logo
Chinese temple gets new home

Chinese temple gets new home

Yahoo27-03-2025
Mar. 27—A rare Chinese temple from the Gold Rush era will continue to be on display in Lewiston, but it's going to have a new home.
Artifacts from the Beuk Aie Temple are moving from the Lewis-Clark State College Center for Arts and History to the Nez Perce County Historical Society and Museum, which has plans for a new building to house the collection.
Representatives from LCSC and the historical society met Wednesday afternoon to sign an agreement and formalize the transfer of a shrine built in 1890 by Chinese immigrants who came to this region to search for gold.
Dan Miller, president of the Nez Perce County Historical Society, said a new building is slated for the museum campus to house the collection, and it should be completed in two years or so. While the project is underway, an exhibit will be available for public viewing in the main museum.
"This is a big moment for us," Miller said, unrolling a blueprint of future plans for the Beuk Aie Temple. "This is our dream."
The temple was originally on the former C Street until 1959, when the building was razed. Fortunately, several Lewiston residents preserved its contents, including a wooden altar carved with dragons, phoenixes, pomegranates and Chinese characters, and an ornate lantern that is fueled with peanut oil.
The exhibit also includes cooking utensils, mining tools and items used in daily life during the time period when Chinese immigrants were here carving out a living here during the gold rush.
Mike Mossler, of Clarkston, helped move the artifacts from their original home to a garage more than five decades ago, before the collection became public. He and other family members preserved a piece of history that will help future generations learn about Idaho's early Chinese residents.
"I think we have the only authentic altar cloth in all of North America," Mossler told the Lewiston Tribune at the brief ceremony. "I have photos of my father and brother and me moving the items before the building was torn down."
LCSC officials said the agreement between the college and the museum was made in close consultation with the Beuk Aie Temple Advisory Committee and at the request of the historical society.
"It has been LC State's honor and privilege to serve as the custodial home and caretaker of this important part of our community's history and Chinese American heritage for over three decades," LCSC President Cynthia Pemberton said in a news release.
Daily headlines, straight to your inboxRead it online first and stay up-to-date, delivered daily at 7 AM
"This is important history that must be preserved for future generations, and we are grateful to the Nez Perce County Historical Society for its keen interest and expertise in doing just that. Transferring the temple to the historical society will preserve its quality care and allow increased public access to this important historical collection."
When gold was discovered near Pierce in the 1860s, thousands of miners, including those of Chinese descent, rushed to this region. Most of the Chinese men who came to the area were from the Toishan district of China's Guangdong Province.
They brought with them their religion, a form of Taosim that combined elements of Confucianism and Buddhism with traditional folk practices and mythology. In 1890, a temple was built to serve as their house of worship. The temple remained for 69 years.
In 1991, LCSC acquired the historic First Security Bank on Main Street, and it became home to the Center for Arts and History. Shortly afterward, the Beuk Aie Temple Society contributed the century-old artifacts to the college. After extensive cleaning and restoration, the collection was dedicated in 1994.
The three-room exhibit on the second floor remained open until a fire forced its closure in 2009. The display was reopened in 2013.
Several years ago, the college and historical society entered into a joint cooperative agreement to support the preservation of the temple. This agreement covered display, accessibility, preservation, maintenance, storage, and established an advisory committee.
According to a news release, the advisory committee conducted a thorough assessment of the exhibit last year and identified the need for additional renovation.
"Currently the Nez Perce County Historical Society has a certified curator, has doubled the size of its campus, and is prepared to manage all aspects of the Chinese community's history," members wrote in a letter of request to LCSC.
The museum, located at the corner of Third and Capital streets, has always featured exhibits that pertain to the area's 1860s Chinese influence and ongoing Chinese American heritage, officials said. The Beuk Aie Temple artifacts are expected to greatly expand and complement existing displays.
The historical society and museum representatives estimate the Beuk Aie Temple altar will be ready for display by June 1. The rest of the Beuk Aie Temple exhibit will be displayed in a separate building after it is constructed on the museum campus.
Sandaine can be reached at kerris@lmtribune.com.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Another gold rush could bring open pit mines to South Dakota's Black Hills
Another gold rush could bring open pit mines to South Dakota's Black Hills

Associated Press

time13 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Another gold rush could bring open pit mines to South Dakota's Black Hills

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — A gold rush brought settlers to South Dakota's Black Hills roughly 150 years ago, chasing the dream of wealth and displacing Native Americans in the process. Now, a new crop of miners driven by gold prices at more than $3,000 an ounce are seeking to return to the treasured landscape, promising an economic boost while raising fears of how modern gold extraction could forever change the region. 'These impacts can be long term and make it so that tourism and outdoor recreation is negatively impacted,' said Lilias Jarding, executive director of the Black Hills Clean Water Alliance. 'Our enjoyment of the Black Hills as a peaceful place, a sacred place, is disturbed.' The Black Hills encompass over 1.2 million acres (485,622 hectares), rising up from the Great Plains in southwest South Dakota and extending into Wyoming. The jagged peaks are smaller than those of the Rocky Mountains, but the lush pine-covered hills are sacred to the Lakota Sioux people and serve as a destination for millions of tourists who visit Mount Rushmore and state parks. Dramatic landscape changes come with modern mining One gold mine now operates in the Black Hills, but companies have proposals before state and federal agencies for another one, plus exploratory drilling sites that they hope will lead to full-fledged mines. That has prompted opposition by Native American tribes and environmentalists who argue the projects are close to sacred sites, will contaminate waterways and permanently scar the landscape. Gold extraction has changed dramatically in the decades since prospectors first began panning for gold in the Black Hills. The industry now typically relies on massive trucks and diggers that create deep, multitiered pits and use chemicals like cyanide to extract the gold. The land can never return to its original state. The Homestake mine, once the largest and deepest gold mine in the Western Hemisphere, now sits barren in Lead, South Dakota, and is used for scientific research. Interest in Black Hills gold mining has soared along with the price of the metal. When the Homestake mine closed in 2002, gold sold for about $300 an ounce. Now it goes for about 10 times as much. Joseph Cavatoni, senior market strategist at the World Gold Council, attributes the price spike to global economic uncertainty. 'Gold tends to be a stable asset,' he said. 'That actually performs well in inflationary times, and holds its value in recessionary times. That's why gold as an asset in investment.' President Donald Trump also boosted the industry by issuing an executive order in March to increase American mineral production, calling for expedited permitting and reviews. Colin Paterson, professor emeritus of geological engineering at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, notes that Black Hills gold is encased in rock. To extract it, the rock is crushed and then a chemical like cyanide is used to dissolve the mineral and remove it. Mining brings revenue, but renews Black Hills fight Coeur Mining runs the single active mine in the Black Hills, but the company Dakota Gold has plans for an open pit mine to begin operating in 2029. The company is also targeting the area near the old Homestake site to build an underground mine where workers would descend hundreds or even thousands of feet into shafts. Jack Henris, president and chief operating officer of Dakota Gold, estimated the open pit mine would create up to 250 jobs and result in the company paying the state up to $400 million in taxes over the life of the mine. Dakota Gold will conduct an environmental study and surveys of soil and vegetation to ensure safe operation, Henris said. 'Most of the people that work here are from this area and just love to live here,' he said. 'So we're a big part of the Hills and we love them just as much as other folks.' To a great extent, gold mining helped create the modern Black Hills region. The U.S. government signed a treaty in 1868 that recognized the Sioux Nation's right to the Black Hills, but the government seized the land after the discovery of gold and allowed settlers into the region. The U.S. Supreme Court later ruled the Sioux were entitled to compensation, but they have not accepted any and maintain their claim to the land. Tribes have largely opposed mining in the Black Hills. 'There's a central truth about mining in the Black Hills in that it was never the most mineral rich place there ever was,' said Taylor Gunhammer, local organizer with the Indigenous advocacy group NDN Collective and an Oglala Sioux, one of the Lakota people. 'It's not even the actual mineral content of the Black Hills that is so attractive to mining companies. It's the permissive nature of the officials who oversee mining.' Some proposed projects, such as Dakota Gold's mine, are on private land and only subject to state rules, not the U.S. Forest Service regulations required for projects on public acreage. Environmentalists have focused their opposition on the possibility of chemicals leaks. They note that Coeur's Wharf mine has had nearly 200 spills and that the former Homestake mine was closed because it contaminated a nearby creek. Coeur's environmental manager, Jasmine McCauley, said in a statement that each spill was 'thoroughly investigated, mitigated, and corrective actions are put in place to prevent reoccurrence.' The company is always improving its processes, she added. Jarding, of the Black Hills Clean Water Alliance, said she remains concerned about the number of projects in the works. 'It's really important that people understand the exponential growth in mining activity that's been happening in the Black Hills over the last five years or so,' Jarding said. 'There are currently active mining claims on 271,000 acres in the Black Hills. That's 20% of the whole Black Hills that is potentially going to be subject to mining.'

Body of Chinese climber killed during K2 summit descent retrieved by rescue team

timea day ago

Body of Chinese climber killed during K2 summit descent retrieved by rescue team

GILGIT, Pakistan -- A rescue team from Pakistan and Nepal has retrieved the body of a Chinese climber who was killed on K2, the world's second-highest peak in northern Pakistan, a regional government spokesman said Saturday. Faizullah Faraq, spokesman for the Gilgit-Baltistan government, said the body of Guan Jing was airlifted by an army helicopter from K2's base camp after a team of mountaineers brought it down. Jing died Tuesday after being struck by falling rocks during her descent, a day after she had reached the summit with a group of fellow climbers. Faraq said her body was taken to a hospital in Skardu city and would be sent to Islamabad after coordination with her family and Chinese officials Karrar Haidri, vice president of the Pakistan Alpine Club, said the body was retrieved after days-long efforts, during which one of the rescuers was injured and airlifted by a helicopter. K2, which rises 8,611 meters (28,251 feet) above sea level, is considered one of the world's most difficult and dangerous peaks to climb. Laura Dahlmeier died while attempting another peak in the region.

Indianapolis World War II soldier's remains returned to family after 1940s recovery mix-up
Indianapolis World War II soldier's remains returned to family after 1940s recovery mix-up

Indianapolis Star

timea day ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Indianapolis World War II soldier's remains returned to family after 1940s recovery mix-up

Family chatter about childhood memories was shared as an escorted vehicle drove to an Indianapolis International Airport gate. Military and public safety officials were preparing for the landing of an American Airlines flight, while the family of late U.S. Army Pvt. LeRoy B. Miller Jr., talked about the lives he couldn't watch grow up. The 31-year-old World War II soldier was reported missing in action in Germany in 1944. On Aug. 15, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency brought Miller's remains home. "The information they gave us explained he died from an explosion," his great-niece, Avila Moore, told IndyStar. "We didn't know what happened back then. Was he captured? Was he tortured? Now we know." The agency is a U.S. Department of Defence branch tasked with providing the fullest possible accounting of missing personnel from past U.S. conflicts. This involves searching for, locating, identifying and returning the remains of missing service members to their families. Moore's family had already buried who they thought was Miller back in the 1940s, when his tag was found in a mass grave site overseas, but after extensive DNA analysis and research, the family finally has the right soldier, and an extraction will need to be made for the original buried remains. "It's just hard to believe that it could happen," Miller's nephew, Lance Hamilton, told IndyStar. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency announced U.S. Army Pvt. LeRoy B. Miller Jr., 31, was accounted for on Aug. 13, 2024, after his death during World War II. Miller was assigned to Company A, 1st Battalion, 112th Infantry Regiment, 28th Infantry Division in November 1944. His battalion captured the town of Kommerscheidt, Germany, in the Hürtgen Forest. A series of heavy German counterattacks eventually forced his battalion to withdraw. Miller was reported killed in action on Nov. 8, 1944, while fighting enemy forces at Kommerscheidt. His remains could not be recovered after the attack, according to the agency. Following the end of the war, the American Graves Registration Command was tasked with investigating and recovering missing American personnel in Europe. During that effort, a recovery team found a mass grave at Kommerscheidt that contained the remains of several American and German soldiers on Sept. 11, 1947. "Recovery effort was heroic in that it was very difficult to do because the locals didn't really want to help," Hamilton said. "They wanted to bury everybody and just let it go, but with pressing investigations, they're bringing everybody home. So they got his bones, and preserved them to a point where they could find out who he was." The exhumation team found Miller's identification tag on one set of remains. The remains were sent to the United States Military Cemetery in Neuville, Belgium, for processing. Based on the tag, officials identified the remains as Miller's and transferred them to his family for final burial in America. But 73 years later, in 2017, an agency historian analyzed documentation regarding three sets of unidentified remains while studying unresolved American losses in the Hürtgen area. Scientists considered the possibility that Miller's remains may have been commingled in the grave or misprocessed and misidentified in the 1940s. At the time, Miller was identified based on the presence of his identification tags, but an updated investigation determined that the original identification was made in error. So whoever Miller's family buried was not related to them. "I've always had kind of a close relationship with him, which may sound a bit strange," Hamilton, who has never met the soldier, said. "My grandmother always talked so fondly of him. He was a very accomplished musician who loved piano and composing." Hamilton said he's always carried Miller's accomplishments with him. He said Miller will always be remembered for his creativity. His family still has some of his records. Miller was one of the youngest composers to have his music played by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. "He just wanted to create music," Hamilton said. "That's all he ever really wanted to do, but he felt that he had to go to war. It wasn't a choice. He had to do it." He was a classical pianist, and Moore said they're going to be playing some of his music at his memorial. "We live in the home he was raised in, and I found some music in a piano bench," Moore said. Hamilton said identifying Miller's remains has been a long process, and he was skeptical of the findings at first. The family didn't believe anything like this could happen, and they didn't believe the remains that matched up with their DNA was Miller's. "But, out of our skepticism, we kept slowly proceeding to find the truth, and here we are," Hamilton said. An honorable transfer happened with his remains arriving at the Indianapolis International Airport aboard an American Airlines flight on Aug. 15, 2025. The ceremony included military honors, the family being escorted, and the remains being transported to Flanner Funeral Home. A graveside service with full military honors is scheduled for Aug. 22 at Crown Hill Cemetery.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store