The Mercury News

Historic archway in Los Gatos needs help

- Sal Pizarro COLUMNIST

If you visit the Los Gatos location of Uplift Family Services on Loma Alta Avenue, you easily could miss the unassuming wooden archway near the parking lot. But that archway, built about 85 years ago, is filled with history and a reminder of another time when Chinese Americans faced discrimina­tion in California.

The arch marked the entrance to the Ming Quong Home, an orphanage for Chinese girls that was opened around 1936 by Donaldina Cameron, who previously opened homes in San Francisco and Oakland. The orphanage later allowed children — including boys — of all races by the mid-1950s. Uplift Family Services is a nonprofit behavioral health treatment provider that operates statewide and grew out of the merger of Ming Quong Home and Eastfield Home of Benevolenc­e in San Jose.

Today, the deteriorat­ing arch is about all that remains of the original orphans home but is infested with termites and needs to be stabilized. Uplift would like to restore it, clean up the area around it and create a space that pays tribute to its origins. Many “alumni” of the Ming Quong Home, as well as their descendant­s, are spearheadi­ng a campaign to raise more than $8,000 to make that happen.

“When I was growing up in San Jose in the 1930s, my family friend, Miss Hung Mui Chew was one of the missionary teach

ers there, having herself been brought up by Donaldina Cameron,” said Gerrye Wong, co-founder of the Chinese Historical and Cultural Project. She remembers that her father, Bill Kee, who owned the San Jose National Dollar Store, would bring clothes, as well as holiday candy and cookies, to the Los Gatos home in the years following the Great Depression.

Wong sees the Ming Quong Home as another example of the forgotten history of the Chinese in the Santa Clara Valley. “In honor of those who led and lived their formative years at the Ming Quong Home, this is a historical monument to the dedication and care they were given during very important time of these young girls’ lives,” she said.

Anyone interested in helping the effort can make a tax-deductible donation at upliftfs.org/getinvolve­d/donate and put “Ming Quong arch” in the comment area, or contact Darren DeMonsi, director of developmen­t for Uplift, at ddemonsi@upliftfs.org.

FUNDRAISER­S WITH A SIDE OF ‘HAM’ >> Broadway production­s still may be shut down, but the spirit of the smash hit “Hamilton” will be part of two school fundraiser­s this week.

Cristo Rey San Jose Jesuit High School’s annual Rey of Hope event today will be a tribute to the show, with Sydney James Harcourt and Lexi Lawson reprising their Broadway roles of Aaron Burr and Eliza Hamilton for the virtual event.

Tickets cost $150, and you can get more details at cristoreys­anjose.org.

Bellarmine College Prep also has a “Hamilton” connection for its virtual fundraiser Saturday as the event is being conducted in place of the annual Golden Bell auction.

In addition to several student performanc­es, the 7 p.m. event will feature a special appearance by alum Ryan Vasquez, a Drama Desk nominee in 2020 who had a turn at several of the major “Hamilton” roles on Broadway and was in the original cast of “Waitress.”

There’s no fee to register for the auction event, which benefits Bellarmine’s Direct Tuition Assistance Fund, and you can get more informatio­n at bcp.org/auction.

SPEAKERS’ BUREAU >> Judith Taylor will give an online talk about her book “The Olive in California: History of an Immigrant Tree” on Monday for the Saratoga History Museum.

What’s the connection with Saratoga? Taylor will talk about the first olive trees planted at a rancho in Saratoga in 1865, later purchased by Edward E. Goodrich, who marketed El Quito Olive Oil.

The 7 p.m. lecture is free to attend, and you can sign up at saratogahi­story. com.

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 ?? NEW MUSEUM LOS GATOS ?? This old photograph shows the entrance to the Ming Quong Home n Los Gatos when it was still an orphanage. Although Ming Quong started out as a haven for Chinese girls, children from other races and boys were admitted beginning in 1953.
NEW MUSEUM LOS GATOS This old photograph shows the entrance to the Ming Quong Home n Los Gatos when it was still an orphanage. Although Ming Quong started out as a haven for Chinese girls, children from other races and boys were admitted beginning in 1953.

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