Almanac note · History and culture
Weaverville Joss House keeps a Chinese Gold Rush story in the mountains
Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park preserves a 1874 Taoist temple, Chinese immigrant history, Gold Rush-era community life, artifacts, worship, and mountain-town memory.
Weaverville Joss House is a small mountain-town stop with a much bigger California story inside it. The temple sits in Trinity County, far from the state’s best-known Chinatowns. That distance is part of why the place matters.
The current temple was built in 1874 after earlier buildings burned. It is California’s oldest continuously used Chinese temple. It is also a Taoist temple, a historic park, a museum, and still a place of worship.
The site connects to Chinese immigrant life during and after the Gold Rush. People came for mining work, trade, community, and survival. They also faced special taxes, unfair treatment, and pressure to leave. The Joss House helps keep that story local and specific instead of letting it disappear into a broad Gold Rush summary.
Inside and around the park, visitors can learn through art objects, pictures, mining tools, items tied to the 1854 Tong War, and the preserved temple setting. The donation by Moon Lim Lee and Dorothy Lee helped protect the place for the public.
California history includes missions, railroads, big cities, and quieter mountain-town stories too. A quiet temple in Weaverville can show how Chinese communities shaped mountain towns. Look up tour details and hours ahead of a visit. Then give the place the respect you would give any active sacred site.
Where to see it
Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park in Weaverville.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 1, 2026
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