Mai Wah Society


Preserving and Interpreting Butte's Asian Heritage Since 1991

  P.O. Box 404, Butte, MT 59703

(406) 723-3231

info@maiwah.org



View the Mai Wah News
by clicking
here.




Click here to see details about the exciting archeological dig in Butte's Chinatown





Click here to see a
slideshow by Yahoo.com
about the Chinese New Year
in Butte, Montana


Our permanent exhibit describes the Butte Chinese Experience. See details here.












The Southern Poverty Law Center has recognized the Mai Wah Society. To see what they say, visit Tolerance.org.



We are a proud member of
Montana Shares, a federation
of education, advocacy and
service organizations supporting
human, cultural and natural
resources in Montana.




Show off your Wah by wearing a Mai Wah T-shirt in the Chinese New Year of the Rat. Sizes from small to XXL in all colors.Colors are Chestnut, Leaf, Pine and Cedar. We still have shirts from previous Years of the Boar, Dog, Rooster, Monkey and Goat, too.
Generic Mai Wah: XL, bright yellow and bright green. To order, send a check for $15 for each shirt to Mai Wah Society, P.O. Box 404, Butte, MT 59703.

The Butte Chinese: A Brief History of Chinese Immigrants in Southwest Montana, a 24-page study guide for $4.25. To order, send check or money order to The Butte Chinese, Mai Wah Society, P.O. Box 404, Butte, MT 59703.

The Wah Chong Tai Mercantile in Butte around 1905.

The Mai Wah Society is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization established for educational, charitable, and scientific purposes, including research and public education about the history, culture, and conditions of Asian people in the Rocky Mountain West.

The Society collects and preserves artifacts, preserves historic buildings and sites, presents public exhibits, and supports research and publication of materials of scholarly and general interest.

Among other projects, the Society is rehabilitating and restoring the Wah Chong Tai Co. and
the Mai Wah Noodle Parlor buildings to hold permanent and temporary public exhibits to interpret the Asian history of Butte, Montana, and the Rocky Mountain West. In addition to preserving and restoring these physical remnants, the Mai Wah Society sponsors public lectures, workshops and movies.

The Mai Wah Museum's
permanent exhibit uses artifacts and photographs to tell the story of Asian immigration to the inland West, especially to Butte. The display contains many original artifacts from the original store and noodle parlor that have made their way from cold storage for public display.

Another notable artifact is on display. Mai Wah board members on a visit to Nevada City recognized a nameplate that once hung over the Wah Chong Tai Mercantile. The Mai Wah now borrows the artifact from the Montana Heritage Commission and it is placed on display in its original location in the area of the museum that was once the Wah Chong Tai Mercantile.


One of its main events of the year, The Mai Wah Society celebrates the arrival of the Chinese New Year with its annual New Year's Parade, the shortest and loudest (and often coldest) such parade in the world.

The 2008 Chinese New Year's parade was held on Saturday, February 9th to honor the arrival of the Year of the (Butte) Rat.

The parade began at the
Butte-Silver Bow Courthouse (155 W. Granite St.) at 3 pm and proceeded through the streets of Uptown Butte accompanied by noisemakers and firecrackers, led by Montana's parade dragon (the dragon was a gift to the people of Montana from the people of Taipei) to the Mai Wah Museum at 17 W. Mercury Street.

There, the lighting of more than 10,000 firecrackers will welcome the arrival of the New Year while parade goers enjoy refreshments provided by the Mai Wah Society.


If you have comments or questions about Butte's Asian heritage, or you would like to know more details about the projects of the Mai Wah Society, please contact us.

To contribute to help continue the Society's efforts, send any donation large or small to Mai Wah Society,P.O. Box 404, Butte, MT 59703, or send e-mail to
info@maiwah.org.
 
All donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law.



The answer to the question of why a large community of Asian immigrants settled in Southwest Montana is found in the rich heritage of Butte, Montana.


Wah Chong Tai Co. & Mai Wah Noodle Parlor || Restocking the Wah Chong Tai ||
 What We Do ||  Related Links ||
 

Would you like to see information about Montana in Chinese?
Click on the horses
above to visit www.montana-chinese.org.
 

Copyright 2008 by the Mai Wah Society. All rights reserved.