
How Lytton Chinese History Museum rose from the ashes, almost five years after fire
LYTTON — Lorna Fandrich recalled walking into the burned out site of the Lytton Chinese History Museum in October 2021, about four months after it and most of the village were destroyed by a wildfire that claimed two lives.
Clad in protective gear, she sifted through foot-deep ashes in the hope of recovering some of the artifacts that documented the Chinese community’s presence in the B.C. Interior, stretching back to the 19th century.
“Those were sad days,” said Fandrich, who originally built the museum in 2017 after discovering that a plot of land her family owned had once been the site of the Chinese community’s joss house, or temple.
“After the fire was a major decision on whether I’d rebuild or not. I was still hoping to tell this Chinese story, but the building was insured for far less than the cost of construction.”