Chinese people in New York City
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The New York metropolitan area is home to the largest and most prominent ethnic Chinese population outside of Asia, hosting Chinese populations representing all 34 provincial-level administrative units of China.[1][2] The Chinese American population of the New York City metropolitan area was an estimated 893,697 as of 2017, constituting the largest and most prominent metropolitan Asian national diaspora outside Asia.[3] New York City itself contains by far the highest ethnic Chinese population of any individual city outside Asia, estimated at 628,763 as of 2017.[4]
New York City and its surrounding metropolitan area, including Long Island and parts of New Jersey, is home to 12 Chinatowns, early U.S. racial ghettos where Chinese immigrants were made to live for economic survival and physical safety[5] that are now known as important sites of tourism and urban economic activity. Six Chinatowns[6] (or nine,[7] New York including the emerging Chinatowns in Elmhurst and Whitestone, Queens,[8] and East Harlem, Manhattan) are located in New York City proper, and one each is located in Nassau County, Long Island; Edison, New Jersey;[8] West Windsor, New Jersey; and Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey. This excludes fledgling ethnic Chinese enclaves emerging throughout the New York metropolitan area, such as Jersey City, New Jersey; China City of America in Sullivan County, New York; and Dragon Springs (in Deerpark, Orange County, New York), which serves as the de facto headquarters for both the global Falun Gong New religious movement as well as its Shen Yun performance arts troupe.[9]
The Chinese American community in the New York metropolitan area is rising rapidly in population as well as economic and political influence. Continuing significant immigration from mainland China[10] has spurred the ongoing rise of the Chinese population in the New York metropolitan area; this immigration and its accompanying growth in the impact of the Chinese presence continue to be fueled by New York's status as an alpha global city, its high population density, its extensive mass transit system, and the New York metropolitan area's enormous economic marketplace. As of 2024, illegal Chinese immigration to New York City has accelerated,[11] including a significant new wave of Chinese Uyghur Muslims fleeing religious persecution in northwestern China's Xinjiang Province and seeking religious freedom in New York,[12] concentrating in Queens.
History[edit]
Among the earliest documented arrivals of Chinese immigrants in New York City were of "sailors and peddlers" in the 1830s. These arrivals were followed in 1847 by three students who came to continue their education in the United States. One of these scholars, Yung Wing, soon became the first Chinese American to graduate from a U.S. college in 1854, when Wing graduated from Yale University.
Many more Chinese immigrants arrived and settled in Lower Manhattan throughout the 1800s, including an 1870s wave of Chinese immigrants searching for "gold.[13]" By 1880, the enclave around Five Points was estimated to have from 200 to as many as 1,100 members.[13] However, the Chinese Exclusion Act, which went into effect in 1882, caused an abrupt decline in the number of Chinese who emigrated to New York and the rest of the United States.[13] Later, in 1943, the Chinese were given a small quota, the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 caused a revival in Chinese immigration,[14] and the community's population gradually increased until 1968, when the quota was lifted and the Chinese American population skyrocketed.[13]
In 1992, New York City officially began providing language assistance for electoral materials in Chinese, given that this population had reached a critical mass in numbers.[15] The Sino-American Friendship Association was established in Midtown Manhattan in 1992.[16] In 2022, "police service stations" serving as espionage arms of the Chinese Communist Party were discovered and shut down in Chinatown, Manhattan and Chinatown, Flushing.[17]
Demographics[edit]
New York City boroughs[edit]
New York City has the largest Chinese population of any city outside of Asia[19] and within the U.S. with an estimated population of 573,388 in 2014,[20] and continues to be a primary destination for new Chinese immigrants.[21] New York City is subdivided into official municipal boroughs, which themselves are home to significant Chinese populations, with Brooklyn and Queens, adjacently located on Long Island, leading the fastest growth.[22][23] After the City of New York itself, the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn encompass the largest Chinese populations, respectively, of all municipalities in the United States.
Rank | Borough | Chinese Americans | Density of Chinese Americans per square mile in borough | Percentage of Chinese Americans in borough's population |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Queens, Chinatowns (皇后華埠) (2014)[24] | 237,484 | 2,178.8 | 10.2 |
2 | Brooklyn, Chinatowns (布魯克林華埠) (2014)[25] | 205,753 | 2,897.9 | 7.9 |
3 | Manhattan, Chinatown (曼哈頓華埠) (2014)[26] | 107,609 | 4,713.5 | 6.6 |
4 | Staten Island (2012) | 13,620 | 232.9 | 2.9 |
5 | The Bronx (2012) | 6,891 | 164 | 0.5 |
New York City (2014) | 573,388[20] | 1,881.1 | 6.8 |
Large-scale immigration continues from China[edit]
In 2013, 19,645 Chinese legally immigrated to the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA core based statistical area from Mainland China, greater than the combined totals for Los Angeles and San Francisco, the next two largest Chinese American gateways;[27] in 2012, this number was 24,763;[28] 28,390 in 2011;[29] and 19,811 in 2010.[30] These numbers do not include the remainder of the New York-Newark-Bridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA Combined Statistical Area, nor do they include the significantly smaller numbers of legal immigrants from Taiwan and Hong Kong. There has additionally been a consequential component of Chinese emigration of illegal origin, most notably Fuzhou people from Fujian and Wenzhounese from Zhejiang in mainland China, specifically destined for New York City,[31] beginning in the 1980s.
Quantification of the magnitude of this modality of emigration is imprecise and varies over time, but it appears to continue unabated on a significant basis. As of April 2019, China Airlines (flying non-stop to Taipei), China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines, EVA Air, Hainan Airlines, and XiamenAir all served John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), while Air China and Cathay Pacific Airways served both JFK and Newark Liberty International Airport in the New York metropolitan area – and among U.S. carriers, United Airlines flew non-stop from Newark to Beijing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong. Hainan Airlines flies non-stop from JFK to both Chengdu and Chongqing in Western China; while China Southern Airlines is expected to start non-stop flights from JFK to Wuhan, in Central China, in July 2019. Meanwhile, Singapore Airlines flies to Singapore, where Standard Chinese is one of the official state languages, both from Newark (with one of the longest non-stop flights in the world[32][33]) and from JFK.
Within the Chinese population, New York City is also home to between 150,000 and 200,000 Fuzhounese Americans, who have exerted a large influence upon the Chinese restaurant industry across the United States; the vast majority of the growing population of Fuzhounese Americans have settled in New York.
The Chinese immigrant population in New York City grew from 261,500 foreign-born individuals in 2000 to 350,000 in 2011, representing a more than 33% growth of that demographic.[34] Chinese immigrants represented 12,000 of the country's asylum requests in fiscal year 2013, of which 4,000 applied for asylum to the New York-area asylum office.
Movement within and outside the metropolitan area[edit]
As many immigrant Chinese to New York City move up the socioeconomic ladder, many have relocated to the suburbs for more living space as well as seeking particular school districts for their children. In this process, new Chinese enclaves and Chinatown commercial districts have emerged and are growing in these suburbs, particularly in Nassau County on Long Island and in some counties of New Jersey. Some Chinese New Yorkers are also migrating to Boston, Philadelphia,[35] and eastern Connecticut.[36][37]
New Jersey Chinese community[edit]
New Jersey, in particular the four counties of New Jersey that start with the letter "M": Mercer County, Middlesex County, Monmouth County, and Morris County, has seen the development of new Chinese communities.[38] The municipalities of Parsippany-Troy Hills, West Windsor, and Edison all have a significant Chinese population, and a number of Chinese commercial and cultural establishments serve the Chinese community of Edison, NJ.
Geography[edit]
The Manhattan Chinatown was the original Chinatown.[39] Little Fuzhou in Manhattan is an ethnoculturally distinct neighborhood within the Manhattan Chinatown itself, populated primarily by Fujianese people. The Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn houses another such Little Fuzhou. Queens and Brooklyn are home to other Chinatowns. The Flushing as well as Elmhurst areas of Queens, Bensonhurst and Homecrest, neighborhoods in Brooklyn[40] also have spawned the development of numerous other Chinatowns. Most of Manhattan, as well as Corona in Queens, the Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope areas of Brooklyn, and northeast Staten Island, have also received significant Chinese settlement.[39][41]
Chinatowns[edit]
Manhattan (曼哈頓華埠)[edit]
Manhattan's Chinatown holds the highest concentration of Chinese people in the Western Hemisphere.[42][43] Manhattan's Chinatown is also one of the oldest Chinese ethnic enclaves.[44] The Manhattan Chinatown is one of nine Chinatown neighborhoods in New York City,[7] as well as one of twelve in the New York metropolitan area, which contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside of Asia, comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017.[45] Manhattan's Chinatown is actually divided into two different portions. The western portion is the older and original part of Manhattan's Chinatown, primarily dominated by Cantonese populations and known colloquially as the Cantonese Chinatown. Cantonese were the earlier settlers of Manhattan's Chinatown, originating mostly from Hong Kong and from Taishan in Guangdong Province, as well as from Shanghai.[46] They form most of the Chinese population of the area surrounded by Mott and Canal Streets.[46]
However, within Manhattan's Chinatown lies Little Fuzhou or The Fuzhou Chinatown on East Broadway and surrounding streets, occupied predominantly by immigrants from the province of Fujian in mainland China. They are the later settlers, from Fuzhou, Fujian, forming the majority of the Chinese population in the vicinity of East Broadway.[46] This eastern portion of Manhattan's Chinatown developed much later, primarily after the Fuzhou immigrants began moving in.
Areas surrounding "Little Fuzhou" consist of significant numbers of Cantonese immigrants from the Guangdong of China; however, the main concentration of people speaking the Cantonese language is in the older western portion of Manhattan's Chinatown. Despite the fact that the Mandarin speaking communities were becoming established in Flushing and Elmhurst areas of Queens during the 1980s–1990s and even though the Fuzhou immigrants spoke Mandarin often as well, however, due to their socioeconomic status, they could not afford the housing prices in Mandarin speaking enclaves in Queens, which were more middle class and the job opportunities were limited. They instead chose to settle in Manhattan's Chinatown for affordable housing and as well as the job opportunities that were available such as the seamstress factories and restaurants, despite the traditional Cantonese dominance until the 1990s. Eventually this pattern was repeated in Brooklyn's Sunset Park Chinatown, but on a much more immense scale.
However, the Cantonese dialect that has dominated Chinatown for decades is being rapidly swept aside by Mandarin, the national language of China and the lingua franca due to the influx of Fuzhou immigrants who often speak Mandarin and as well as there are now more Mandarin speaking visitors coming to visit the neighborhood.[47] Chinatown's modern borders are roughly Delancey Street on the north, Chambers Street on the south, East Broadway on the east, and Broadway on the west.[48]
Queens (皇后華埠)[edit]
New York City's satellite Chinatowns in Queens, as well as in Brooklyn, are thriving as traditionally urban enclaves, as large-scale Chinese immigration into New York continues,[51][52][53][54] with the largest metropolitan Chinese population outside Asia.[55] busy intersection of Main Street, Kissena Boulevard, and 41st Avenue in the Flushing Chinatown (法拉盛華埠), in Queens. The segment of Main Street between Kissena Boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue, punctuated by the Long Island Rail Road trestle overpass, represents the cultural heart of Flushing Chinatown. Housing more than 30,000 individuals born in China alone, the largest by this metric outside Asia, Flushing is home to one of the largest and fastest-growing Chinatowns in the world.[49] Massage parlors in the Flushing Chinatown have become the hub of organized prostitution in the United States.[56]
The Flushing Chinatown, in the Flushing area of the borough of Queens in New York City, is one of the largest and fastest growing ethnic Chinese enclaves outside Asia, as well as within New York City itself. Main Street and the area to its west, particularly along Roosevelt Avenue, have become the primary nexus of Flushing Chinatown. However, Flushing Chinatown continues to expand southeastward along Kissena Boulevard and northward beyond Northern Boulevard. In the 1970s, a Chinese community established a foothold in the neighborhood of Flushing, whose demographic constituency had been predominantly non-Hispanic white. Taiwanese began the surge of immigration. It originally started off as Little Taipei or Little Taiwan due to the large Taiwanese population. Due to the then dominance of working class Cantonese immigrants of Manhattan's Chinatown including its poor housing conditions, they could not relate to them and settled in Flushing.
Later on, when other groups of Non-Cantonese Chinese, mostly speaking Mandarin started arriving into NYC, like the Taiwanese, they could not relate to Manhattan's then dominant Cantonese Chinatown, as a result they mainly settled with Taiwanese to be around Mandarin speakers. Later, Flushing's Chinatown would become the main center of different Chinese regional groups and cultures in NYC. By 1990, Asians constituted 41% of the population of the core area of Flushing, with Chinese in turn representing 41% of the Asian population.[57] However, ethnic Chinese are constituting an increasingly dominant proportion of the Asian population as well as of the overall population in Flushing and its Chinatown. A 1986 estimate by the Flushing Chinese Business Association approximated 60,000 Chinese in Flushing alone.[58] Mandarin Chinese[59] (including Northeastern Mandarin), Fuzhou dialect, Min Nan Fujianese, Wu Chinese, Beijing dialect, Wenzhounese, Shanghainese, Suzhou dialect, Hangzhou dialect, Changzhou dialect, Cantonese, Hokkien, and English are all prevalently spoken in Flushing Chinatown, while the Mongolian language is now emerging. Even the relatively obscure Dongbei style of cuisine indigenous to Northeast China is now available there.[60] Given its rapidly growing status, the Flushing Chinatown has surpassed the original New York City Chinatown in the Borough of Manhattan in size and population, while Queens and Brooklyn vie for the largest Chinese population of any municipality in the United States other than New York City as a whole.
Elmhurst, another neighborhood in Queens, also has a large and growing Chinese community.[61] Previously a small area with Chinese shops on Broadway between 81st Street and Cornish Avenue, this new Chinatown has now expanded to 45th Avenue and Whitney Avenue. Since 2000, thousands of Chinese Americans have migrated into Whitestone, Queens (白石), given the sizeable presence of the neighboring Flushing Chinatown, and have continued their expansion eastward in Queens and into neighboring, highly educated Nassau County (拿騷縣) on Long Island (長島), which has become the most popular suburban destination in the U.S. for Chinese.[62][63][64]
Brooklyn (布魯克林華埠)[edit]
By 1988, 90% of the storefronts on Eighth Avenue in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, were abandoned. Chinese immigrants then moved into this area, consisting of not only new arrivals from China, but also members of Manhattan's Chinatown seeking refuge from high rents, who flocked to the relatively less expensive property costs and rents of Sunset Park and formed the original Brooklyn Chinatown,[69] which now extends for 20 blocks along 8th Avenue, from 42nd to 62nd Streets. This relatively new but rapidly growing Chinatown located in Sunset Park was originally settled by Cantonese immigrants like Manhattan's Chinatown in the past. However, in the recent decade, an influx of Fuzhou immigrants has been pouring into Brooklyn's Chinatown and supplanting the Cantonese at a significantly higher rate than in Manhattan's Chinatown, and Brooklyn's Chinatown is now home to mostly Fuzhou immigrants.
In the past, during the 1980s and 1990s, the majority of newly arriving Fuzhou immigrants settled within Manhattan's Chinatown, and the first Little Fuzhou community emerged within Manhattan's Chinatown; by the first decade of the 21st century, however, the epicenter of the massive Fuzhou influx had shifted to Brooklyn's Chinatown, which is now home to the fastest-growing and perhaps largest Fuzhou population in New York City. Unlike the Little Fuzhou in Manhattan's Chinatown, which remains surrounded by areas which continue to house significant populations of Cantonese, all of Brooklyn's Chinatown is swiftly consolidating into New York City's new Little Fuzhou. However, a growing community of Wenzhounese immigrants from China's Zhejiang is now also arriving in Brooklyn's Chinatown.[70][71] Also in contrast to Manhattan's Chinatown, which still successfully continues to carry a large Cantonese population and retain the large Cantonese community established decades ago in its western section, where Cantonese residents have a communal venue to shop, work, and socialize, Brooklyn's Chinatown has seen a change from its primarily Cantonese community identity to a more diverse Chinese melange.[72]
Like Manhattan's Chinatown during the 1980s and 1990s (pre-gentrification), Brooklyn's Chinatown became the main affordable housing center for Fuzhou immigrants – and for job opportunities ranging from seamstress factories and restaurants – despite its domination by Cantonese immigrants in the earlier years.
Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, as well as Avenue U in Homecrest, Brooklyn, in addition to Bay Ridge, Borough Park, Coney Island, Dyker Heights, Gravesend, and Marine Park, have given rise to the development of Brooklyn's newer satellite Chinatowns, as evidenced by the growing number of Chinese-run fruit markets, restaurants, beauty and nail salons, small offices, and computer and consumer electronics dealers. While the foreign-born Chinese population in New York City jumped 35 percent between 2000 and 2013, to 353,000 from about 262,000, the foreign-born Chinese population in Brooklyn increased 49 percent during the same period, to 128,000 from 86,000, according to The New York Times. The emergence of multiple Chinatowns in Brooklyn is due to the overcrowding and high property values in Brooklyn's main Chinatown in Sunset Park, and many Cantonese immigrants have moved out of Sunset Park into these new areas. As a result, the newer emerging, but smaller Brooklyn's Chinatowns are primarily Cantonese dominated while the main Brooklyn Chinatown is increasingly dominated by Fuzhou emigres.[40][73]
List[edit]
- Chinatowns of NYC:
New Jersey[edit]
Middlesex County, Mercer County, and Morris County all have significant Chinese communities. Parsippany-Troy Hills, West Windsor, and Edison all have significant Chinese population. A number of Chinese and Asian commercial establishments serve the Chinese community of Edison, NJ.
Culture[edit]
Languages[edit]
For much of the overall history of the Chinese community in New York City, Taishanese was the dominant Chinese variety.[74] After 1965, an influx of immigrants from Hong Kong made Cantonese the dominant dialect for the next three decades.
Later on, during the 1970s–80s, Mandarin and Fuzhou-speaking immigrants began to arrive into New York City. Taiwanese were settling into Flushing, Queens when it was still predominantly European American, while Fuzhou immigrants were settling in Manhattan's then very Cantonese-dominated Chinatown. The Taiwanese and Fuzhou people were the earliest significant numbers of Chinese immigrants to arrive into New York who spoke Mandarin but not Cantonese, although many spoke their regional Chinese dialects as well.
Since the mid-1990s, an influx of immigrants from various parts of mainland China began arriving later on eventually, with the increased influence of Mandarin in the Chinese-speaking world, and a desire of Chinese parents to have their children learn this language, Mandarin has been in the process of becoming the dominant lingua franca among the Chinese population of New York City. In the Manhattan Chinatown, many newer immigrants who speak Mandarin live around East Broadway, while Chinatowns in Brooklyn and Queens have also witnessed influxes of Mandarin-speaking Chinese as well as Min Chinese and Southern Min speakers.[74]
Unique demographics of New York City Chinese enclaves[edit]
However, the different Chinese cultural and language groups as well as socioeconomic statuses are often subdivided among different boroughs of New York City. In Queens, the Chinatowns are very diverse, composed of different Chinese regional groups mainly speaking Mandarin although speaking other dialects as well, and who are more often middle- or upper-middle class. As a result, the Mandarin dialect is primarily concentrated in Queens. In addition, Flushing's Chinatown is now the largest Chinese cultural center of New York City, including being the most diverse with many different Chinese populations from many various regions of China and Taiwan, but in since the 2000s, especially since the 2010s, the Northeastern Chinese immigrants have been increasingly becoming a more dominant Chinese population in Flushing Queens.
However, since Manhattan's Chinatown and Brooklyn's Chinese enclaves still hold large Cantonese speaking populations, who were the earlier Chinese immigrants to arrive into New York City and with the popularity of Hong Kong Cantonese cuisine and entertainment being widely available, the Cantonese dialect and culture still hold a large influence, and Cantonese is still a dialect in those enclaves.
Even though there are very large Fuzhou populations in Manhattan's Chinatown and Brooklyn's Chinese enclaves, many of whom speak Mandarin as well, the influence of Mandarin in those enclaves is as only one of the dialects in addition to Cantonese, rather than being the dominant one – unlike in the Chinese enclaves in Queens, where Mandarin is the most dominant dialect and as well as an almost exclusive dialect, despite the presence of a high diversity of Chinese regional languages in Queens – since there are fewer Mandarin speakers besides the Fuzhou population in Manhattan and Brooklyn than in Queens.
However, in Brooklyn, Fuzhou speakers predominate in the large Chinatown in Sunset Park while the several smaller emerging Chinatowns in various sections of Bensonhurst and in a section of Sheepshead Bay are primarily Cantonese speakers, unlike in Manhattan's Chinatown, where the Cantonese enclave and Fuzhou enclave are directly adjacent to each other. Therefore, Mandarin and Cantonese dialects significantly varies between the different Chinatowns of Sunset Park, Bensonhurst and Sheepshead Bay. Cantonese is the main variety of Chinese spoken in Bensonhurst's and Sheepshead Bay's Chinatowns, since they are mostly Cantonese populated; Mandarin is another, but less dominant variety. Since Sunset Park's Chinatown is now mostly Fuzhou populated, Mandarin is more dominant there. In Manhattan's Chinatown, Cantonese is dominant in the western portion and Fuzhouese in the eastern portion. Cantonese and Mandarin are equally spoken there due to the high number of mainland Chinese visitors and Cantonese residents from other neighborhoods.[75][76][77][78][79][80]
The Cantonese and Fuzhou populations are often more working class. However, because of the gentrification in Manhattan's Chinatown, Sunset Park in Brooklyn is increasingly becoming the main target for newly arrived Fuzhou immigrants while Bensonhurst and Sheepshead Bay in Brooklyn are increasingly becoming the main targets for the newly arrived Cantonese immigrants. This shift has now resulted in Brooklyn's Chinatowns rapidly replacing Manhattan's Chinatown as the largest primary gathering cultural centers for the Cantonese and Fuzhou populations of New York City.[81][82][83]
Cuisine[edit]
Given that the New York City metropolitan area has become home to the largest overseas Chinese population outside of Asia,[1][84] all popular styles of regional Chinese cuisine have commensurately become ubiquitously accessible in New York City,[85] including Hakka, Taiwanese, Shanghainese, Hunanese, Sichuanese, Cantonese, Fujianese, Xinjiang, Zhejiang, Korean-Chinese, and Malaysian Chinese cuisine. Even the relatively obscure Dongbei style of cuisine indigenous to Northeast China is now available in Flushing, Queens,[86] as well as Mongolian cuisine and Uyghur cuisine.[87] The availability of the regional variations of Chinese cuisine originating from throughout the different Provinces of China is most apparent in the city's Chinatowns in Queens, particularly the Flushing Chinatown (法拉盛華埠), but is also notable in the city's Chinatowns in Brooklyn and Manhattan.
Kosher preparation of Chinese food[edit]
Kosher preparation of Chinese food is also widely available in New York City, given the metropolitan area's large Jewish and particularly Orthodox Jewish populations. The perception that American Jews eat at Chinese restaurants on Christmas Day is documented in media as a common stereotype with a basis in fact.[88][89][90] The tradition may have arisen from the lack of other open restaurants on Christmas Day, as well as the close proximity of Jewish and Chinese immigrants to each other in New York City. Kosher Chinese food is usually prepared in New York City, as well as in other large cities with Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods, under strict rabbinical supervision as a prerequisite for Kosher certification.
News media[edit]
Numerous media publications geared toward serving the Chinese diaspora are headquartered in the New York metropolitan area. The World Journal, one of the largest Chinese-language newspapers outside of Asia, has its headquarters in Whitestone (白石), Queens.[91][92]
The China Press is headquartered in Midtown Manhattan.[93] The Epoch Times, an international multi-language newspaper and media company affiliated with the Falun Gong new religious movement, is also headquartered in Manhattan.[94][95][96][97] The Hong Kong-based, multinational Chinese-language newspaper Sing Tao Daily maintains its overseas headquarters in Chinatown, Manhattan. The Beijing-based, English-language newspaper China Daily publishes a U.S. edition, which is based in the 1500 Broadway skyscraper in Times Square.[98] In addition, both Sino Monthly and Global Chinese Times are published in Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey,[99][100] to serve both a growing global readership and New Jersey's growing Chinese population of over 150,000 in 2016.[101]
Museums[edit]
The Museum of Chinese in America is located in the Manhattan Chinatown, at 215 Centre Street, and this prominent cultural institution has documented the Chinese American experience since 1980.
Chinese Lunar New Year[edit]
Chinese Lunar New Year is celebrated annually throughout New York City's Chinatowns. Chinese New Year was signed into law as an allowable school holiday in the State of New York by Governor Andrew Cuomo in December 2014, as absentee rates had run as high as 60% in some New York City schools on this day.[102] In June 2015, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared that the Lunar New Year would be made a public school holiday;[103] and in September 2023, New York State made Lunar New Year a mandatory public school holiday.[104]
Religion[edit]
Beginning in 2006 many Chinese Catholics began worshipping at St. John Vianney Church in Flushing.[105]
Education[edit]
P.S. 184 is a public school in Manhattan's Chinatown, as part of the New York City Department of Education, that offers a dual-language instructional program in Mandarin and English.[106] Conversely, the Yung Wing school, also in Manhattan's Chinatown and known additionally as P.S. 124, is an elementary school within the New York City Department of Education.[107] The Huaxia Edison Chinese School operates in Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey, as a branch of the Huaxia Chinese School system; while all students at the YingHua International School in nearby Kingston, New Jersey are fluent in Mandarin by 8th grade.[108] Chinese Americans compose a disproportionate enrollment relative to the general population in the nine elite public high schools of New York City, including Stuyvesant High School and Bronx Science High School.[109]
Transportation[edit]
Numerous New York City Subway routes directly serve the multiple Chinatowns of New York City. The BMT Fourth Avenue Line (D, N, and R trains) and BMT Brighton Line (B and Q trains) connect Chinese communities in Lower Manhattan and Brooklyn. The Little Fuzhou neighborhood within Chinatown, Manhattan, hosts the East Broadway station on the IND Sixth Avenue Line (F and <F> trains). Avenue U is served by the B and Q trains, while Sunset Park is served by the N and R trains, and Bensonhurst is served by the D train. The IRT Lexington Avenue Line (4, 5, 6, and <6> trains) serves the burgeoning Chinese community of East Harlem in Upper Manhattan. Meanwhile, Flushing in Queens is served by the IRT Flushing Line (7 and <7> trains) of the New York City Subway, as well as by four stations of the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR)'s Port Washington Branch.[110]
Borough | Line | Route | Neighborhoods served | Notable stations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Brooklyn | BMT Brighton Line | | Avenue U | Avenue U |
BMT Fourth Avenue Line | | Sunset Park | 53rd Street, 59th Street | |
BMT Sea Beach Line | Eighth Avenue, Fort Hamilton Parkway | |||
BMT West End Line | Bensonhurst | 20th Avenue, Bay Parkway | ||
Manhattan | IND Sixth Avenue Line | | Little Fuzhou | East Broadway |
| Manhattan Chinatown | Grand Street | ||
BMT Broadway Line | | Canal Street | ||
BMT Nassau Street Line | | Bowery, Canal Street | ||
IRT Lexington Avenue Line | | Canal Street | ||
East Harlem | 110th Street, 116th Street | |||
Queens | IND Queens Boulevard Line | | Elmhurst | Elmhurst Avenue, Grand Avenue–Newtown |
IRT Flushing Line | | Flushing | Flushing–Main Street | |
LIRR | Port Washington Branch | Flushing–Main Street, Murray Hill, Broadway, Auburndale |
A system of dollar vans operates between the different Chinatowns in New York City. The dollar vans (which are distinct from, and not to be confused with, Chinatown bus lines), go from Manhattan's Chinatown to places in Sunset Park, Brooklyn; Elmhurst, Queens; and Flushing, Queens. There is also a service from Flushing to Sunset Park that does not pass through Manhattan. Contrary to their name, the dollar vans' fares are $2.50, which is cheaper than the New York City transit fares of $2.75 as of 2015[update].[111][112][113]
There are also intercity bus services that operate from the Chinatowns in New York City.[114][115]
As of 2016[update], the two largest Taiwanese airlines have provided free shuttle services to and from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City for customers based in New Jersey.
- China Airlines's service stops in Fort Lee, Parsippany, and Jersey City[116]
- EVA Air's service stops in Jersey City, Piscataway, Fort Lee, and East Hanover.[117]
Organizations[edit]
The Chinese American Planning Council is headquartered on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Chinese American associations include the Sino-American Friendship Association, the Millburn-Short Hills Chinese Association (MSHCA; Chinese: 蜜尔本华人协会; pinyin: Mìěrběn Huárén Xiéhuì) in New Jersey, which hosts a moon festival each year.[118] 2005 is the year of the organization's establishments.[119]
The Long Island Chinese American Association (LICAA) serves those on Long Island. As of 2020[update], Gordon Zhang is the president. Other associations include Chinese American Association of North Hempstead and the Herricks Chinese Association.[120]
Political influence[edit]
The political stature of Chinese Americans in New York City has become prominent. As of 2017, Guo Wengui, a self claimed Chinese billionaire turned political activist, has been in self-imposed exile in New York City, where he owns an apartment worth $68 million on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, overlooking Central Park. He has continued to conduct a political agenda to bring attention to alleged corruption in the Chinese political system from his New York home.[122] Taiwan-born John Liu, former New York City Council member representing District 20, which includes Flushing Chinatown and other northern Queens neighborhoods, was elected New York City Comptroller in November 2009, becoming the first Asian American to be elected to a citywide office in New York City.[123] Concomitantly, Peter Koo, born in Shanghai, was elected to succeed Liu to assume this council membership seat. Margaret Chin became the first Chinese American woman representing Manhattan's Chinatown on the New York City Council, elected in 2009. Grace Meng is a member of the United States House of Representatives, representing New York's 6th congressional district in Queens since 2009. Of the more than 2,100 Asian Americans within the uniformed ranks of the New York Police Department (NYPD) in 2015 – about six percent of the total – roughly half were Chinese American, NYPD statistics show, a number which has grown tenfold since 1990.[1] Yuh-Line Niou is a Taiwanese-American Democratic Party member of the New York State Assembly representing the 65th district in Lower Manhattan, elected in 2016, taking over the seat previously held by Sheldon Silver.[124]
In 2021, Republican Party politicians, including Curtis Sliwa, who ran for Mayor of New York City, attracted Chinese American voters who opposed Democratic Party policies in education and crime.[125]
Economic influence[edit]
The economic influence of Chinese in New York City is growing as well. The majority of cash purchases of New York City real estate in the first half of 2015 were transacted by Chinese as a combination of overseas Chinese and Chinese Americans.[126] The top three surnames of cash purchasers of Manhattan real estate during that time period were Chen, Liu, and Wong.[126] Chinese have also invested billions of dollars into New York commercial real estate since 2013.[127] According to China Daily, the ferris wheel under construction on Staten Island, slated to be among the world's tallest and most expensive with an estimated cost of $500 million, has received $170 million in funding from approximately 300 Chinese investors through the U.S. EB-5 immigrant investor program, which grants permanent residency to foreign investors in exchange for job-creating investments in the United States, with Chinese immigrating to New York City dominating this list.[128] Chinese billionaires have been buying New York property to be used as pied-à-terres, often priced in the tens of millions of U.S. dollars each,[129][130] and as of 2016, middle-class Chinese investors were purchasing real estate in New York.[131] Chinese companies have also been raising billions of dollars on stock exchanges in New York via initial public offerings.[132] The major Chinese banks maintain operational offices in New York City.
Notable people[edit]
Academia and humanities[edit]
- Anthony Chan – chief economist, JPMorgan Chase; former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and economics professor at the University of Dayton[133]
- Sewin Chan – Director of the PhD program, NYU Wagner School of Public Service[134]
- Peter Kwong – professor of Asian American studies at Hunter College and professor of sociology in the City University of New York system
- Betty Lee Sung – leading literary authority on Chinese Americans and former professor at City College of New York[135]
- Tim Wu – professor at Columbia Law School
- Yiju Huang – assistant professor of Chinese and comparative literature at Fordham University[136]
Academia and sciences[edit]
- Chia-Kun Chu – late professor emeritus of applied mathematics at Columbia University
- Chien-Shiung Wu – late experimental physicist and Columbia University professor
- David Ho – scientific researcher and Helen Wu professor at Columbia University
- Tsung-Dao Lee – university professor emeritus at Columbia University, Nobel Prize winner in physics
- Z.Y. Fu – founder of the Fu Foundation School of Engineering at Columbia University
Business[edit]
- Sam Chang – real estate and hotel developer
- James S.C. Chao – shipping magnate and father of former U.S. Cabinet member Elaine Chao
- Guo Wengui – billionaire businessman and political activist
- Andrea Jung – CEO and president of Grameen America, a non-profit microfinance company with philanthropy as its primary mission
- Kim Y. Lew – CEO, Columbia Investment Management Co., manager of the multi-billion dollar Columbia University endowment[137][138]
- Peng Zhao – CEO, Citadel Securities
- Charles Wang – late owner, New York Islanders team of the National Hockey League
- Chris Jiashu Xu – real estate and hotel developer
Entrepreneurship and technology[edit]
- Perry Chen – co-founder of Kickstarter
- Christopher Cheung – co-founder, Boxed
- Chieh Huang – CEO and co-founder, Boxed[139]
- William Fong – co-founder, Boxed
- Andrew Yang – founder, Venture for America; U.S. 2020 Democratic presidential candidate; candidate, New York City mayoral election 2021; and pioneer of the Universal Basic Income concept
- David Zhu – co-founder, Enterproid
Law, politics, and diplomacy[edit]
- Margaret Chan – New York State Supreme Court Civil Branch justice in Manhattan[140][141]
- Leigh Cheng – New York City Court judge, Brooklyn[142]
- Denny Chin – justice on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Manhattan
- Margaret Chin – first Chinese American woman elected to represent Manhattan's Chinatown on the New York City Council in 2009
- Edith Hsu-Chen – Executive director, New York City Department of City Planning, appointed by Mayor Eric Adams in 2022[143]
- Peter Koo – New York City councilman elected in 2009 to represent District 20 in Queens
- Li Baodong – President of the United Nations Security Council during months in 2011 and 2012
- Doris Ling-Cohan – New York State Supreme Court Civil Branch justice in Manhattan[140]
- Liu Jieyi – Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations from 2013 to 2017
- John Liu – first Taiwanese American, Chinese American, and Asian American to be elected New York City Comptroller, in 2009
- Ma Zhaoxu – current Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations, since January 2018
- Grace Meng – member of the United States House of Representatives, representing New York's 6th congressional district in Queens
- Sarah Min – activist[144]
- Yuh-Line Niou – former member of the New York State Assembly, representing the 65th District in Lower Manhattan, elected in November 2016, serving through 2022, and succeeded by Grace Lee, above
- Chi Ossé – youngest ever member of the New York City Council to be elected, in January 2022 at age 23, to represent District 36 in Brooklyn
- Fred Teng – president and founder of the America China Public Affairs Institute in 2012[145]
- Qian Julie Wang – writer, civil rights lawyer
- Wenjian Liu – first Chinese American officer in the New York City Police Department to die in the line of duty in 2014
- Wenliang Wang – honorary chairman, NYU Center on U.S.-China relations[146]
- Ya-Ting Liu – first chief public realm officer of New York City[147]
- Peter Yew – Chinese Americans first protested police brutality with high-profile activism outside New York City Hall in May 1975, after the beating of this 27-year-old Chinese-American engineer who was a bystander at the scene of a traffic dispute in Chinatown in Manhattan.[1]
- Zhang Yesui – Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations from 2008 to 2010
Media[edit]
Chinese people have emerged prominently in the New York City journalism sphere. This media subsection has been created to acknowledge this professional prominence.
- Ai Heping – journalist, China Daily[126]
- An Rong Xu – photographer, journalist[148][149]
- Kathy YL Chan – journalist, Bloomberg News[150]
- Mable Chan – The New York Times[151]
- Wilfred Chan – The Guardian[152]
- Clio Chang – journalist, Curbed[153]
- Gordon G. Chang – journalist, multiple platforms
- Laura Chang – journalist, editor of the Booming blog, The New York Times
- Lia Chang – actress and photographic journalist, multiple media platforms
- William Y. Chang – late founder of the Chinese-American Times newspaper
- Adrian Chen – investigative journalist, staff writer at The New Yorker
- Aria Hangyu Chen – multimedia journalist[154]
- Brian X. Chen – lead consumer technology journalist, The New York Times[155]
- Caroline Chen – journalist, ProPublica[156]
- David W. Chen – investigative journalist, City Hall bureau chief, The New York Times[157]
- Elaine Chen – digital editor, The New York Times[158]
- Stefanos Chen – real estate reporter, The New York Times[159]
- Evelyn Cheng – journalist, CNBC[160][161][non-primary source needed]
- Roger Cheng – executive editor in charge of breaking news, CNET News[162]
- Paul Cheung – journalist, global director of interactive and digital news production, The Associated Press[163]
- Ronny Chieng – comedian
- Andrew R. Chow – journalist, The New York Times[164]
- Denise Chow – science and technology editor, NBC News[165]
- Dominic Chu – journalist, CNBC[166]
- Christine Chung – journalist, The New York Times[167]
- Connie Chung – journalist[168]
- James Dao – op-ed editor, The New York Times[169]
- Wendi Deng – media personality, film producer, and businessperson
- Christina Fan – journalist, WCBS-TV[170]
- Scarlet Fu – Bloomberg Television anchor and New York Stock Exchange reporter[171]
- Esther Fung – journalist, The Wall Street Journal[172]
- Vivian Giang – journalist, The New York Times[173]
- Lisa Kailai Han – journalist, Business Insider[174]
- Amy He – journalist, China Daily[175]
- Angela He – corporate communications specialist, The New York Times[176]
- Gary He – journalist, Vox Media[177]
- Krystal Hu – journalist, Reuters[178]
- Hezi Jiang – journalist, China Daily[179]
- Nicole Hong – law enforcement and courts journalist, The New York Times[180]
- Hong Xiao – journalist, China Daily[128]
- Cindy Hsu – journalist, WCBS-TV
- Tiffany Hsu – business reporter, The New York Times[181]
- Winnie Hu – journalist, The New York Times[182][183]
- Hua Hsu – journalist, The New Yorker
- Eddie Huang – writer, author of Fresh Off the Boat: A Memoir
- Virginia Huie – journalist, News 12 Long Island[184]
- Jing Cao – journalist, Bloomberg News[185]
- Jason Kao – journalist, The New York Times[186]
- Hope King – senior business reporter, Axios[187]
- K.K. Rebecca Lai – graphics editor, The New York Times[188]
- Chau Lam – Gothamist[189]
- Katherine Lam – digital producer, Fox News[190]
- Esther Lee – deputy editor, The Knot[191]
- Jennifer 8. Lee – journalist, credits including The New York Times
- Melissa Lee – news anchor, Fast Money on CNBC[192]
- Kristin Lin – op-ed columnist, The New York Times[193]
- Betty Liu – news anchor, Bloomberg Television
- Jennifer Liu – journalist, CNBC[194]
- Denise Lu – The New York Times[195]
- Lu Wang – journalist, Bloomberg News[196]
- Richard Lui – news anchor, MSNBC and NBC News
- Michael Luo – journalist, The New York Times[197][198]
- Sarah Min – investing reporter, CNBC[199]
- Alfred Ng – associate engagement editor, New York Daily News[200]
- Emily Ngo – journalist, Politico[201]
- Niu Yue – journalist, China Daily[128]
- Rong Xiaoqing – journalist, Curbed[202]
- Shiyu (Shelly) Xu – field producer, Fox News [203]
- Gillian Tan – Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering private equity and mergers and acquisitions[204]
- Terry Tang – deputy editorial page editor, The New York Times[205]
- Kaity Tong – journalist, news anchor
- Crystal Tse – Bloomberg News[206]
- Echo Wang – journalist, Reuters[207]
- Christine Wang – news editor, CNBC[208]
- Vivian Wang – journalist, The New York Times[209]
- Justin Wee – photojournalist, The New York Times[210]
- Andrea Wong – journalist, Bloomberg News[211]
- Natalie Wong – journalist, Bloomberg News[212]
- Vanessa Wong – journalist, BuzzFeed[213]
- Ellen Yan – The New York Times, Newsday[214]
- Jeff Yang – media consultant, "Tao Jones" columnist for The Wall Street Journal
- Kimberly Yam – journalist, HuffPost[215]
- Lucy Yang (disambiguate) – journalist, WABC-TV[216]
- Lucy Yang (disambiguate) – Zola[217]
- Maya Yang – journalist, The Guardian[218]
- Stephen Yang – photojournalist, New York Post[219]
- Yueqi Yang – journalist, Bloomberg News[220]
- Angela Yee – radio personality
- Vivian Yee – journalist, The New York Times[221]
- Claudia Yeung – communications director, Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office, New York[222]
- Karen Yi – journalist, Gothamist[223]
- Yong Xiong – investigative producer and journalist, CNN[224]
- William Yu – digital media strategist[225]
- Jada Yuan – travel correspondent, The New York Times[226]
- Yun Li – journalist, CNBC[227]
- Benjamin P. Zhang – journalist, Business Insider[228]
- Raymond Zhong – climate change journalist, part of the 2021 Pulitzer Prize winning team for COVID-19 pandemic coverage, The New York Times[229]
- Zijia Song – journalist, multiple media platforms[230]
Theater, arts, and culture[edit]
- Celia Au – actress and filmmaker
- Awkwafina (Nora Lum) – Korean-Chinese actress and rapper
- Malan Breton – fashion designer
- Kevin Chan – fashion designer[231][232]
- Amy Chang – actress[233]
- Fala Chen – actress
- Angel Chang – fashion designer
- Cheung Pei Pei – actress[233]
- Margaret Cho – Korean-Chinese multi-hyphenate entertainer and LGBT social activist
- David Chu – fashion designer
- Grace Zia Chu – late author of Chinese cookbooks
- Diana Eng – fashion designer
- Ying Fang – principal soprano at the Metropolitan Opera
- Fei Fei Sun – supermodel
- Vivienne Hu – fashion designer[234]
- David Henry Hwang – Broadway playwright, librettist, and screenwriter
- MC Jin – rapper
- Yue-Sai Kan – television host and producer, entrepreneur, fashion icon, author and humanitarian[235]
- Jonathan Koon – fashion designer
- Derek Lam – fashion designer
- Lap Chi Chu – Off-Broadway set lighting
- Li Hongzhi – founder of Falun Gong
- Humberto Leon – fashion designer
- Tina Leung – actress, Bling Empire: New York[236]
- Li Yu – actress[233]
- Mimi Lien – Broadway set designer
- Phillip Lim – fashion designer
- Jenny Lin – pianist
- Joseph Lin – violinist
- Ling Tan – supermodel
- Lucy Liu – actress, fashion model, and artist
- Liu Wen – supermodel
- Chella Man – artist, actor, and transgender model
- Angela Mao – former actress and martial artist, aka "Lady Kung Fu"[237]
- Ming Cho Lee – Broadway set designer
- Peter Mui – fashion designer, actor, and musician
- I.M. Pei – world-renowned late architect
- Mary Ping – fashion designer
- Shen Wei – choreographer, stage designer
- Mimi So – jewelry designer
- Phillipa Soo – Broadway actress
- Peter Som – fashion designer
- Anna Sui – fashion designer
- Brandon Sun – fashion designer[238]
- Vivienne Tam – fashion designer
- Oscar and Hsin Mei Agnes Hsu Tang – philanthropists to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on the Upper East Side of Manhattan
- Zang Toi – fashion designer
- Alexander Wang – fashion designer[239]
- Dorothy Wang – actress, Bling Empire: New York[240]
- Vera Wang – fashion designer
- Yuja Wang – concert pianist
- Jason Wu – fashion designer
- Ximan Li – filmmaker[233]
- Xin Ying – modern dancer[241]
- Sophia Yan – classical pianist[242]
- Bowen Yang – writer and actor, Saturday Night Live
- Yeohlee Teng – fashion designer[243]
- Yuhua Hamasaki – drag queen
- Joe Zee – fashion stylist
See also[edit]
- Asian Americans in New York City
- Bangladeshis in New York City
- Chinese Americans
- Demographics of New York City
- Filipinos in the New York metropolitan area
- Fuzhounese in New York City
- Indians in the New York City metropolitan region
- Japanese in New York City
- Koreans in New York City
- Russians in New York City
- Taiwanese people in New York City
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