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  • 04/29/26 SJ Spotlight: San Jose to name new park in honor of Chinese American pioneer

04/29/26 SJ Spotlight: San Jose to name new park in honor of Chinese American pioneer

April 30, 2026 5:57 PM | Elyse Wong (Administrator)

A photo taken during the 80th birthday celebration for Bill Kee, (pictured third from top right) was featured on the cover of a pamphlet about his life. Photo courtesy of the Kee family.

The following are excerpts from the 04/29/26 San Jose Spotlight:

By Keith Menconi

San Jose’s newest park will bear the name of a pioneering Chinese American business leader.

Councilmembers unanimously approved a plan Tuesday to transform an undeveloped 1.2-acre parcel of land in southwest San Jose into a new park, named in honor of the late Bill Kee, who led a fight in the 1940s to preserve San Jose’s longest standing Chinatown.

As councilmembers prepared to vote on the park plan, which supporters said will bring sorely needed open space to a densely populated residential area just west of Highway 87, they heard from two of Kee’s descendants, who spoke in support of the name selection.

“This was such a wonderful culmination of a long time,” Gerrye Wong, Kee’s 93-year-old daughter, told San José Spotlight directly after the vote. “This is showing San Jose is recognizing the impact and the importance of the Chinese community.”

The planned park site sits at the terminus of Rinconada Drive, not far from the Almaden Expressway and Curtner Avenue off-ramp. San Jose acquired the land in 2013 as part of a development agreement that paved the way for the construction of the neighboring Latitude 37 apartment complex.

[...]

The name Bill Kee Park won out in a recent community poll.

Kee, who died in 1989 at 86, rose to local prominence in San Jose during a time when the city’s Chinese American community faced broad discrimination. The manager of a well-known San Jose department store, Kee broke the color barriers at a number of local organizations, becoming the first Chinese American admitted to the San Jose Rotary Club, the Scottish Rite fraternity and the San Jose Merchants Association, according to a pamphlet on his life distributed by his family.

“He worked doubly hard knowing that he needed to be a role model for a Chinese man to assimilate in a not so welcoming period of time for Asians during the Depression and World War II,” Kelly Matsuura, Kee’s granddaughter, said during Tuesday’s meeting.

Kee spoke before the City Council in 1945, imploring San Jose’s elected leaders not to demolish the Ng Shing Gung Temple in the city’s downtown. Originally built in 1888, by the 1940s the structure was the last remaining building from a historic Chinese enclave known as Heinlenville.

While Kee’s efforts only granted the building a temporary reprieve from the wrecking ball — it was demolished in 1949 — he is credited with bringing public attention to the temple’s importance. Decades later in 1991, San Jose incorporated a recreation of the temple into History Park, and today the structure houses a museum of South Bay Chinese American history.

Read the full SJ Spotlight news article: 04/29/26 San Jose Spotlight

Museum Address:

History Park
635 Phelan Avenue
San Jose, CA 95112

In Ng Shing Gung Building

Mailing Address:

PO Box 5366
San Jose, CA 95150-5366

Email: info@chcp.org

Chinese Historical & Cultural Project
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