Curiosity is often at the core of uncovering history. For Yosemite National Park Ranger Yenyen Chan, curiosity about Chinese history in the park has led to a decades-long journey of unearthing and sharing stories that might otherwise have gone untold.
Roads to the past
Chan’s enthusiasm for studying Chinese history in Yosemite was sparked in 1993, when she was working as a park intern in Tuolumne Meadows and was surprised to learn that Chinese workers had played a central role in building the famous Tioga Road.
Many years later, after returning to work as a park ranger, Chan was asked to lead a Yosemite Association program focused on the history of Chinese workers in the park. She agreed, and jumped into research.
Chan learned that Chinese immigrants began to move to the West Coast in the 1840s, often seeking opportunities in the gold rush to support their families in China, where social and environmental disasters were ravaging many regions. California’s Foreign Miners’ Tax of 1850 forced Chinese immigrants to search for work beyond gold mining, including in agriculture and railroad construction.
In Yosemite, Chinese immigrants made up most of the workforce that built the Wawona Road — during just 18 weeks, in winter, using only handpicks and shovels. And, as Chan had learned in 1993, Chinese laborers helped build the 56-mile Great Sierra Wagon Road, today’s Tioga Road, in the 1880s. The crew worked in rugged terrain on foot, without machinery, using dangerous blasting powder to clear the route and hand tools to build retaining walls. According to one report, 250 Chinese and 90 European-American laborers completed the road in just 130 days.
The history of Chinese road workers lives on in the Conservancy-supported Washburn Trail, too, which stretches for two miles from the Mariposa Grove Welcome Plaza up to the famous giant sequoias. The trail was built over the course of two years and opened to the public in late 2018. Part of the trail follows the footprint of the old Washburn Road, which featured stone walls built by Chinese masons and once carried stagecoach travelers between Wawona and Mariposa Grove.
Chan’s research led her into the stories of Chinese chefs who worked in and around the park, including Ah You, who was born in China in 1848 and arrived in California at age 21. The Washburn family hired Ah You as head chef at their Wawona Hotel in 1886. He stayed on in the kitchen when Ah Louie took over the head chef role in 1910, and both men continued cooking for the hotel until the property changed hands in the early 1930s.
Another celebrated Chinese chef, Tie Sing, had been working for the U.S. Geological Survey for nearly three decades when Robert Marshall, the USGS chief geographer, tapped him to cater Stephen Mather’s July 1915 “Mountain Party.” Mather, who was then serving as special assistant to the secretary of the Interior, had brought together a group of men from the worlds of government, publishing, engineering, business, and conservation for a two-week trek through Sequoia National Park, with the goal of solidifying support for the creation of a dedicated federal agency to oversee the national parks.
Mules carried silverware, pots and pans, linens, and ingredients from camp to camp. Albright recounts inventive strategies for transporting and preserving food on the trail: Sing and his assistant, Eugene, wrapped meat in damp newspaper to keep it cool, and kept fresh bread dough close to mules’ bodies, letting it rise throughout the day before baking it in the evening. (By Albright’s account, the daily bread continued until a mule stumbled off a cliff; the animal climbed back up relatively unscathed, but the sourdough starter it had been carrying was lost.)
One evening, when the group descended Mt. Whitney in a storm, Sing “surpassed his previous wonders” by dishing up plum pudding. The group’s final meal was “superb — more than usually superb,” Albright wrote, and ended with special pastries that held personalized “future fortunes” written by Sing.
Hiking into history
As Albright notes, Sing’s renown as a backcountry chef was well-established long before that feast-filled 1915 trek; 16 years earlier, a mountain in the southern Sierra Nevada had been named in his honor. Today, Sing Peak, on Yosemite’s southern boundary, is the destination of a backpacking trip that ranger Chan helps lead as part of an annual event focused on the park’s Chinese history.
Restoring a building — and a story
When Yosemite Conservancy donors Sandra and Franklin Yee learned about our 2019 grant to the National Park Service to restore the laundry building and its connections to Chinese history, they were so inspired that they decided to significantly increase their support by making a generous major gift to fully fund the work.
Park preservation experts repaired windows, eaves and siding; rebuilt the front porch; and removed modern plumbing and electrical utilities, with the goal of returning the building to its original state. The project also included developing new educational exhibits about Chinese history in the park.
Thanks to Chan and the Yees’ curiosity and passion, stories of Chinese history in Yosemite are coming to light, in Wawona and beyond.
Comments
really interesting, thank you!
Re: National Park Service... Yosemite National Park... National Park Ranger Yenyen Chan... Yosemite Conservancy... Interpretive presentations, research, and writings... Thank you! So wondrous still... A+... 5 stars out of 5 stars... 10 x 10 to the exponential power of 10, ad infinitum... Respectfully...
Thanks to Ranger Chan for uncovering this hidden historical gem. It makes me wonder how many more historical treasures are out there, waiting to be discovered.
My cousin, Jerry Read, gave his art collection to the Nevada Museum in Carson City NV. It included a small painting of a man in a "coulee" hat fihing in Yosemite. You may want to contact the Museum to see if you can get a photo of that painting. The caption I saw said it was evidence of early Chinese visitors to Yosemite. Please forward this to Yenyen Chan at the National Park Service. Thanks. Emily Renzel
What an amazing effort to recognize the Chinese accomplishments and a great article. The hard work of the Chinese made it possible for me to experience this incredible place. There is no place in America lovlier than Wawona and the Mariposa Grove. Thank you for helping me to understand the full history of this magical place. And thank you to the Chinese whose backbreaking work made it possible. I especially loved reading about the mighty Mr. Sing's culinary triumphs on the trail. What a master!
Gerry O'Scannlain, Portland, Oregon
My family and I were thrilled to stay at the Wawona Hotel during our first visit to Yosemite last month. Thanks to the incredible efforts of the Chinese immigrants who carved out the various roads in the Park, we (and so many others) were able to enjoy the stunning beauty of this place. Thanks also to Ranger Chan and her dedicated colleagues in the NPS!