The Chew Kee Store is one
of the few museums in Northern California that is filled with authentic
artifacts and furnishings of Chinese life during the Gold Rush and afterwards.
The Chinese were instrumental in building California, yet so little remains of
their first settlements in the Sierra foothills. The tiny Amador County hamlet
of Fiddletown is proud to have several 19th Century buildings remaining that
once served the Chinese community.
The Chew Kee Herb Shop is one of four structures that
represent the largest and most intact group of Chinese buildings remaining from
a California Gold Rush mining town. Fiddletown's Chinese General Store, Gambling Hall, and Chinese
Roasting Oven were constructed in the late 1850s. They were significant parts
of Fiddletown or Chinatown, which was vibrant until the early 20th Century.
The FPS formed the Restoration of Chinese Structures (ROCS) project to raise funds and garner
support for the refurbishing of the Chinese General Store and Gambling Hall.
In 2001 the FPS successfully applied for a California Office of Historic
Preservation grant of $203,000 -- which must be matched -- to stabilize,
weatherproof, and restore the exterior of the two structures. As a small
community of only 600 residents, Fiddletown needs help from the outside
community to raise the matching funds by the September 2007 deadline.
The money
will go toward the necessary architectural, engineering, and construction work
to be accomplished. Without renovation work, the buildings will imminently collapse and the legacy of
the Chinese pioneers will be gone.To help raise funds for the ROCS project, the
group is holding its Third
Annual Fiddletown Heritage Celebration on April 14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
Downtown Fiddletown. Some of the special features include guest
speakers, gold-panning workshops, a cowboy lunch, live entertainment, a guided
tour of town and many other fun, family-friendly things to do. Admission is
free, but donations will be accepted for the ROCS project. All contributions
are tax-deductible. Donations may also be mailed to FPS, PO Box 53, Fiddletown, CA 95629. For more
information, visit the FPS Web site at www.fiddletown.info or call (209)
296-6476.

