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7 years ago

Yummy food, great service! Friendly owners! It's a great place to go for a sandwich, coffee or ice cream cone!

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Kam Wah Chung Chinese Heritage Museum - Kitchen

Kam Wah Chung Chinese Heritage Museum

(35 reviews)

I am currently working on assignment in John Day, Oregon. I had the pleasure of going to the museum…read morewith a guided tour. My tour guide was a tall guy, unfortunately, I cannot remember his name. He was very informative about the museum and about the home. I felt sad at one point because the last person to own the home/business, went for a simple procedure and unfortunately passed away. You can still see the date he left on the calendar. The museum was very informative and some of the patient letters were very touching. This is a very nice gym within the small town of John date. Also, when you go into the reception center/gift shop you will see all of the items people have found in their yards that date back to the early 1900s. I highly recommend visiting the museum with a guided tour.

An important piece of Oregon and Chinese history, a must see!…read more I felt very fortunate to have visited the Kam Wah Chung Museum on my recent trip to Oregon. Seeing how the early Chinese settlers came to the US under harsh working environment, racial discrimination, language barriers and away from their families made me realized how resilient and strong of all these Chinese men. Being part Chinese and an immigrant myself, I could relate to some of their struggles. Located in John Day on the main street, this musem contains two parts. The first part is the museum with glass cased exhibits with illustration of early Chinese settlers and brief descriptions of the lives of Doc Hay and Lung On. The second part of the museum is only available as a guided tour, where you can enter the living quarter and pharmacy of Doc Hay and Lung On. I highly recommend taking the guided tour of the living quarter/pharmacy of Doc Hay and Lung On, as the staff tried to preserve all the original details back in its days. Our tour guide was extremely knowledgeable, and she mentioned each single detail (down to mouse trap) in the house. The front of the house contains a red chair that Doc Hay would take your pulse and determine your health, with the pharmacy right behind his chair. We also saw Doc Hay's bedroom, common kitchen, sleeping quarters and Lung On's room. The most striking part of the tour was when guide mentioned how the Chinese settlers had to lock themselves in every evening to avoid getting shot by drunk white people. They also set up a water pump inside (vs. outside) of the house to avoid leaving the safety of the premise. Despite the harsh circumstances, I saw many posters on the walls of spending good time with friends and making huge fortunes. I admired their optimism and hard work under such extenuating circumstances. Overall, this is an important part of Oregon and Chinese history that you should definitely see. It is wonderful to see deliberate efforts are made to feature the contribution of minorities to the US history. It is also heartwarming and yet bittersweet to witness the obstacles our ancestors overcame to give better lives to future generations. Inspirational and highly recommend!

Grant County Historical Museum

Grant County Historical Museum

(4 reviews)

Who'd have thought that a dowdy old county historical society museum could be so f**kin' scary?…read more Grant County Historical Museum sets itself apart from other small museums in eastern Oregon by focusing on ghoulish curiosities, including two-headed calves and the personal effects of executed criminals. But these historical curios don't hold a candle to the museum's collection of hand-carved mannequins. There is no reasonable excuse for the appearance - nay, existence! - of these life-sized figures, carved with ever-so-much care and attention to look like the grimacing victims of a flash fire. Many of these mannequins have extremely realistic dentures shoved into their lipless mouths, ready to spring to life and chomp some hapless toddler's hand. All are draped into chairs and wagons or propped against corners, lolling corpselike and dangling empty sleeves. Look - I'm a 22-year-old skeptic, and there's no way anyone's going to convince me that the mannequins at the Grant County Historical Museum don't come alive at night and wreck up the place. Don't bring your little kids. Don't bring the elderly. Don't bring anyone with a heart condition. Bring a camera. Because despite the sheer visceral heart-stopping horrors to be found inside this unassuming museum, I highly recommend it.

I'd give this museum five stars even if I didn't have deep family ties to Grant County. The…read morevolunteer was so nice and happily looked in her files for my family. She also shared a few stories about her favorite artifacts, including a very cool walking stick that was borrowed at one point by the Smithsonian. I was last there in the mid 1990s and the place pretty much looks the same. There's a timeless feel to it. The museum definitely has something for everyone.

Gold Post - beer_and_wine - Updated May 2026

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