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42:, existed around the 1870s to 1960s. The area was located along Idaho Street, and east from 8th Street along Front Street and Grove Street. Over the years, Boise's Chinatown consisted of multiple Chinese owned residencies and businesses including restaurants, merchandise stores, laundries, two herbal medicine shops operated by three generations of the Ah-Fong family, a Chinese Masonic Hall, and a
123:"He was the only traditional Chinese herb doctor in Idaho to be licensed as a physician or surgeon" and "had a substantial non-Chinese clientele in the Boise area." His son and grandson, Herbert and Gerald Ah Fong, continued the practice. Gerald practiced in Boise's Chinatown until 1964. Their two stores were located on the corner of Capital Boulevard and Idaho Street near the
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Dr. Ah Fong Chuck (aka C. K. Ah-Fong) was born on
October 5, 1844/1845 in Chun Sin, Guangdong and practiced medicine in Boise. Ah Fong Chuck graduated from Kung Guh Medical College in 1867. He and his father, Whey Fong, (also a physician), emigrated to San Francisco before moving to Boise in 1889.
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which consisted of three red viewers that featured images of Boise's
Chinatown. The viewers were located on Grove Plaza, Capitol & Front Street, and Capitol & Grove Street. Another public artwork, Grove Street Illuminated & Boise Canal (2003) by Amy Westover, references the Chinatown
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Billy Fong was the last reported resident of Boise's
Chinatown at the age of 84. He lived in an upstairs apartment of the Hop Sing Tong Building for thirty years. He refused to leave his residence until the day before demolition began, drawing regional media
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as "Kwangtung" Province). It is unknown how many people of
Chinese origin or descent lived in Boise's Chinatown over the years. In the U.S. 1870 Census, 1,754 Chinese people lived in Boise, which made up 45.7% of the total population of Boise (3,834).
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is blamed for the final destruction of Boise's
Chinatown. Using eminent domain, the Boise Redevelopment Agency claimed and subsequently demolished seven downtown city blocks between 1968 and 1971, this included nearly all of Boise's Chinatown. The
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Around 1901, the city condemned wooden
Chinatown buildings along Idaho Street for being fire-prone. By the 1960s, most Chinese residents moved (or were forced) out of the Boise Chinatown's core.
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Chinese Odd
Fellows Building, 610-612 Front Street, Boise, Idaho, USA. Designed by Tourtellotte & Hummel/Clifton & Corbridge, 1911–1912.
340:"Objective Description: Idaho State Historical Museum Chinese Remedies and Herbs shop replica. Washington State University Vancouver Library"
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Grove Street
Illuminated & Boise Canal (2003) image of a man selling produce from a Model T Ford in 1927
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Residents and families of residents were originally buried in the Morris Hill
Cemetery in Boise and the
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https://web.archive.org/web/20210427192633/https://www.boiseartsandhistory.org/media/2708/pa-reader.pdf
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Reference to Boise's
Chinatown in Grove Street Illuminated & Boise Canal (2003) by Amy Westover
303:"Public Arts Program, Policies & Guidelines." Boise City Department of Arts & History.
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https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/decennial/1870/population/1870a-06.pdf
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318:"The Curious Case of Ah Fong Chuck, America's First 'Licensed' Acupuncturist"
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Early immigrants to Boise's Chinatown were mainly from six districts in the
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Center for Idaho History and Politics, Boise State University
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is one of the last surviving buildings and is listed on the
281:"Historic Site: Boise Chinatown | Boise Arts & History"
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U.S. Census Bureau: 1870. "Table II. Territory of Idaho."
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from the Idaho State Historical Society Ethnic History.
251:. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 200.
173:"Second Chinatown: It's [sic] Rise and Fall"
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97:In 2001, Boise City funded Dwaine Carver's
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370:"'Home Holdout' In Boise To Be Moved"
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76:National Register of Historic Places
38:The historic Chinatown in downtown
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344:WSU Libraries Digital Collections
183:from the original on 16 June 2021
374:The Herald-Journal (Logan, Utah)
350:from the original on 21 May 2022
316:Devitt, Michael (October 2011).
407:Chinatowns in the United States
214:from the original on 2016-03-03
142:C.K. Ah Fong biographical image
202:Kingsbury, Larry (July 2002).
99:Historical Sight: Boise China,
27:Ethnic enclave in Boise, Idaho
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208:Idaho County IDGenWeb Project
171:Felton, Ann (19 June 2014).
72:Chinese Odd Fellows Building
322:Journal of Chinese Medicine
285:www.boiseartsandhistory.org
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257:10.12987/9780300249408-011
376:. 14 June 1972. p. 6
204:"Warren Chinese Cemetery"
245:Shelton, Tamara (2019).
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57:in China (previously
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125:Idaho State Capital
102:History of Boise.
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40:Boise, Idaho
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396:Categories
380:30 October
290:2022-05-21
149:References
131:attention.
59:romanized
348:Archived
212:Archived
181:Archived
136:See also
328:: 5–12.
218:June 4,
354:20 May
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109:near
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