Home / Accueil

Lytton Joss House Site

145 Main Street, Lytton, Colombie-Britannique, Canada

Reconnu formellement en: 2016/01/27

View of Lytton BC, 1885, showing original Joss House at left (nearest building). Photo: City of Vancouver Archives Can N133.; City of Vancouver Archives, Can N133
Joss House at Lytton, 1885 (left, closest building)
Opening of replica Joss House (Lytton Chinese History Museum), Lytton, May 13, 2017. Photo: Lorna Fandrich; Lorna Fandrich, 2017
Opening of Lytton Chinese History Museum, 2017
Pas d'image

Autre nom(s)

s/o

Liens et documents

Date(s) de construction

Inscrit au répertoire canadien: 2017/06/02

Énoncé d'importance

Description du lieu patrimonial

Located on Main Street in downtown Lytton, British Columbia, this site was once the location of the Lytton Joss House, which served as a sacred building for the Chinese Canadian community in the area. As of May, 2017, it is the site of a new Chinese History Museum.

Valeur patrimoniale

The site of the former Lytton Joss House has historical, cultural, social and spiritual value, particularly for its former use as a house of worship for Chinese Canadians. .

Constructed in 1881 by Chinese workers who arrived in Lytton to work on the Canadian Pacific Railway, the place has high historical and spiritual value as the location of one of the first Joss Houses in B.C. and for its former use as an essential place of worship, spiritual sustenance and physical healing, and also as a gathering place for Chinese Canadians living, working and travelling through this area of the province.

Joss Houses were built throughout the province wherever Chinese migrants settled. The Lytton Joss House site is an important representation of the formerly common presence of Joss Houses along the Fraser River corridor, the Okanagan and the Kootenays. These places were dedicated to folk heroes, historical figures, Confucian, Taoist and Buddhist deities, and local protector gods, which in the case of the Lytton Joss House were Kwan Yin (goddess of mercy), Shen Nong (patron of herbal medicine) and Zhu Rong (protector against fire, disease and anger).

The site of the Lytton Joss House is important as a tangible reminder of the substantial Chinese Canadian history and influence in Lytton and the surrounding region, through their work in railway construction, in gold mining, as merchants and as innovative vegetable farmers. Its prominent place in the community is noted in part through its central location within a substantial Chinatown that included stores, laundries, rooming houses, a cemetery and herbal medicine shops. The building faced towards the river as is usual in places dedicated to Kwan Yin.

The Lytton Joss House was culturally and socially important for providing spiritual support for Chinese Canadians in very difficult times. It also provided social and medical support through its purpose of taking care of sick and injured railway workers.

In its wood frame construction and wood siding, the building was typical of its time, but was combined with an interior arrangement specific to a Joss house, which customarily included a main shrine hall, guest room, caretaker's room and community meeting hall.

Living spiritual and cultural values are embodied by the site, which is still recognized by local Buddhists as having spiritual power. In June of each year, the Lion's Gate Buddhist Priory, a branch of the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives, holds a ceremony dedicated to Kwan Yin at this location.

A lack of respect for Chinese sacred traditions is apparent in a land transaction in 1928, when the Joss House was sold to a local farmer by the Dominion Government despite protests from the Chinese community and the Consul-General of the Republic of China in Vancouver. The gods and goddesses were removed from the sacred building, which was then used for agricultural purposes.

The loss of the original Joss House is an intangible reminder of the devaluing of Chinese culture by the dominant European society.

Source: Province of British Columbia, Heritage Branch

Éléments caractéristiques

Not applicable.

Reconnaissance

Juridiction

Colombie-Britannique

Autorité de reconnaissance

Province de la Colombie-Britannique

Loi habilitante

Heritage Conservation Act, s.18

Type de reconnaissance

Lieu provincial reconnu (Reconnu)

Date de reconnaissance

2016/01/27

Données sur l'histoire

Date(s) importantes

1928/01/01 à 1928/01/01

Thème - catégorie et type

Exprimer la vie intellectuelle et culturelle
La philosophie et la spiritualité
Établir une vie sociale et communautaire
L'organisation communautaire
Un territoire à peupler
Immigration et migration

Catégorie de fonction / Type de fonction

Actuelle

Historique

Communauté
Local pour association fraternelle, organisation sociale ou de bienfaisance
Religion, rituel et funéraille
Centre religieux ou lieu de culte

Architecte / Concepteur

s/o

Constructeur

s/o

Informations supplémentaires

Emplacement de la documentation

Province of British Columbia, Heritage Branch

Réfère à une collection

Identificateur féd./prov./terr.

EbRj-218

Statut

Édité

Inscriptions associées

s/o

RECHERCHE DANS LE RÉPERTOIRE

Recherche avancéeRecherche avancée
Trouver les lieux prochesTROUVER LES LIEUX PROCHES ImprimerIMPRIMER
Lieux proches