In 1921, Kamenosuke Aoki along with other farmers went to Hellman’s Ranch to grow chili peppers for a chili pepper company who owned the land. The farmers lived on the land and were called “Hellmanites” because of how they lived and worked the land. The farmers would have to transport their crops from the farm to the chili pepper kilns dry houses in Huntington Beach to dry. Kamenosuke set up one of his ware-houses for the farmers to practice Judo and Kendo. Kamenosuke called this the “Aoki Kendo Hall”. In 1934 most of the farmers had left Hellman Ranch. Aoki was the last to leave but continued farming in the same area.
Aoki was tired of growing chili peppers, so he decided to try farming in Oceanside CA. Kamenosuke and his son Iwao, decided to grow strawberries as their main crop. Growing strawberries flourished and was becoming successful until the war broke out.
Aoki was taken to an internment camp in Poston, Arizona until the war ended. Aoki had entrusted all his land and equipment to a company that would take control while he was gone. The company misappropriated all his assets and equipment, and Aoki lost everything.
After the war, Aoki returned to the Talbert area in Fountain Valley CA. where he farmed near Newhope and Warner Ave. His main crops were cauliflower, tomatoes, chili peppers and cabbage. He also farmed the property he owned and lived at on Beach Blvd and Ellis Ave in Huntington Beach until 1964.
Aoki Family Portrait: Iwao, Shiro, Chieko, Hitoshi, Yaeko, Kamenosuke, Iku
Hellman ranch farmers led by Kamenosuke who were called "Hellmanites"
Iwao Aoki grading his farm for strawberries in Oceanside, CA
Aoki's Chili pepper trucks at Chili dry houses in front of "Kendo Hall"
Peppers transported to Huntington Beach Chili kilns warehouses
Kamenosuke and Iwao cultivating the ground at Hellman's ranch
Iwao harvesting cauliflower on his farm in Fountain Valley, CA
Inspection of the first experimental use of liquid fertilizer in drip irrigation system