Overview
Housed near the original emigration departure hall, this museum tells the story of the one million Koreans who left through Incheon's port for Hawai'i, Mexico, and beyond between 1902 and the 1960s.
Highlights
- Departure hall recreation: A life-size replica of the wooden waiting room where emigrants spent their last hours on Korean soil.
- Personal stories: Letters, photographs and interview recordings from first-generation Korean diaspora families.
- Interactive timeline: A touchscreen wall tracing Korean emigration patterns across a century.
History
The museum opened in 2008 to mark the centenary of the first large-scale Korean emigration to Hawai'i's sugar plantations and is one of the few immigration-focused museums in East Asia.
Visitor Tips
- Tip: Free admission. English-language brochures are available at the entrance.
- Tip: Allow time to watch the 15-minute documentary screened in the basement theatre.
- Duration: 45–75 minutes.