Greater St. Louis has a Chinese community.
The first Chinese immigrant to St. Louis was Alla Lee, a 24-year-old from Ningbo who arrived in 1857.[1] He socialized with the Irish American community and married an Irish woman. He sold coffee and tea in a shop on North Tenth Street.[2]
Around 1867, several hundred Chinese looking for work in factories and mines in and around St. Louis moved there from New York and San Francisco. The community they settled, Hop Alley, became St. Louis' Chinatown.[2]
This community disappeared in 1966 when it was demolished to make room for a parking lot for Busch Stadium.[2] Many Chinese Americans moved to St. Louis's Missouri suburbs,[3] where they founded Chinese-language schools and Chinese churches and community organizations.[4]
In the late 19th century and the early 20th century, the ethnic Chinese population was less than 0.1% of the city's population.[2] There were 300 Chinese in St. Louis by the end of the 19th century.[5] In 1960, 102 Chinese lived in the St. Louis suburbs, making up 30% of the Greater St. Louis Chinese. In 1970, 461 lived in the suburbs, making up 80% of the area population. In 1980 the number increased to 3,873, making up 78% of the area population. In 1990, the number increased to 3,873, making up 83% of the area total.
The 2000 U.S. Census said that there were 9,120 people of Chinese descent in Greater St. Louis. Huping Ling, author of Chinese St. Louis: From Enclave to Cultural Community, said that unofficial estimates as of 2004 ranged from 15,000 to 20,000.[6] She said that 1% of the population of suburban St. Louis was ethnic Chinese and that the "great majority" of the ethnic Chinese in the area lived in the suburbs, particularly those west and south of St. Louis.[6]
As of 2004, the St. Louis area had more than 300 Chinese restaurants.[6]
During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, St. Louis' Chinese population provided 60% of the city's laundry services.[2]
As of 2004, there were more than 40 Chinese community organizations in the area.[6] Organization of Chinese Americans has an area chapter, OCA St. Louis, founded in 1973.[7] Other organizations include the St. Louis Overseas Chinese Educational Activity Center aka the Chinese Cultural Center, the St. Louis Taiwanese Association, the Chinese Liberty Assembly, and the St. Louis Chinese Jaycees.[4]
As of 2016, there were four Chinese-language schools in the St. Louis area:[6]
As well, St. Louis University High School has Chinese-language programs and is home to a Confucius classroom that is part of Webster University's Confucius Institute.
As of 2004, there were two weekly Chinese language newspapers:[6]
As of 2004 there are around 12 Chinese religious institutions.[6]
Christian churches include the Taiwanese Presbyterian Church of Greater St. Louis (TPCSTL, in Ballwin,[4] [16] the St. Louis Chinese Christian Church (SLCCC; in Chesterfield,[4] [17] the St. Louis Chinese Gospel Church in Manchester,[4] [18] the Light of Christ Lutheran Chinese Mission in Olivette,[4] [19] [20] The St. Louis Chinese Baptist Church (STLCBC; in St. Peters,[4] [21] the Lutheran Asian Ministry in St. Louis, and the St. Louis Tabernacle of Joy.[4]
The other religious institutions are the St. Louis Amitabha Buddhist Learning Center,[4] the St. Louis Tzu-Chi Foundation,[4] [22] the St. Louis International Buddhist Association,[4] the Mid-America Buddhist Association (MABA) in Augusta,[4] [23] and the St. Louis Falun Dafa.[4] The Fo Guang Shan St. Louis Buddhist Center (FGS) is in Bridgeton.[24]
The Chinese Culture Days are annually held at the Missouri Botanical Gardens. The Chinese community organizations sponsor this event, cultural gatherings, and other Chinese-American events.[6]