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Chinese Milwaukee (WI) (Images of America) (Images of America (Arcadia Publishing))
 
 
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Chinese Milwaukee (WI) (Images of America) (Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)) [Paperback]

David B. Holmes (Author), Wenbin Yuan (Author)

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Book Description

Images of America (Arcadia Publishing) September 8, 2008
The history of Chinese Milwaukee begins in April 1874, with the opening by Wing Wau of a Chinese laundry at 86 Mason Street. Other Chinese soon followed, and by 1888, there were at least 30 Chinese laundries operating in the city. Charlie Toy moved to Milwaukee in 1904 and within two decades had built both one of the largest Chinese trading businesses in the United States and a six-story Chinese-style building in downtown Milwaukee described as the largest and most luxurious Chinese restaurant building in the world. An example of the community's influence as a whole is the period 1937 to 1940, when the community of less than 300 residents contributed more money to the Chinese war effort against Japan than any other Chinese community in the United States except San Francisco.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Publication: On Milwaukee

Article Title: Duo works to promote Milwaukee's Chinese history

Author: Bobby Tanzilo

Date: 11/8/2008



If you're a regular reader of OnMilwaukee.com, you know by now that Arcadia Publishing's "Images of America" series of paperback books packed with historical photos has included a number of books about various ethnicities and neighborhoods in and around Milwaukee.

The latest installment is "Chinese Milwaukee" ($19.99), by David B. Holmes and Wenbin Yuan, the co-founders of the Wauwatosa-based Milwaukee Chinese Historical Society.

Although the city is dotted with Chinese restaurants, local government has gone on trade missions to Chine and we were happy to welcome YI Jinlian to the Bucks -- however briefly -- Chinese-Americans in Milwaukee seem to have a pretty low profile.

"I think that there is probably a more vibrant Chinese-American community in Milwaukee today than has existed at any time in the past," says Holmes, explaining that its lack of visibility might be due to the fact that the community, "is also probably more dispersed and better integrated than at any time."

We talked to Holmes about the Milwaukee Chinese Historical Society, about the book, about his co-author and about the Chinese in Milwaukee.

OnMilwaukee.com: Can you tell us a bit about the birth of the book and how you came to be involved?

David Holmes: The original inspiration for the book can probably be traced to an article I read in the Milwaukee newspaper several years ago which described efforts by a group of Milwaukee area businessmen to create a Chinatown District in Milwaukee. The article made me wonder about exactly had been the history of the Chinese community in Milwaukee and how far back did this history go.

Out of curiosity, I spent a few hours researching the Milwaukee Chinese community on the internet, performing Google searches using "Milwaukee" in combination with other key words such as "Chinese," "China," "Chinatown," etc. I was somewhat surprised when this initial research revealed that not only that a Chinese community had existed in Milwaukee for more than 100 years, but that it had apparently been exceptional in several ways.

OMC: How do you hook up with Arcadia, then?

DH: During this initial research, I happened to visit a local bookstore and noticed a series of books published by Arcadia Publishing on various ethnic communities of Milwaukee. It occurred to me that the Chinese community of Milwaukee might be an interesting subject for a similar book. On a whim, I called Arcadia Publishing and requested an informational packet with instructions on how to submit a book proposal.

I recruited, Wenbin Yuan, a long-time friend of mine with an interest in history, to be the coauthor for the book. At this point the real work on the project began. It took us nearly six months to collect enough materials (example photographs, newspaper illustrations, etc.) to complete the proposal, and an additional 18 months to complete the book once we had a contract in place with the publisher.

OMC: How difficult was it to assemble the photos?

DH: I would like to note that there were many people besides Wenbin and I who contributed to the book. There were at least 15 volunteers from the Chinese community who contributed numerous hours researching and writing portions of the book. In addition, there were more than 25 individuals and organizations that donated photographs and other images to be used as illustrations in the book.

The volunteers included Dr. Maurine Huang, who had completed her Ph.D. dissertation in 1988 at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee on a study of the Milwaukee Chinese community titled "Chinese without a Chinatown."

OMC: You and your collaborator on the book are co-founders of the Milwaukee Chinese Historical Society, right?

DH: You are correct in that we are two of the founders of the Milwaukee Chinese Historical Society (MCHS). The MCHS was modeled on a similar organization in Chicago, and was established in anticipation that the publication of the book would likely to spur additional and continuing interest in the history of the Chinese community of Milwaukee.

The Society is somewhat informally organized at present, although we do have a Web site, as well as a display area and office space at the Mercan Chinese Language Institute in the South Bank Tower at Mayfair Mall. Now that the book is published, we hope to work on several projects during the next year, including a Chinese language version of the book as well as English and Chinese language television documentaries on the Milwaukee Chinese community (subject to raising some additional funding). We are looking for volunteers with an interest in Chinese history or Milwaukee Chinese history who would like to play a role in the organization and in these future projects.

OMC: How did you meet?

DH: I have known Wenbin Yuan, my coauthor, for about 15 years. We are both trained as geologists, and working as professionals in the environmental industry. Wenbin came from mainland China to the United States as a student in the mid-1980s and had the opportunity to stay in the United States and to become a citizen. Since moving to the Milwaukee area in the early 1990s, Wenbin has been active in the Chinese community, helping to found or serve as a board member for several Chinese community or professional organizations. He is the President and principal owner of an environmental construction and contracting company named Dakota Intertek Corp.

OMC: Is Milwaukee's Chinese heritage overlooked?

DH: I believe so, and this was definitely one motivating factor in writing the book. When we started the project, an updated edition of prominent local historian John Gurda's book "The Making of Milwaukee" had just been published as well as screening of the four-hour television documentary of the same title. I bought the book and watched the television series expecting to gain some additional insights into the history of the Milwaukee Chinese community, but was disappointed to find barely a single word of mention for the Chinese community.

The neglect of the history of the Milwaukee Chinese community also appears to extend to general studies of Chinese American history. For example, I own three books on the history of Chinese Americans throughout the United States as a whole and have found not a single reference in any of the books to either Chinese in Milwaukee or in Wisconsin.

OMC: It seems that like the Italians in Milwaukee, many Chinese immigrants came, earned some money and went home, barely leaving a trace. Is that true?

DH: That was definitely true for many of the early immigrants, for whom the over-riding motive for migrating to the United States was typically to support and sustain their extended family in China. They generally expected to make occasional trips home to marry and have children, and to eventually return permanently to China to retire in comfort. This was especially true of the Chinese who arrived in Milwaukee prior to 1900.

Interestingly, as far as the early immigrants "barely leaving a trace," this was true even after death as it was the custom prior to mid or late 1940s for a national organization (the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association) to, every 15 years, gather the remains of deceased Chinese throughout the United States and ship the bones back to China for permanent burial. When a grave was exhumed, the inscription on the headstone was cut off and the headstone then used for another Chinese, leaving literally not a trace of even Chinese immigrants who died and were buried in Milwaukee.

The history of these earliest Chinese immigrants to Milwaukee is fascinating and an area where we hope to perform future detailed study.

OMC: You hear a lot about other ethnicities here but maybe not as many people know about the history of the Chinese community here, why is that?

DH: I think there are a number of factors, including the relatively small size of the early community, which likely did not exceed 100 members until the mid or late 1920s. Another factor was that the community was dispersed to a greater degree than in many other American cities and had no "Chinatown" area that might have attracted a greater level of attention by historians. A cultural characteristic that may have been a factor in the past was a preference by many of the earlier generations of Milwaukee Chinese to maintain a low profile and avoid actions that would attract attention to either themselves or to the Chinese community as a whole.

OMC: Is there still a vibrant Chinese-American community in the city or has it dispersed and integrated and been replaced by new immigrants?

DH: I think that there is probably a more vibrant Chinese-American community in Milwaukee today than has existed at any time in the past, although it is also probably more dispersed and better integrated than at any time. Reportedly, the population of the Chinese community of Milwaukee is growing more rapidly than that of many better-known Chinese-American communities such as Chicago or Houston. I don't think that the Chinese community has been displaced by other immigrants as much as supplemented by new types of Chinese immigrants, such as large numbers of immigrants from mainland China after the re-establishment by the Carter Administration in 1979 of diplomatic relations between the United States and China.

OMC: Does the book try to create a comprehensive history of that community?

DH: Yes -- we definitely tried to present a comprehensive history of the Chinese community of Milwaukee from its beginnings in 1874 to the present day. We also did our best to include representation of the various subgroups that exist within the Milwaukee Chinese community. There is significant diversity within the Chinese community, which includes groups with diverse backgrounds, such as those descended from the early immigrants who spoke Cantonese and arrived...

About the Author

David B. Holmes, a resident of the Milwaukee area since 1973, is an environmental consultant with a longtime interest in both Chinese and Milwaukee history. Wenbin Yuan, a native of Taiyuan, China, came to Milwaukee in 1990 and is a cofounder of several Chinese community organizations as well as the president and owner of an environmental technology and general contracting business. Holmes and Yuan are cofounders of the Milwaukee Chinese Historical Society.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Charlie Toy, Milwaukee Chinese, Courtesy of the Milwaukee Public Library, Courtesy of the Toy, Wenhin Yuan, Milwaukee Journal, Toy Building, Milwaukee City Directory, World War, Holiday Folk Fair, Chinese Exclusion Act, Courtesy of Paul Wong, Chinese American, Elinor Lee, Grand Avenue, West Mitchell Street, North Third Street, Hong Kong, Wing Lung Company, Marquette University, Joe Wong, Courtesy of Sally Moy Klatt, North Second Street, Milwaukee Sentinel
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