Asian American Comparative Collection:
Classes and Tours
Priscilla Wegars, Ph.D., Volunteer Curator
Laboratory of Anthropology
University of Idaho
P. O. Box 441111
Moscow, Idaho 83844-1111 USA
208-885-7075
pwegars@uidaho.edu
Classes and Tours
The descriptions below are of trips that have been successfully offered
in the past. Please inquire if you are interested in any of them.

Sign inside Polly Bemis's cabin. Photo by P. Wegars.
The World of Polly Bemis
Brief
Description: Idaho's most remarkable pioneer Chinese
woman, Polly Bemis, arrived in 1872. Following their 1894 marriage, she
and Charlie
Bemis
homesteaded on the remote Salmon River. Their first cabin burned
in 1922, and Charlie died shortly afterwards. Polly's neighbors built
another
cabin for her, where she lived until just before her death in 1933. It
is now on the National Register of Historic Places. During our
three-day,
two-night adventure into rugged north central Idaho we will visit
Polly
Bemis's cabin and grave, and
Charlie Bemis's grave on the
main
Salmon River, today easily accessible only by jet boat. We will
also
visit Lewiston's
Beuk Aie Temple, now restored and on permanent
exhibit at the Lewis-Clark Center for Arts & History in Lewiston,
as
well as
The Historical Museum at St. Gertrude
in Cottonwood, where
some of Polly's personal possessions are housed. Click
here
for detailed itinerary of a previous trip.

Chinese rock house near Half and Half Rapids,
Lower Salmon River. Photo by P. Wegars.
Chinese Mining on the Lower Salmon
River
Trip
Description: Chinese miners first arrived in north central
Idaho in the 1860s to work in the newly- discovered gold fields, some
of
which were on the remote, roadless, lower Salmon River. Today, many
signs
of their presence can still be seen, including some striking remains of
rock
dwellings. During this three-day, two-night float trip and
rafting
adventure, a brief layover at Packers Creek will enable us to
examine
Chinese miners' rock dwellings, hydraulic workings, man-made
reservoirs,
and Chinese artifacts. We will also visit other Chinese sites
along
this 55-mile stretch of the Salmon and Snake rivers.
Participants
can also sample Chinese culture and cuisine, try their luck at gold
panning and Chinese games, and learn to identify
Chinese
artifacts.
Chinese
Pioneers in the Northwest
Trip
Description: This
two day, one night adventure
into northeastern Oregon will feature visits to Baker City's Chinese
cemetery and to the world-renowned
Kam Wah Chung and Company Museum
in John Day. Its isolated location has helped preserve this
fully-furnished
store and herbal medicine shop dating to the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. We will also explore two unique
archaeological
sites created by mid- to late nineteenth-century Chinese placer
miners.
One, called the Ah Hee Diggings (earlier known as the "Chinese
Walls"),
comprises some 60 acres of hand-stacked, wall-like, rock
tailings.
The other, at Union Creek, has an impressive three-tiered,
rock-walled,
water delivery channel, originally fed by two earthen dams.
Return to AACC
March 2007/tours.htm/pwegars@uidaho.edu