Lew Hing - Legacy

Legacy

Lew Hing was a pioneer in California industry. The Lew Hing building remains in San Francisco’s Chinatown, and Oakland’s Chinatown owes incalculable gratitude to Lew. The Pacific Coast Canning Company’s building remains, though empty, at 12th and Pine Streets in Oakland. In 2006 this site will be torn down and replaced by housing, though a commemorative plaque will include Lew Hing’s name and importance to the site. This site has been opened as the Pacific Cannery Lofts.

After a rich career in canning, shipping, hotels, banking, and other industries, Lew Hing considered his most worthy contribution to be the swimming pool for the youth at the San Francisco Chinese YMCA, built in 1925. After more than 80 years, the pool that Lew Hing built remains the only swimming pool in San Francisco’s Chinatown.

Inventive and industrious throughout his life, Lew Hing was very progressive for his time. He was also a man of high principles. Coming from his very humble beginning, he had great compassion for Chinese immigrants in America because he understood them well. He was a well-respected gentleman who generated much business in the community and created many job opportunities for the Chinese in the Bay Area. He contributed in upgrading the quality of life for Chinese immigrants in their ordeal of assimilation and integration into the Western ways of life in these United States.

He also related well to the Caucasian community, as indicated when he often attended formal civic events and was included in the inner circle of San Francisco’s long-time mayor, Jimmy Rolph. Lew became very American in his ways, never again desiring to return to China.

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