Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏Collections馆藏

The Kimlau Memorial Arch, located at Chatham Square in New York’s Chinatown, was erected in 1961 by the American Legion, Lt. B.R. Kimlau Post 1291. It honors U.S. service members of Chinese ancestry that have died serving their country. The granite arch was designed by architect Poy Gum Lee as a modern take on the traditional ceremonial gateway. It was named after U.S. Army Air Corps 2nd Lieutenant Benjamin Ralph Kimlau, a former resident of Chinatown, who was shot down in 1944 during World War II.