In its heyday in the 1960s and 70s, Yenching Palace was a landmark in Washington, D.C. Known for its iconic neon sign with the confusing backwards “Y,” it was frequented by celebrities and politicians. Today, it’s a humble Walgreens, tucked between Fire Department Engine Company 28 and a 7-Eleven.
It would be easy to walk by and have no idea the old building once served up Chinese food to guests like Mick Jagger, Art Garfunkel, Ann Landers, Henry Kissinger, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Or that a crucial moment in American history took place here: It was the final meeting place in negotiations to between the U.S. and Russia to resolve the Cuban Missile Crisis and avoid nuclear war.
As the story goes, ABC newsman John Scali, representing President John Kennedy, and Soviet Embassy counselor (and senior K.G. B. officer) Aleksander Fomin, representing the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, met covertly at Yenching in 1962 in second to last booth on the left to iron out the details of an agreement.
There are, of course, scant few details on the meeting, but the New York Times reported that the negotiations took place over the course of several meetings in local Washington establishments. Over lunch at the Willard Hotel the terms for settlement of the crisis were proposed—the promise not to invade Cuba in exchange for the missiles being removed—and the terms were agreed upon later at the Statler coffee shop. The next day the two men celebrated the conflict resolution with a Chinese dinner at Yenching Palace.
Yenching Palace was opened in 1955 by Van Lung, the son of Chinese warlord. Ownership passed down to his nephew, who, facing rising costs, leased the iconic building to Walgreens in 2007.