Joe Shoong - Founder of National Dollar Stores
USINFO | 2013-05-27 13:43

 
Joe Shoong (1879-1961) was the patriarch of an Oakland Chinese-American family affiliated with the once widely known National Dollar stores. Born in San Francisco, the son of immigrants from the Guangdong province of China, Shoong opened a small retail clothing shop called "China Toggery," in 1903 at age 24, along with three other partners. Within four years, Shoong had bought out his partners and established more branches. He renamed the new retail chain National Dollar Stores, which grew to more than 50 outlets in California, Hawaii, Nevada, Arizona, Washington and Utah.
 
Shoong became a millionaire many times over, say history files.
 
 Longtime Oaklanders may remember the Oakland National Dollar Store at Washington and 11th streets, for many years the heart of downtown shopping. Nothing in the store sold for more than $1. The Shoong family home was in the Adams Point district, north of the lake where he kept his five cars. Their Mediterranean-style two-story home on Bellevue, now a city landmark, was designed by architect Julia Morgan. The cost to build the house in 1922 was $13,000.
 
In the decades to follow, Shoong's Adams Point home "became a hub of Chinese-American society," with such luminaries as Chiang Kai-shek coming for visits, causing the entire block to be "roped off and guarded around the clock by the FBI and the local police," say the files. During his later years, Shoong donated much of his wealth to philanthropic causes, including building a community center in Chinatown, still in use today (at 9th and Harrison streets) and endowing scholarships for Chinese-American students at the University of California. Shoong, as well as son Milton, contributed to the restoration of the landmark Paramount Theatre in the 1970s, and to a tree-top teahouse and dragon slide in Children's Fairyland.
 
In 1938, Shoong's stores began having labor problems. National Dollar's women's dresses, once manufactured on the premises were being supplied by a factory in San Francisco's Chinatown. Chinatown was the only part of labor-minded San Francisco without labor unions.
 
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