• Heinlenville (Chinese: 海因倫鎮; also called the Sixth Street Chinatown 六街唐人埠 and San Jose Chinatown 散那些唐人埠) was a Chinese-American ethnic enclave in San Jose...
    21 KB (2,036 words) - 06:37, 22 February 2025
  • known as Plaza Chinatown (1872–1887) Woolen Mills Chinatown (1887–1902) Heinlenville, also known as the Sixth Street Chinatown (1887–1931) Of these enclaves...
    14 KB (1,497 words) - 03:22, 22 February 2025
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    as a site for boardinghouses for Japanese men, just west of the 1887 "Heinlenville" Chinatown settlement, which was the block bounded by Sixth, Seventh...
    17 KB (1,479 words) - 23:28, 5 January 2025
  • (2023-10-26). "Heinlenville Park opens in San Jose's Japantown | Nichi Bei News". Nichi Bei News. Retrieved 2024-05-11. "Heinlenville Park opens in Japantown"...
    8 KB (939 words) - 01:46, 31 December 2024
  • Thumbnail for Chinatowns in the United States
    to the dismay of the non-Chinese public. The area was then known as "Heinlenville" and contained a variety of merchants, barbers, traditional doctors,...
    117 KB (12,043 words) - 00:37, 17 April 2025
  • survive as immigrants in the United States. Initially, it was known as Heinlenville between Jackson and Taylor east of Sixth Street.[incomprehensible] However...
    13 KB (1,394 words) - 02:37, 24 February 2025
  • and Vine streets before moving on to the Woolen Mills Chinatown and Heinlenville, both north of the city. In 1981, the Redevelopment Agency of San Jose...
    15 KB (1,360 words) - 17:07, 24 April 2025
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    neighborhood, once one of San Jose’s first Chinatown settlements known as “Heinlenville.” Ruth Tunstall Grant was an acclaimed artist, activist, and educator...
    16 KB (1,785 words) - 22:22, 28 January 2025