San Jose's first Chinatown was located at the southwest corner of Market and San Fernando streets, near the present-day
Circle of Palms Plaza. City officials noted the Chinese presence by 1866. By January 1870, white residents had begun complaining to the
San Jose City Council about the concentration of Chinese people in the neighborhood. A couple weeks later, Chinatown burned to the ground while the
San Jose Fire Department did little to save it. Within weeks, the New Chinatown Land Association leased on Vine Street, near the
Guadalupe River. The
1870 census recorded 454 residents in the Vine Street Chinatown. The city's first Chinese temple, or
joss house, was later built there. Meanwhile, in March 1870, a wealthy Chinese businessman from San Francisco secured a ten-year lease of the original Market Street Chinatown's land. Pressure from Vine Street neighbors convinced some Chinese to return to Market Street. Severe flooding on the Guadalupe during the winter of 1871 to 1872 brought the short-lived Vine Street Chinatown to an end. The second Market Street Chinatown grew to about 1,400 people by 1876. By 1884, it occupied most of the block along
Market Plaza between San Fernando and San Antonio streets. On March 24, 1887, the city council declared Chinatown a
public nuisance and discussed options for legally removing the community from the city's center. On May 4, Chinatown burned to the ground in an intense arson fire while white residents looked on. Local newspapers cheered the neighborhood's destruction. The Market Street Chinatown's inhabitants temporarily resided at San Fernando and Vine streets before moving on to the
Woolen Mills Chinatown and
Heinlenville, both north of the city. On September 28, 2021, the city formally apologized for its past discrimination against the Chinese community, including its role in the 1887 fire. ==Woolen Mills Chinatown==