Chinatown and Little Italy, Edmonton

Chinatown and Little Italy is a business revitalization zone (BRZ) created by the City of Edmonton, roughly comprising the informal Chinatown and Little Italy ethnic enclaves in the city's inner neighbourhoods. The boundaries of the BRZ includes only the "commercial strips" within those enclaves, and the BRZ itself straddles the official neighbourhoods of McCauley and Boyle Street.[2][3]

Chinatown and Little Italy
Business revitalization zone
The Harbin Gates marks the entrance to Chinatown South.
Chinatown and Little Italy
Location of Chinatown and Little Italy in Edmonton
Coordinates: 53.555°N 113.487°W / 53.555; -113.487
Country Canada
Province Alberta
CityEdmonton
QuadrantNW
Ward6
NeighbourhoodsMcCauley and Boyle Street
Government
  MayorDon Iveson
  Administrative bodyEdmonton City Council
  CouncillorScott McKeen
Elevation
668 m (2,192 ft)

History

Chung Kee or John Kee, was the first Chinese to settle in Edmonton, arriving by stage-coach from Calgary in late May 1890 to establish a laundry. In 1899 there were only 13 Chinese men in Edmonton, one restaurant and two laundries, about half lived in Strathcona. By the early 1900s a small Chinatown began to emerge after several Chinese merchants arrived to establish their businesses at the intersection of Namayo Street (contemporary 97 Street) and Rice Street (contemporary 101A Avenue). By 1911 the original 13 Chinese people residing in Edmonton had swelled to 154 (150 males, 4 females) and by 1921 it increased further to 518 (501 males, 17 females). From covering an area of 3 city blocks in 1911 (bounded by Jasper and Elizabeth Avenue as well as Fraser and Namayo Street, to expanding eastward as far as Kinistino Street (Modern 95 Street). Despite this substantial increase in size of the Chinese community, the Chinese people still only accounted for 1% of Edmonton's population.[4]

In 1911, some 150 Chinese happily greeted the Xinhai Revolution by cutting off their queues and celebrating, although Sun Yat Sen did not visit Edmonton, he did visit Calgary in February 1911. In 1913, when Sun left the government of Yuan Shikai, Chinese Edmontonians formed a "Dare to Die Brigade" to go to China and support him. Trained by Morris Cohen (also known as General Two-Gun Cohen) they never got the chance to go to China, as Sun fled to Japan. In 1914, at the start of the First World War the Dare to Die Brigade offered to go to Europe to fight, however their request was turned down and they were disbanded. When Dr. Sun Yat Sen died in 1925, a large memorial service was held in Edmonton.

Edmonton's current Chinatown consists of two parts, Chinatown South is the older part, easily recognized by the presence of the Harbin Gate and other Chinese-themed street furniture. Chinatown North lies just to the north of its older counterpart. Chinatown North also includes a large Vietnamese presence, and blends into the multicultural "Avenue of Nations" (107 Ave) which runs east-to-west along the northern edge of both Chinatown and Little Italy.[5] The Edmonton Remand Centre located at 9660 - 104 Avenue is in the process of being closed[6] and relocated to a new facility at 127 Street & 186 Avenue in early 2013. The facility will be turned over to Alberta Infrastructure to determine its future once it is vacated and decommissioned by corrections.[7]

Chinatown & Little Italy Business Association

The smaller enclave of Little Italy lies just few blocks to the east of Chinatown. By the early 21st century, it had ceased to be an area of major Italian settlement, but continues as a shopping district.[8]

gollark: If everyone believes in Norway, is Norway a god?
gollark: I mean, nature makes horrible things like those parasitic wasps, and we humans have nice things like computers and medicine.
gollark: A lot of the time it's just because it's not "natural" or something, which seems stupid and meaningless.
gollark: > >not buying a box of 10,000 BIC blue pens10000, you say? Where can I buy such quantities?
gollark: I bought a box of 100 on Amazon some years back, very helpful.

References

  1. "Mayor and City Council". City of Edmonton. Retrieved November 12, 2017.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-05-12. Retrieved 2013-01-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. Edmonton, City of (24 May 2018). "Page Not Found (404 Error)". edmonton.ca.
  4. "Chinatown Histories". Simon Fraser University. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  5. "Chinatowns in Edmonton - Heritage Community Foundation". www.abheritage.ca.
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-01-29. Retrieved 2013-02-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. http://www.solgps.alberta.ca/Lists/Common%20Questions/DispForm.aspx?ID=330
  8. "Edmonton's Little Italy - 2002". www.albertasource.ca.
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