About Chinatown

Salinas Chinatown is an historical “gold mountain.” Established on Soledad Street in 1893, after the first Chinatown burned down, Salinas’ Chinatown is the largest extant Chinatown between San Francisco and Los Angeles. It is an important crossroads in California immigrant history. It was home to successive waves of immigrant labor that formed the backbone of California’s agricultural economy: Chinese in the 1860s, Japanese in the 1890s, Filipinos in the 1920s, and Mexican “braceros” in the 1940s. These ethnic communities coped with marginalization and discrimination as they coexisted and sought to establish homes and livelihoods as immigrant laborers. As these communities dispersed with urban renewal in the 1970s and 80s, Chinatown suffered deterioration. Thriving businesses closed and buildings were boarded up. Currently, Chinatown is known more for its homeless shelters, soup kitchens and drug traffic than for its rich history.

This tiny enclave contains a ‘root’ California story that is little known within and outside the local community. If walls could speak, this rundown neighborhood on the other side of the railroad tracks from Main Street would tell a rich multi‐ethnic story of agricultural development, labor movements, daily life and low life, celebrations and struggles, collaboration and tension, discrimination and solidarity. The story of Chinatown’s past gives insight into contemporary struggles around immigration, integration, and socio-cultural marginalization, through the persistence of inter-ethnic ties and collaboration in the present.