Lethbridge Herald

Lee Duck achieved success despite policies

- Carolyn Ben

When Ron Lee was 17, his mother told him to go talk with his dying grandfathe­r Lee Duck one last time.

From his bed, Lee Duck opened up to his grandson about his life in China at the turn of the century. Born in a village near Taishan in 1888, he left home at ten years old to seek his fortune in Canton (Guangzhou), first working as a thief, then as a card shark. At 15, he walked into the back of a kitchen and convinced the cook to hire him. While living and working in Canton, he caught the bubonic plague but fortunatel­y recovered and decided to become a tailor.

A traveller returning from Canada convinced Lee Duck to emigrate from China in 1905. Lee travelled across the Pacific Ocean on a steamer named Empress of India. He stayed in the steamer’s belly shovelling coal to avoid confrontat­ions with the white passengers aboard the ship.

Once he arrived in Canada, Lee secured a job as a car oiler, or grease monkey, with the Canadian Pacific Railway on the route between Vancouver and Calgary.

Eventually, he moved to Lethbridge and started Lee Duck Cleaners on 13 Street North. Lee married Der Soon Yet. They had six children in Lethbridge and sent the five oldest to China to be educated there and return to Canada as teenagers.

Lee Duck ran a successful business in Lethbridge and travelled back and forth to China multiple times, where he built a magnificen­t house.

What makes Lee’s story more remarkable is that he achieved all this against the backdrop of Canada’s antiChines­e immigratio­n policies, which included a $500 head tax for each entry to Canada, followed bya near-total ban on Chinese immigratio­n after 1923.

You can learn more about the history of Chinese Canadian businesses in Lethbridge and southern

Alberta by exploring the documents, materials and photograph­s in the Galt’s online database at collection­s.galtmuseum.com.

 ?? Galt Museum photo ?? People inside Lee Duck Cleaners.
Galt Museum photo People inside Lee Duck Cleaners.

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