Log in


  • Home
  • News
  • 07/04/25 CHCP @ CAPHC July 4th Dutch Flat Parade & Gold Country Tour

07/04/25 CHCP @ CAPHC July 4th Dutch Flat Parade & Gold Country Tour

July 05, 2025 4:50 PM | Elyse Wong (Administrator)

By Samantha Lee, CHCP Member

The Dutch Flat Fourth of July Parade is one of California’s oldest Independence Day celebrations. Originating in the mid-19th century during the Gold Rush era, the parade emerged from both patriotic fervor and a need for community cohesion among the Sierra foothill’s diverse population, including miners, railroad workers, and settlers, notably a significant Chinese immigrant community. During the late 1800s, Chinese immigrants played a central role in constructing the Transcontinental Railroad and in developing Dutch Flat’s infrastructure, despite facing systemic racism and the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. Their contributions, enduring spirit, and resilience in the face of these injustices are inspiring. The Fourth of July celebration emerged as a way to unify a rugged and often transient population through a shared nationality. Yet paradoxically, it also highlighted the inequities and exclusions inherent in that identity. 

The 2025 Parade saw a significant and symbolic turnout with CHCP joining the Chinese American Pioneer Heritage Committee, the Locke Foundation, Chinese Railroad Workers Descendants Assoc, ChiAm and more. The positive response from the community is a testament to the collective effort in shifting the parade from celebration to active remembrance. This evolution mirrors a broader trend in American memory, where the Fourth of July is no longer only about fireworks and flags, but about asking whose freedom was celebrated then, and how we can expand that representation.

This year’s standout was a long snake puppet reminiscent of traditional dragon dance, and adorned with scale-like fabric that reflected the sunlight. It was a living metaphor: both playful and powerful. The snake, with its history in Chinese culture, symbolizes wisdom, power, and good luck. Some participants wore wooden hats—a nod to early Chinese laborers—and one marcher carried a papier mâché golden spike, referencing the ceremonial final spike driven into the Transcontinental Railroad tracks in 1869, a moment that symbolized completion but failed to fully acknowledge the Chinese laborers who made it possible until 2019.

Spectators reacted with applause and curiosity, many stopping afterward to speak with parade members about their participation. This community engagement is a nod to the past, where storytelling and cultural survival go hand in hand. The response from the community was overwhelmingly positive, with many expressing appreciation for the opportunity to honor the contributions of Chinese Americans to Dutch Flat's history.

The parade itself remains delightfully old-school in other ways: tractors pulling flower-covered floats, children on bicycles festooned with flags, vintage fire trucks, dogs in patriotic kerchiefs—it’s a Norman Rockwell scene filtered through a Gold Rush lens. But Chinese American presence completes that image, necessarily and beautifully. The march was both homage and intervention, reminding attendees that the American story, and especially California’s story, is more complete by honoring the Chinese lives that shaped its soil, tracks, and spirit.

In Dutch Flat, under the July sun, history walked—and danced—in the streets. And the parade, like the town itself, breathed a little deeper because of it.

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

CHCP is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization committed to providing an environment that is free from discrimination due to race, color, religion, creed, national origin, ancestry, disability, gender, sexual orientation, or age.


© Copyright 1996-2025. All rights reserved. Federal Tax ID #77-0156509

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software