This is a slightly modified version, now with pictures of postcards from my collection, of a couple posts I contributed to a thread in the Events category. I thought it might be of wider interest so decided to put the updated version here. Note that it was primarily intended as a response to some comments of Mike G and Cathy2 and is not at all a comprehensive discussion of early Chinese restaurants in Chicago.
The number of Chinese restaurants in Chicago exploded in the very late 19th/very early 20th centuries. According to a January 1902 article in the
Chicago Daily Tribune, ". . . now there are twenty times more Chinese restaurants in Chicago than when Moy began [somewhat after the Exposition] . . ." Many of these places were around Clark & Van Buren but they weren't confined to that enclave. Even in the very earliest years of the 20th century there were plenty in the Vice District, a bit east of the current Chinatown: "There is a renaissance in chop suey in Twenty-second street, between Wabash avenue and Clark street." This was the neighborhood of the Everleigh Club, Four Deuces and Colosimo's.
One well-known establishment, King Yen Lo at Clark & Van Buren, occupied the upper floor of Hinky Dink Kenna's saloon in the early 20th century.
King Yen Lo (postmarked 1909)
I think many of the earliest Chinese restaurants around Clark & Van Buren (and elsewhere) were quite inexpensive. The 1902
Tribune article notes they competed successfully with the cheapest American lunchrooms and were patronized by actors and actresses, policemen, and reporters. The area around Clark & Van Buren wasn't particularly savory what with all the gambling rooms, opium dens and brothels.
The Standard Guide to Chicago for the Year 1892 says of the area, "Respectable people are not in much danger down here, for the very good reason that respectable people are seldom to be found loitering around this neighborhood."
There was also strip of more upscale Chinese restaurants in the north Loop in the early 20th century. Among the earliest was King Joy Lo which opened on Randolph in 1906 but it definitely wasn't the first on that street. I believe these places were patronized mainly by non-Chinese theater goers.
King Joy Lo, New Year's Eve, 1906
In general the Chinese restaurants on Randolph Street appealed to a higher-class clientele. My impression is that King Joy Lo was the first to up the ante with its elaborate interior and live orchestra. I'm sure this place wasn't cheap. For several decades there seemed to be an escalation of elaborateness with each new restaurant trying to outdo its competition. For me, the culmination of the Chinese Restaurant Wars was Hoe Sai Gai with its spectacular art deco interior.
Hoe Sai Gai, Modern Room
Hoe Sai Gai, Ming Room
Won Kow
Won Kow is the oldest surviving Chinese restaurant in Chinatown (1927). It's better than nothing but I truly regret never having a chance to have a drink in the Ming Room at Hoe Sai Gai. It's painful to think about all the other great Chinese restaurants (not to mention the Polynesian places!) that we've lost.