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    • Chinese Joss House Museum | SAH ARCHIPEDIA
      • Evanston was home to a substantial Chinese population from the early 1870s through the 1890s. The census of 1880 listed more than 100 Chinese residents in a town of 1,200. In 1874, the community built a temple in the neighborhood known as Chinatown, a segregated enclave across the tracks from the main part of town.
      sah-archipedia.org › buildings › WY-01/041/0046
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  2. Dec 23, 2023 · An archaeological excavation of Evanston’s historic Chinatown, a community that was built in 1868 and burned in 1922, has so far turned up more than 300,000 artifacts, and confirmed insight into an early Wyoming holiday tradition. Nobody ate fruit cake back then, either.

  3. Nov 8, 2014 · Chinese in Evanston. Chinese contract laborers were among the earliest residents of Evanston. They worked on section crews and as coal miners at the UP mines at Almy, about seven miles to the northwest—down the Bear River—from town. The 1880 census listed more than 100 Chinese in Evanston.

  4. Similar to other railroad towns in Wyoming, early Evanston had a large population of Chinese Railroad Workers – in Evanston they lived on the north side of the railroad tracks in a small "China town." Over time, the Chinese population dwindled; the last two members of the first generation of immigrants died in the 1930s.

    • 6,749 ft (2,057 m)
    • Uinta
  5. The Evanston Chinatown grew up because of the need to maintain the railroad and gradually expanded as a service center that provided food and merchandise for Chinese residents in the area. At Evanston, the Bear River, fed by runoff from the Uinta Mountains to the south, literally flowed around Chinatown. Situated on a bench that jutted out

  6. In 1880, the census revealed that the Chinese population of Evanston, Wyoming was over one hundred. They made this town their home away from home, constructing a community hall and temple among lines of houses.

  7. Evanston also had a Chinatown, and the residents had built a Chinese temple. It was one of only a few Chinese temples in the country. In Evanston, Ah Yuen married two more times. Her third husband, Lock Long Choong, was a gardener who sold vegetables.

  8. Evanston ( / ˈɛvənstən / EV-ən-stən) is a city in Cook County, Illinois, United States, situated on the North Shore along Lake Michigan. A suburb of Chicago, Evanston is 12 miles (19 km) north of Downtown Chicago, bordered by Chicago to the south, Skokie to the west, Wilmette to the north, and Lake Michigan to the east.

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