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Pekin Chop Suey sign, Butte, MT

From the National Registry of Historic Places sign in the window:

 

“Butte's Chinese community settled on this block in the 1880s. Dwellings, club rooms, laundries, restaurants and stores selling Chinese goods crowded its thoroughfares and alleyways. This business block is a lone survivor displaying Asian roots.

 

G. B. DeSnell designed the building on speculation for Butte attorney F. T. McBride. Upon completion in 1909, Hum Yow moved his Mercury Street noodle parlor to the second floor and soon owned the property. Upstairs noodle parlors were common in urban Chinese communities and the Pekin's central stair and sign long beckoned customers. Close proximity to Butte's once teeming red light district has fueled local legends about the Pekin's curtained booths. However, these booths were a fixture in Asian restaurants and simply offered diners privacy.

 

The two ground-floor storefronts housed Hum Yow's Chinese Goods and Silks and G. P. Meinhart's *sign painting business*. Hum Yow and his wife Bessie Wong—both California-born first-generation Chinese—raised three children in the rear living quarters.

 

The Hums retired to California in 1952 and several more generations of the family have maintained this landmark business.”

 

From Debra Jane Seltzer :

“The Pekin Noodle Parlor opened in 1911 and is still operating. It is believed to be the oldest, continuously-operated Chinese restaurant in the country. The restaurant is located on the second floor and has wooden booths from the early 1900s. The neon sign was built around 1940. The "119" sign in the window orginally advertised for London Company Cigars next to the restaurant on the first floor. It has ripple tin panels and is probably from the late 1920s or early 1930s.” www.roadarch.com/signs/mt2.html

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Uploaded on August 23, 2022
Taken on August 17, 2022