Ng Shing Gung Museum displays the rich Chinese American history of San Jose

ByJason Beal Localish logo
Friday, January 24, 2025 9:42PM
Ng Shing Gung Museum displays SJ's rich Chinese American history
The Ng Shing Gung Museum is a replica of a Chinese temple built in San Jose in 1888. The museum showcases the rich history of Chinese Americans.

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- In San Jose Park off Phelan Avenue, there are a number of cultural museums, each detailing the rich history of those cultures in San Jose and the greater South Bay Area. One of the most decorative you'll find is the Ng Shing Gung Museum, also known as the Chinese American Historical Museum.

"We took the architectural drawings of the original temple," said Gerrye Wong, founder of the Chinese Historical and Cultural Project, "and built this as a replica and wanted to make it to show the history of the Chinese-American communities from the early 1850s up to the present."

"That's our goal," added Anita Wong Kwock, governing trustee for the Chinese American Historical Museum. "To educate, preserve, and promote the Chinese-American culture."

The museum boasts a full-scale timeline wall, documenting key events as far back as the 1850s, and breaking them up by location: in China, in the U.S., and in San Jose. The first 100 years of events are displayed in a traditional format, but the museum recently installed an interactive touch-screen monitor, allowing guests to find specific events of the last 85 years.

Throughout the rest of the first floor, visitors will find a number of artifacts recovered and preserved, such as clothing, pottery, silverware, and even toothbrushes.

"This building is a replica of a building that stood in San Jose's last Chinatown from 1888 to the late 1940s," said Gerrye Wong.

At its peak, there were five Chinatowns in San Jose.

"This building was a community center," adds Kwock, "a place for people to gather. It was a place for Chinese schools. So, kids would go to regular school and then come here from five o'clock to eight o'clock to learn how to read, write, and speak Chinese."

The Ng Shing Gung was known as the Temple of the Five Gods, the altar for which was beautifully recreated on the top floor of the building.

"This altar is the largest existing altar in a museum being presented in the United States," said Wong. "We are so proud of it because it took many people thousands of labor hours to preserve it."

All the pieces of the altar were found stored under the bleachers of a nearby municipal stadium. Wong says the pieces were not in great shape and needed to be cleaned and pieced together to create the replica of the altar.

The Chinese American Historical Museum serves as a testament to the rich Chinese history of San Jose and the South Bay.

"New immigrants don't know that much about Chinese-American history," said Wong. "The sacrifices and the hard struggles that the early immigrants faced when they were here."

"I think with more understanding," adds Kwock, "then you have better communication and everybody's better."

The museum is located at 635 Phelan Avenue in San Jose and is open most Saturdays from 11:00 am to 3:30 pm, free guided tours of the museum can also be requested by contacting Anita Kwock at info@chcp.org.

For more information about the museum you can visit CHCP's website.