Chinatown located in [[Downtown Tacoma]]. In November 1885 disgruntled whites [[Tacoma riot of 1885|drove out the Chinese population and burned down Chinatown]]. Recently, a special remembrance garden called the Chinese Reconciliation Park has been built a short distance away.<ref>http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/garden03.shtml</ref>

===Washington, D.C.===
{{Main|Chinatown, Washington, D.C.}}
The old Chinatown of [[Washington, D.C.]] is on I Street and [[H Street]], from 5th to 7th St NW. Today, it has roughly 10 Chinese restaurants, mostly geared towards tourists. It has been part of a redevelopment movement occurring in the Downtown Washington, D.C. area. Mainstream restaurant and retail chains have mostly filled in Chinatown.

==Gallery of photographs==
<Gallery>
Image:PittsburghPaChinatown7.jpg|Old buildings in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|Pittsburgh]]
Image:pittsburghchinatown.jpg|Old Pittsburgh Chinatown on Blvd. of the Allies
</Gallery>

==See also==
{{Chinese American|state=collapsed}}
{{Chinese Canadian}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links to North American Chinatowns ==
{{Chinatowns}}
{{Americas topic|Chinatowns in}}
=== Canada ===
{{Authority control}}
*[http://www.cbc.ca/news/indepth/chinese/ CBC News - Indepth: Chinese Migrants] – History of Chinese immigration in Canada
*[http://www.ama.ab.ca/westworld/?/articles/a_walking_tour_of_calgarys_chinatown] – Walking Tour of Calgary's Chinatown
*[http://www.riversdalebid.com/index.php?id=3 Chinatown Saskatoon-Riverside]
*[http://www.raisethehammer.org/index.asp Raise the Hammer] – a brief mention of Hamilton's Chinatown
*[http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~salaff/conference/papers/MPhan-DraftSinoVietnamese.pdf Sino-Vietnamese: Chinese sub-ethnic relations in Toronto's Chinatown West District] – Academic paper about the Chinese Vietnamese in Toronto's Chinatown (PDF file).
*[http://www.eye.net/eye/issue/issue_07.04.02/news/chinatown.html Historic Chinatown desperately seeking revival] about Toronto
* http://www2.ville.montreal.qc.ca/urb_demo/q-chinois/chinatown1.htm L'Urbanisme À MontrÉal – Chinatown Development Plan official Web site

=== United States ===
* http://www.sanfranciscochinatown.com/ San Francisco Chinatown Largest Chinatown in North America
*[http://www.phxchinatown.com Chinese Cultural Center] – A Chinatown-themed shopping center located in [[Phoenix, Arizona]]
*[http://www.okcasiandistrict.com/ Homepage for Asia District] in [[Oklahoma City]], USA
*[http://www.sdsmt.edu/wwwsarc/projects/deadwood/ Deadwood, South Dakota excavations] – Remains of an old Chinatown
*[http://www.chinatownla.com Homepage for Chinatown, Los Angeles, USA]
*[http://www.c-c-c.org Chinese Cultural Center in San Francisco]
*[http://www.lvchinatown.com Las Vegas Chinatown Plaza]
*[http://www.specialtyretail.net/issues/aug02/feature.htm Article: Asian-themed centers quickly dotting the desert in Las Vegas] – Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
*[http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award99/cubhtml/cichome.html Library of Congress: The Chinese in California, 1850-1925]
*[http://www.asianweek.com/052496/LittleTaipei.html The Chinese Beverly Hills] – ''Asian Week'' article on the first Chinese American suburban community of Monterey Park, California, USA (Greater Los Angeles area).
*[http://www.sumei.org/newarkchinatown/index.html When Newark Had A Chinatown] – A project researching the hidden history of a former Chinatown of a large American city, [[Newark, New Jersey]]
*[http://www.aquapulse.net/knowledge/chinatown Constructing New York's Chinatown: The Urban Development of a Neighbourhood]
*[http://www.latimes.com/la-fo-tour15jan15001435.htmlstory Where the action is] – Los Angeles Times article on the suburban Chinese business district of San Gabriel, California (Greater Los Angeles area).
*[http://urbanlegends.about.com/library/bl-sars-restaurants.htm Urban Legends and Folklore: SARS Infects Restaurant Workers in Asian Neighborhoods] – Lists Chinatown SARS hoaxes that were distributed online.
*[http://www.countyofplumas.com/museum/museum_chinese_history.htm The Chinese in Plumas County (California)] – Several examples of early rural Chinatowns in Northern California.
* http://www.chinatownhi.com Honolulu's Chinatown
* http://www.chicago-chinatown.com Chicago Chinatown
* http://www.oaklandchinatownstreetfest.com Oakland Chinatown StreetFest
* [http://www.detroitchinatown.org An historical research project on Detroit's former Chinatowns.]

==Further reading==
*''American Chinatown: A People's History of Five Neighborhoods'', Bonnie Tsui, 2009 ISBN 978-1416557234 [http://americanchinatown.com/ Official website]
*''Chinatowns: Towns Within Cities in Canada'', David Chuenyan Lai, 1988
*''The First Suburban Chinatown: The Remaking of Monterey Park, California'', Timothy P. Fong, 1994
*''San Gabriel Valley Asian Influx Alters Life in Suburbia Series: Asian Impact'' (1 of 2 articles), Mark Arax, ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', 1987

{{DEFAULTSORT:Chinatowns In Canada And The United States}}
[[Category:Chinese American history]]
[[Category:Chinatowns in North America| ]]


[[Category:Chinatowns|Americas]]
[[ja:北米のチャイナタウン]]

Latest revision as of 18:40, 16 December 2024

Chinatowns in the Americas
Chinatown, Manhattan, the highest concentration of Chinese people outside Asia.[1][2][3]
Chinese唐人街
Literal meaning"Chinese Street"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinTángrénjiē
Wu
Romanization[Daon nin ka] Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 10) (help)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationTòhngyàhngāai
JyutpingTong2 jan2 gaai1
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTông-jîn-ke
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCTòng-ìng-kĕ
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese中國城
Simplified Chinese中国城
Literal meaning"Chinatown"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguóchéng
Wu
Romanization[Tson koh zen] Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 10) (help)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationJūnggwoksìhng
JyutpingJung1 gwok3 sing4
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTiong-kok-siânn
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCDŭng-guók-siàng
Second alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese華埠
Simplified Chinese华埠
Literal meaning"Chinese District"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHuábù
Wu
Romanization[Gho bu] Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 9) (help)
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationWàhfauh
JyutpingWa4 fau6
Southern Min
Hokkien POJHôa-bú
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCHuà-pú

This article discusses Chinatowns in the Americas, urban areas with a large population of people of Chinese descent. The regions include: Canada, the United States, and Latin America.

Locations

[edit]

Canada

[edit]

Chinatowns in Canada generally exist in the large cities. Calgary, Edmonton, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, and Winnipeg have Chinatowns.

Chinatowns have existed in some smaller towns throughout the history of Canada. Prior to 1900, almost all Chinese were located in British Columbia, in towns such as Nanaimo, New Westminster, Mission, Lillooet, Barkerville, and Penticton. Some British Columbia towns that were majority Chinese for years, such as Stanley, Rock Creek, and Richfield were not known as Chinatowns.

From 1923 to 1967, immigration from China was suspended due to exclusion laws. In 1997, the handover of Hong Kong to China caused many from there to flee to Canada due to uncertainties. According to an article from the Globe and Mail, Canada had 25 Chinatowns total across the entire country between the 1930s to 1940s, some of which had become extinct.[4]

Vancouver

[edit]
Entrance to Victoria's Chinatown in British Columbia

Vancouver's Chinatown is the largest in Canada.[5] Dating back to the late 19th century, the main focus of the older Chinatown is Pender Street and Main Street in downtown Vancouver, which is also, along with Victoria's Chinatown, one of the oldest surviving Chinatowns in North America. Vancouver has been the setting for a variety of modern Chinese Canadian culture and literature. Vancouver's Chinatown contains numerous galleries, shops, restaurants, and markets, in addition to the Chinese Cultural Centre and the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden and park; the garden is the first and one of the largest Ming era-style Chinese gardens outside China. Although only one neighborhood is designated as Chinatown in modern Greater Vancouver, the high proportion of Chinese people living in the region (the highest in North America) has created many commercial and residential areas that while Chinese-dominated are not called "Chinatown". In Greater Vancouver that term refers only to the historic Chinatown in the city core. There is an abundance of Chinese- and Asian-themed malls in the region, with the highest concentration in the Golden Village district of Richmond.

United States

[edit]

Chinatowns in the United States of America have existed since the 1840s on the West Coast and the 1870s on the East Coast. The Chinese were one of the first Asian groups to arrive in large numbers. Circumstances caused by the Korean and Vietnam wars, the 1965 Immigration Act, in addition to the desire for skilled workers caused more immigration from China and the rest of Asia. As of the early 21st century the Chinese are the largest of the Asian immigrant groups; and have been so for most of the history of the United States. As other immigrants of other countries arrive, Chinatown, the oldest of the Asian ethnic enclaves has become a pattern for other Asian enclaves such as Japantown, Koreatown, and Little India.[6] The Flushing Chinatown in New York City is now home to the largest Chinese population outside of Asia, while the Chinatown in San Francisco is the oldest in the United States.

New York City

[edit]
On Leong building in Chinatown, Manhattan
Intersection of Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue in Flushing, home to the world's largest Chinatown
Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn Chinatown

The New York metropolitan area contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside of Asia,[7][8] comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017,[9] including at least 12 Chinatowns - six[10] (or nine, including the emerging Chinatowns in Corona and Whitestone, Queens,[11] and East Harlem, Manhattan) in New York City proper, and one each in Nassau County, Long Island; Edison, New Jersey;[11] and Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey, not to mention fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York City metropolitan area. Chinese Americans, as a whole, have had a (relatively) long tenure in New York City. The Manhattan Chinatown is home to the highest concentration of Chinese people in the Western Hemisphere.[12]

The first Chinese immigrants came to Lower Manhattan around 1870, looking for the "golden" opportunities America had to offer.[13] By 1880, the enclave around Five Points was estimated to have from 200 to as many as 1,100 members.[13] However, the Chinese Exclusion Act, which went into effect in 1882, caused an abrupt decline in the number of Chinese who immigrated to New York and the rest of the United States.[13] Later, in 1943, the Chinese were given a small quota, and the community's population gradually increased until 1968, when the quota was lifted and the Chinese American population skyrocketed.[13] In the past few years, the Cantonese dialect that has dominated Chinatown for decades is being rapidly swept aside by Mandarin Chinese, the national language of China and the lingua franca of most of the latest Chinese immigrants.[14] While the Flushing Chinatown in Queens has become the largest Chinatown in the world, it has also become the epicenter of organized prostitution in the United States.[15] Flushing is undergoing rapid gentrification by Chinese transnational entities.[16] The growth of the business activity at the core of Downtown Flushing, dominated by the Flushing Chinatown, has continued despite the COVID-19 pandemic.[17]

San Francisco

[edit]
Sing Chong building in Chinatown, San Francisco with a California Street cable car

A Pacific port city, San Francisco has the oldest and longest continuous running Chinatown in the Western Hemisphere.[18][19][20] It originated circa 1848 and served as a gateway for incoming immigrants who arrived during the California gold rush and the construction of the North American transcontinental railroads. Chinatown was later reconceptualized as a tourist attraction in 1910.[21]

San Francisco's Chinatown was almost completely destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire, but some of its inhabitants did not relocate elsewhere.[22] Looming large were proposals by real estate speculators and politicians to expand the Financial District's influence into the area, by displacing the Chinese community to the southern part of the city. In response, many of Chinatown's residents and landlords defiantly stayed behind to stake their neighborhood's claim, sleeping out in the open and in makeshift tents. Numerous businesses and housing based in brick buildings survived with moderate damage and continued functioning, if only in a limited capacity. In just two years after the earthquake, the landmark Sing Fat and Sing Chong buildings were completed as a statement of the Chinese community's resolve to remain in the area. As a result of this action, Chinatown remains the longest, continuously occupied Chinese community outside of Asia.[18][19][20]

Still a community of predominantly Taishanese-speaking inhabitants, San Francisco's Chinatown became one of the most important Chinese centers in the United States.[23][24]

Latin America

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Chinatowns in Latin America (Spanish: barrios chinos, singular barrio chino / Portuguese: bairros chineses, singular bairro chinês) developed with the rise of Chinese immigration in the 19th century to various countries in Latin America as contract laborers (i.e., indentured servants) in agricultural and fishing industries. Most came from Guangdong Province. Since the 1970s, the new arrivals have typically hailed from Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. Latin American Chinatowns may include the descendants of original migrants — often of mixed Chinese and Latino parentage — and more recent immigrants from East Asia. Most Asian Latin Americans are of Cantonese and Hakka origin. Estimates widely vary on the number of Chinese descendants in Latin America. The oldest Chinatown in Latin America is in Mexico City, dating back to at least the early 17th century.[25] Two notable Chinatowns exist in Lima, Peru.

In Brazil, the Liberdade neighborhood in São Paulo has, along with a large Japanese community, an important Chinese community.[26] There is a project for a Chinatown in the Mercado neighborhood, close to the Municipal Market and the commercial Rua 25 de Março.[27][28][29][30]


References

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  1. ^ "Chinatown New York". Civitatis New York. Retrieved November 30, 2020. As its name suggests, Chinatown is where the largest population of Chinese people live in the Western Hemisphere.
  2. ^
  3. ^ Stefanie Tuder (February 25, 2019). "Believe It or Not, New York City Has Nine Chinatowns". EATER NY. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  4. ^ "Quebec City's Chinatown - gone but not forgotten". Hogtown Front. June 18, 2006. Retrieved July 13, 2014. which in turn references Ingrid Peritz (June 17, 2006). "Chinatown is gone, gone to heaven". The Globe and Mail.
  5. ^ "Chinatown Vancouver Online". Vancouverchinatown.ca. Retrieved September 11, 2011.
  6. ^ David Johnson. "Chinatowns and Other Asian-American Enclaves". Infoplease. Retrieved December 30, 2012.
  7. ^ Vivian Yee (February 22, 2015). "Indictment of New York Officer Divides Chinese-Americans". The New York Times. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  8. ^ "Chinese New Year 2012 in Flushing". QueensBuzz.com. January 25, 2012. Retrieved February 23, 2015.
  9. ^ "Selected Population Profile in the United States 2017 – American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA Chinese alone". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  10. ^ Kirk Semple (June 23, 2011). "Asian New Yorkers Seek Power to Match Numbers". The New York Times. Retrieved October 3, 2014.
  11. ^ a b Lawrence A. McGlinn (2002). "Beyond Chinatown: Dual Immigration and the Chinese Population of Metropolitan New York City, 2000" (PDF). Middle States Geographer. 35 (1153): 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 29, 2012. Retrieved 2014-10-03.
  12. ^ Sarah Waxman. "The History of New York's Chinatown". Mediabridge Infosystems, Inc. Retrieved November 10, 2019. Manhattan's Chinatown, the largest Chinatown in the United States and the site of the largest concentration of Chinese in the Western Hemisphere, is located on the Lower East Side.
  13. ^ a b c d Waxman, Sarah. "The History of New York's Chinatown". ny.com. Retrieved October 3, 2014.
  14. ^ Semple, Kirk (October 21, 2009). "In Chinatown, Sound of the Future Is Mandarin". The New York Times. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
  15. ^ Nicholas Kulish, Frances Robles, and Patricia Mazzei (March 2, 2019). "Behind Illicit Massage Parlors Lie a Vast Crime Network and Modern Indentured Servitude". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 6, 2019. Retrieved March 2, 2019.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Sarah Ngu (January 29, 2021). "'Not what it used to be': in New York, Flushing's Asian residents brace against gentrification". The Guardian US. Retrieved August 13, 2020. The three developers have stressed in public hearings that they are not outsiders to Flushing, which is 69% Asian. 'They've been here, they live here, they work here, they've invested here,' said Ross Moskowitz, an attorney for the developers at a different public hearing in February...Tangram Tower, a luxury mixed-use development built by F&T. Last year, prices for two-bedroom apartments started at $1.15m...The influx of transnational capital and rise of luxury developments in Flushing has displaced longtime immigrant residents and small business owners, as well as disrupted its cultural and culinary landscape. These changes follow the familiar script of gentrification, but with a change of actors: it is Chinese American developers and wealthy Chinese immigrants who are gentrifying this working-class neighborhood, which is majority Chinese.
  17. ^ Justin Davidson (December 15, 2022). "Can the Hochul-Adams New New York Actually Happen?". Curbed - New York magazine. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  18. ^ a b Bacon, Daniel: Walking the Barbary Coast Trail 2nd ed., page 50, Quicksilver Press, 1997
  19. ^ a b Richards, Rand: Historic San Francisco, 2nd Ed., page 198, Heritage House Publishers, 2007
  20. ^ a b Morris, Charles: San Francisco Calamity by Earthquake and Fire, pp. 151–152, University of Illinois Press, 2002
  21. ^ Look Tin Eli (1910). Our New Oriental City: Veritable fairy palaces filled with the Chinese treasures of the Orient. San Francisco: The Metropolis of the West. pp. 90–93.
  22. ^ Pan, Erica Y.Z. (1995). The Impact of the 1906 Earthquake on San Francisco's Chinatown (American University Studies: Ser. 9, Vol. 173 ed.). Peter Lang. ISBN 0-8204-2607-5.
  23. ^ "USA". Chinatownology.com. Retrieved September 11, 2011.
  24. ^ "Chinatown San Francisco Pictures and History". Inetours.com. March 11, 2007. Archived from the original on March 28, 2014. Retrieved September 11, 2011.
  25. ^ Mann, Charles C. (2012). 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. Random House Digital, Inc. p. 416. ISBN 978-0-307-27824-1. Retrieved October 12, 2012.
  26. ^ "A Chinatown brasileira". May 12, 2015.
  27. ^ "Revitalização do Centro de SP: Conheça o projeto Chinatown". January 4, 2023.
  28. ^ "O Globo destaca projeto da Chinatown São Paulo". June 5, 2023.
  29. ^ "Opinião - José Ruy Gandra: A Chinatown paulistana". November 11, 2021.
  30. ^ "Xiangqi Players of NYC Chinatown's Columbus Park - photo essay". January 21, 2024.