Austin, Texas · Est. 1880s

The Lung Family
A Century in Austin

From the mountains of Guangdong, China, to the railroad camps of California and Texas, to a beloved string of Austin restaurants — the story of one Chinese American family across five generations.

From 1897 to 1990, the Lung family fed Austin for three generations — through cafés, Chinese kitchens, and sandwich shops. Theirs is a story of migration, resilience, community, and cuisine that stretched from a small county in southern China to the heart of the Texas capital.

Origins · Kaiping, Guangdong, China
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Kaiping, Guangdong Province, China
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Before 1876

A Family in Kaiping

The Lung family originates in Kaiping (Hoi Ping), Guangdong Province, in southern China. Their surname in Chinese is Zhou (or Chou). When the patriarch arrived in America, "Zhou" was anglicized to "Joe" — a common transformation for Chinese immigrants navigating a new country.

Guangdong Province Zhou / Chou Family
The Railroad Years · 1870s–1880s
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Chinese Railroad Workers, Texas, 1870s
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1876

Arrival in America

Joe (Zhou) Lung emigrates from China at approximately 12 years of age to help build the American railroads — joining the tens of thousands of Chinese laborers who were the backbone of the nation's rail expansion. He arrives in California before being recruited to Texas.

"His grandfather came to America in 1876 to help build the railroads; he was 12." — Austin American-Statesman
Railroad Era California → Texas
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Congress Avenue, Austin · circa 1880s
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1880s

Settling in Austin

After laying tracks northeast of Austin for the Houston & Texas Central Railway, Joe and his brother Fong Lung settle in the city — among the very first Chinese residents of Austin. The brothers open a grocery store on Congress Avenue, beginning the family's long commercial relationship with the capital city.

Austin's First Chinese Residents
Building a Family · 1880s–1910s
1882

The Chinese Exclusion Act

The U.S. government passes the Chinese Exclusion Act, banning Chinese laborers from entering the country and barring Chinese immigrants from citizenship. The law strips away many civil rights — restricting marriage, property ownership, and employment — and will remain in effect, in various forms, until the 1940s.

The Lung family, already established in Austin, must navigate decades of institutional discrimination while quietly building their community.

Discrimination Legal Barrier
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Joe & Dora Lung Family Portrait
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1889

Joe Lung Marries Dora Wong

Joe Lung marries Dora Wong. Together they will raise six sons and three daughters in Austin — a family whose achievements will span education, missionary work, military service, and decades of Austin restaurant history.

Lung Family Grows
The Restaurant Legacy Begins · 1897–1926
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Lung Family Café, East 6th & San Jacinto
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1897

The First Café Opens

The Lung family launches a café at the corner of East Sixth and San Jacinto Streets — the founding moment of a restaurant legacy that will span nearly a century. The café serves American-style food and quickly becomes a fixture of downtown Austin life.

1897 – Lung's Café Founded
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Inez Lung, born April 18, 1900
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April 18, 1900

Inez Lung Is Born

Inez Lung is born to Joe and Dora Lung in Austin — the child who will go on to become one of the most remarkable members of the family, and one of the most extraordinary Chinese American women of her era.

Generation 2
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The Lung House · 1605 Canterbury Street
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1917

The Canterbury Home & the Kaiping Tower

Joe Lung purchases the family home at 1605 Canterbury Street, which becomes a community anchor in East Austin for decades. He is known for providing financial assistance to neighbors of all backgrounds — Chinese, African American, and Latino alike.

The same year, using remittances earned in Texas, Joe commissions a watchtower (diaolou) in Kaiping, China — a striking transpacific symbol of his success and connection to his homeland.

Lung House National Register of Historic Places
1918

The Café Moves to San Jacinto

The American-style café relocates to 507 San Jacinto Street, where it will continue operating as a beloved Austin institution for another three decades, closing in 1948.

507 San Jacinto St.
Inez Lung — Scholar & Missionary · 1919–2004
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University of Texas at Austin · 1919
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1919

Inez Lung Enters the University of Texas

Inez Lung is admitted to the University of Texas at Austin with a full scholarship — becoming the first Chinese female student to attend the university. She earns a Master's degree in English, graduating from Saint Mary's Academy and UT. She later does graduate work at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth.

First Chinese Female UT Student Master's in English
1926

The Patriarch Passes — Sam Takes Over

Joe Lung (the patriarch) passes away. His son Sam Lung, who had been attending the University of Texas, drops out to take over the family restaurant business — ensuring the legacy continues into a second generation.

Generation 2: Sam Lung
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Inez Lung departs for China · 1928
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1928 – 1936

Inez Goes to China as a Missionary

Sponsored by the First Baptist Church of Austin, Inez Lung travels to Canton (Guangzhou), China, to teach high school English at Pooi To School. In 1936 she officially becomes the first Chinese American Southern Baptist foreign missionary to China.

As wartime invasions spread, Inez and her students move from city to city, never stopping their work.

China Mission First Chinese American Southern Baptist Missionary
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WWII — Burma Road, 1945
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1940s – 1945

World War II: Behind Enemy Lines

During the Second World War, Inez Lung continues her mission work behind Japanese lines in China. Her family in Austin receives no word of her fate for years.

In 1945, she escapes China with the 3rd Marine Division via the Burma Road. She returns to Texas for six months — then goes straight back to China.

"No one knew if she was dead or alive. She got out of China in 1945 with the 3rd Marine Division on the Burma Road." — Joe Lung, 2014
WWII Burma Road
Lung's Chinese Kitchen · 1945–1974
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Lung's Chinese Kitchen · Red River Street
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c. 1945–1948

Austin's First Chinese Restaurant

Under Sam Lung's direction, the family converts their American-style café into Lung's Chinese Kitchen at 1128 Red River Street (Red River & 12th) — the first Chinese restaurant in Austin. The menu is so novel to Austinites that it includes instructions on how to use chopsticks.

For decades, it is "pretty much all that Austinites knew about locally served Asian food." A landmark of Austin's culinary history.

Austin's First Chinese Restaurant 1128 Red River St.
1948

An Era Closes — And Inez Flees to Hong Kong

The original Lung family café on San Jacinto Street closes after more than 50 years of continuous operation.

In China, the Communist takeover forces Inez Lung to flee — she escapes to Hong Kong, where she teaches at a girls' school until her retirement.

1948
1958 – 1959

Inez Returns to Austin

After 30 years as a missionary in China, Inez Lung retires and returns to the United States, settling back in Austin in 1958. She marries in April 1959 and lives out her remaining years in the city, traveling the country to give speeches about her extraordinary life.

30 Years in China Returns to Austin
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Lung's Chinese Kitchen interior
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1974

Lung's Chinese Kitchen Closes

Lung's Chinese Kitchen closes in 1974, a casualty of urban renewal. After nearly three decades as Austin's premier Chinese restaurant, the Red River Street location shutters. Sam Lung passes away not long after. The family's central kitchen legacy ends, but the story is not yet over.

1974 · End of an Era
Joe Lung's Austin · 1960s–1997
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Joe's Sandwich Shops, Austin
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1960s

Joe Lung Takes Over: The "Joe's" Chain

Joe Michael Lung Sr. — grandson of the founder — takes over the family business and launches a series of popular casual sandwich shops called Joe's. He had grown up on Canterbury Street, attended Austin High School, graduated from the Defense Language Institute in 1962, and served as a German specialist with the National Security Agency before returning to the family trade.

"They couldn't believe it: A Chinese guy speaking German." — Joe Lung
Generation 3 Joe's Sandwich Shops
1990

The Last Restaurant Closes

Joe Lung sells the final family sandwich shop. After 93 continuous years of Lung family restaurant operations in Austin (1897–1990), the era of feeding the city comes to an end.

1897 – 1990 Three Generations
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Texas State Capitol · Austin
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1997 onward

Joe at the Capitol

After suffering a heart attack in 1997 — like his father before him — Joe Lung slows down and takes a role at the Capitol Gift Shop in the Capitol Extension, where his sunny smile and spellbinding storytelling welcome visitors from around the world. He becomes as much of a landmark as the building itself.

Capitol Gift Shop Austin Character
Legacy & Recognition · 2004 – Present
2004

Inez Lung Lee Passes at 104

Inez Lung Lee — UT's first Chinese female student, China missionary, wartime survivor, and lifelong Austinite — passes away at the age of 104. Her life spanned the Chinese Exclusion Act, two World Wars, the Communist Revolution, and the Civil Rights era.

1900 – 2004
June 27, 2018

Joe Michael Lung Sr. Passes

Joe Lung, the final restaurateur of the Lung dynasty and beloved Austin storyteller, passes away at age 77 from complications of a stroke. He is survived by his wife Diane, sons Mike and Mark, and four grandchildren.

That same year, the Austin Public Library launches the digital exhibition Pioneers from the East: Austin's First Chinese Families, featuring the Lung family story prominently.

1940 – 2018 Pioneers from the East · 2018
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Lung House · National Register of Historic Places
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Present

The Lung House: A National Landmark

The family home at 1605 Canterbury Street is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, recognized for its significance in ethnic history as a symbol of the Lung family's resilience and the broader Chinese immigrant experience in Austin.

National Register of Historic Places 1605 Canterbury St.
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Roots Unveiled · Austin Public Library · 2025
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May – August 2025

Roots Unveiled: The Story Lives On

The Roots Unveiled exhibition at the Austin Public Library, organized by the Asian American Art & Culture Initiative and curated by Sylvia XuHua Zhan, features Joe Lung and Inez Lung as central figures in a 200-year chronicle of Chinese Americans in Texas. A video art installation based on Joe Lung's family and Inez's ancestral journey back to Kaiping premieres as part of the exhibition.

Roots Unveiled · 2025 Austin Public Library

The Lung Family of Austin, Texas

Sources: Austin American-Statesman (2018) · Austin Public Library — Lung Family · AustinTexas.gov · Texas Historical Commission National Register · Asian American Art & Culture Initiative

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Lung's Chinese Kitchen
Lung's Chinese Kitchen