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Kimlau Square Visioning Happens Tuesday Night

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Kimball Square. Photo: NYC Parks Department.
Kimball Square. Photo: NYC Parks Department.

Tomorrow night, there’s a public visioning session on the renovation of Kimlau Square in Chinatown.

The mayor’s office and City Council member Margaret Chin have allocated $900,000 to make the space bordering Oliver Street and East Broadway more inviting.

The meeting will take place tomorrow from 6:30-8 p.m. at Mariners’ Temple Baptist Church, 3 Henry St.  Once designers have renderings of the park, they’ll go to Community Board 3 for approval. Tomorrow night’s session is meant to provide them guidance from the local community.

Questions? Email matthew.beck@parks.nyc.gov.

Here’s more from the Parks Dept. on the history of Kimlau Square:

In 1961, a local law named this island within Chatham Square in recognition of the contributions of Lt. Kimlau and the Lt. B.R. Kimlau Chinese Memorial Post 1291, founded by Chinese-American World War II veterans in 1945. Second Lieutenant Benjamin Ralph Kimlau (1918-1944) was a Chinese-American bomber pilot who died serving his country in World War II. Born in Concord, Massachusetts, Kimlau moved to New York City with his parents when he was fourteen. After graduating from Dewitt Clinton High School in 1937, Kimlau first traveled to China, where he witnessed firsthand Japanese military aggression. The next year, he returned to the United States and entered the Pennsylvania Military College (now the United States Army War College). Kimlau graduated with honors, earning a commission as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Field Artillery. Interested in airborne defense, Kimlau transferred from Field Artillery to the United States Army Air Force. Following flight school, he was assigned to the “Flying Circus,” the 380th Bombardment Group of the Fifth Air Force in Australia. Beginning on February 27, 1944, along with four other pilots, Kimlau embarked on a mission to bomb Japanese airbases around New Guinea. On March 5, 1944, Kimlau and his fellow pilots were ordered to attack the Japanese rear line at Los Negros, an island adjacent to New Guinea. During the attack, the Japanese defenders shot down the attacking U. S. bombers, killing Kimlau and the other pilots. For their heroism and devotion to duty on this occasion and several others, the members of 380th Bombardment Group earned two Presidential Unit Citations. The Post gifted the Lt. Kimlau Memorial monument in 1961 with the renaming of the park. This memorial, designed by architect Poy G. Lee (1900-1968), is located at the head of Oliver Street and is reminiscent of a triumphal arch. The memorial stands eighteen feet nine inches in height and is sixteen feet wide. Inscribed on the memorial is a dedication in both English and Chinese: “In Memory of the Americans of Chinese Ancestry who lost their Lives in Defense of Freedom and Democracy.”  The largest in New York City, the Post continues to promote numerous patriotic programs and community service initiatives within Chinatown.They have established and contributed to a capital fund for the construction of a recreation center at the Chinese Community Center, published the American Legion’s first bilingual newsletter, and teach new immigrants basic English.

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