Historic Businesses of Chinatown/Little Bourke St

This interactive map documents the Chinese storekeepers/businesses in Little Bourke St from 1900 to 1920 and 1940. Use it to search for individuals, business and specific economic activity. Discover their locations in Little Bourke St and nearby surrounds.

This resource is based on the work of Sophie Couchman. Tong Yun Gai (Street of the Chinese): Investigating patterns of work and social life in Melbourne’s Chinatown 1900-1920 Master of Arts (Public History), Monash University, 2000

NB. This map is based on data transcribed from the Historic Sands & McDougall directories and inaccuracies exist due to historical address changes. Locations are only an approximation of the actual locations.

Detail of Little Bourke St photograph by Airspy c1927, State Library of Victoria

“Chinatowns and the people who live and work within them have been subject to some powerful stereotypes and generalisations that obscure the diversity of experience and understanding of these areas. The objective of this thesis is to reveal the diversity of Melbourne’s Chinatown in the 1900 to 1920 period through a detailed examination of the lives and businesses of those who lived in the Swanston to Russell Street block of the eastern end of Little Bourke Street. This approach builds on a trend in recent research towards more detailed regional studies of Chinese communities across Australia. By understanding the minutiae of life in this block in the broader context of Chinese and Australian history it is possible to move beyond generalisations and create new understandings of Melbourne’s Chinatown.

Sands and McDougall Street Directories were used to construct a spatial framework. The database created was part of my commissioned work with the Museum of Chinese Australian History. This spatial framework was overlain with a wide range of other primary sources. The use of electronic databases and a spatial approach for collecting and analysing material assisted overcome the particular difficulties of searching for Chinese names within English language records. Detailed vignettes of the lives of individuals and organisations at different times and locations emerged from this spatial overlay of information. These vignettes are discussed geographically like a walking tour. As the narrative progresses along Little Bourke Street the nature of the people and place emerges.”

Sophie Couchman

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