“Hop Alley has rich ties to Asian culture in Denver, beyond the name alone.”
In the midst of preparing for their grand opening, Lee and Somma were thrilled when Carl Teshima stopped by the restaurant, ostensibly there just to deliver produce. While it is relevant that Teshima works at Pacific Mercantile, a respected grocer of mainly Japanese goods, the fact that his parents used to own the building at 3500 Larimer, now home to Hop Alley, is a striking twist of fate. Despite his inclination to revitalize regional Chinese cuisine in the heart of Denver, Lee himself was unaware of the building’s history prior to signing the lease. Therefore, Teshima, who was similarly surprised to find the place where he grew up had been transformed into a Chinese restaurant, was able to deliver more than provisions when he let the new tenants in on their building’s history…
3500 Larimer: The History
As Teshima tells it, roughly 60 years after the Hop Alley riot, his father, Uhachiro Teshima, re-established the food production company Rafu Shoyu at 3500 Larimer, the same building that today houses Hop Alley. The elder Teshima and his employees had been forced to abandon their original business in Los Angeles per President Roosevelt’s executive order evicting all Japanese-Americans from the west coast in light of the attack on Pearl Harbor. Sent to Heart Mountain Relocation Center in northwest Wyoming—one of 10 internment camps established for the purpose of resettling Japanese-Americans who called the coast home—Uhachiro Teshima made the most of his culinary expertise and cut a deal that allowed him to leave Heart Mountain in Wyoming to come to nearby Denver (Colorado Governor Ralph Carr was a fierce opponent of anti-Japanese sentiment, which is one reason Teshima ended up here). He agreed to do what he could to help camp officials improve the conditions in the camps at large—one of the main complaints therein was the low quality and/or unavailability of traditional Japanese foods.
When the war ended and Uhachiro Teshima no longer needed to supply the internment camps, he nevertheless continued to operate Rafu Shoyu out of 3500 Larimer, providing bean sprouts, wonton and eggroll skins, dried noodles and fried noodles to Chinese restaurants throughout Colorado, Wyoming and New Mexico. He did so up until his death in 1962, at which point his wife Yoriko Teshima took over. She then sold the company 10 years later to Tony Kajiwara and Roy Nagai, who operated Oriental Foods Inc., the oft-mentioned wonton commissary, from 1972 up until late last year when Tommy Lee and Hop Alley come into the picture. In another wild twist that brings the narrative full circle, Nagai married into the family that owns Pacific Mercantile to this day, which is where Carl Teshima now works and currently provides dry goods and tofu for Hop Alley—thus continuing the legacy of his family and their post-war efforts to sustain Asian cuisine here in Denver.
Though decades have passed since his family has had anything to do with the building, Carl Teshima’s enthusiasm for the mere fact of Hop Alley’s existence serves as additional vindication for Lee’s venture.
“I think it’s great what they did [with the space]” said Teshima.
Somma, who wanted to know every little detail about the old layout, was honored to have Teshima’s blessing in the end.
“It was such a crazy thing to hear that [history], and he was really happy, which made a lot of our days, honestly,” he said. “Because sometimes, especially when you’re talking about moving into a long-existing neighborhood and doing something a little different, it can be a touchy subject. It just felt like we didn’t ruin anything.”
Indeed, given the amount of press and early praise bestowed upon the restaurant in only a little more than a month’s time, Hop Alley’s impact is far from ruinous. Rather, Lee and Somma have built upon their earlier endeavors and seem committed to making further expressions that will factor into an ongoing renaissance of Asian cuisine in the mile high…
Matthew,
Great article but could you put down that Hop means together/join in chinese and that isn’t just a slang term for opium? I understand that opium was procured in Hop Alley and people just weren’t creative enough back than to think of a better slang term for it. There are businesses and asian associations through out the country and nation that use the word Hop in their names, by only stating it was slang for opium gives a negative view.
Thank you