China Joe Explained

China Joe (c. 1834 - May 17/18, 1917, also nicknamed Joe the Baker [1] [2]) was a Chinese-American merchant who worked in Alaska during its gold-mining boom days in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

His Chinese name is not known exactly, and varies from source to source:

Joe first came to North America in 1864, landing in Victoria, British Columbia and moving to Boise, Idaho. He moved to the Cassiar region in 1874 and operated a bakery near Dease Lake. He was known for fair prices of his goods, especially around 1875 when the area's primary supply route, the Stikine River, froze early and steamboats were unable to deliver items such as flour.[1] He was well known for his generosity toward miners.[5]

He moved to Wrangell about 1878. He purchased an abandoned steam wheeler named the Hope, built a restaurant and bakery in the hull, and rented out the staterooms. The business worked well for about a year until Wrangell began to decline. Joe then moved to Sitka, Alaska and operated a bakery there.[1]

In the summer of 1881 Joe moved to Juneau. He bought half of a town lot on July 18 at the corner of Third and Main streets. The estate cost US$60.[1] There he opened the city's first bakery,[6] where he lived for 36 years. Supporters worked to keep Joe in Juneau when Chinese workers in the Treadwell gold mine were forced out of the city in 1886. Joe was proud to be an active member of the early Juneau community.[3] He is buried in Juneau's Evergreen Cemetery[5] under the name Hi Chung.[7]

Notes and References

  1. [R. N. DeArmond|DeArmond, R. N.]
  2. Web site: China Joe . 2008-01-29 . Alaska's Digital Archives .
  3. Rickard, Thomas Arthur. Through the Yukon and Alaska, p. 22. San Francisco: Mining and Scientific Press, 1909.
  4. Web site: China Joe and Other Foreign Miners . 2008-01-29 . 1999 . Alaska's Gold . https://web.archive.org/web/20080119054815/http://library.state.ak.us/goldrush/STORIES/chinajoe.htm . 2008-01-19 . dead .
  5. Web site: Presentation to pay tribute to Juneau pioneer . 2008-01-29 . Marquis . Kim . 2008-01-28 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20100205044853/http://juneauempire.com/stories/012808/loc_241298191.shtml . 2010-02-05 . dead .
  6. Web site: The Founding of Juneau, Alaska . 2008-01-29 . Ferrell . Nancy . 1995-07-12 .
  7. Web site: Museum – Evergreen Cemetery – City and Borough of Juneau . 2024-06-10 . juneau.org.