Chinatown, Salt Lake City

Historically, the city of Salt Lake City, Utah, had a Chinatown that was located in a section called "Plum Alley" that contained a Chinese population that worked in the mining camps and the transcontinental railroad. The first Chinese peoples came in the 1860s and had formed a historical Chinatown in a section called "Plum Alley" on Second South Street which lasted until 1952. The area had a network of laundromats, restaurants and oriental specialty shops.

Salt Lake City Chinatown
Neighborhood
Men lounging outside saloon & Chinese laundry, Salt Lake City, 1910
Men lounging outside saloon & Chinese laundry, Salt Lake City, 1910
Map
Coordinates: 40°45′0″N 111°53′0″W / 40.75000°N 111.88333°W / 40.75000; -111.88333
Country United States
StateUtah
CitySalt Lake City

While most residents kept within their micro-community, the residents did take part in some local Salt Lake City traditions. According to the tourist sign located at the former Chinatown, the Salt Lake City's New Year's Day Parade featured a "200 foot long Chinese dragon."[1] According to KUED, around 1,800 Chinese lived here with "... a network of laundries, restaurants, Oriental specialty shops..." and "... gambling joints, providing the social outlet for many of the lonely residents..." who were bachelors, but Plum Alley was eventually razed "... and was replaced by Regent Street Parking Terrace".[2]

Josie Manwill of Brigham Young University notes the effects of anti-Chinese sentiment and the Chinese Exclusion Act but attributes the decline of Salt Lake City's Chinatown primarily to the Great Depression.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "Plum Alley Today". Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2013-05-22.
  2. ^ "The Hidden History of Plum Alley, Salt Lake's Chinatown" Archived 2013-04-15 at archive.today, University of Utah: KUED 7
  3. ^ Manwill, Josie. "Salt Lake's Forgotten Chinatown". Intermountain Histories. Retrieved 2021-08-26.

Further reading

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