After working for the mill for a short while, Zenhichi Harui and Zenmatsu Seko, (brothers with different last names because Zenmatsu took his wife’s last name), started a small fruit and vegetable farm on New Brooklyn Road in Bainbridge Island in Washington State. In 1913 they built Bainbridge Gardens. Harui and Seko procured 23 acres of land off Miller Road where they built Bainbridge Gardens Grocery and Nursery along with several ornamental gardens, farmland for growing plants for the nursery, and a home for their families. The beautiful ornamental gardens were a favorite spot for young children to play in. Shiki Harui and Hatsuno Seko, wives of Zenhichi and Zenmatsu, often stood in the Bainbridge Gardens’ greenhouses tending to their prize- winning chrysanthemums.
Before the war, Bainbridge Island was made up of several small communities, each with their own grocery store and post office. Bainbridge Gardens was in the heart of the Fletcher bay community, and became a gathering place to visit with friends and neighbors.
Harui and Seko had a thriving grocery store. The store was rented during WWII. Tenants kept up the building so it was in good shape upon the Haruis and Sekos return after the war.
However, upon their return, the brothers were devastated to find their lush gardens and nursery damaged beyond repair. The beautiful plants were stolen or had died; the display gardens were ruined, and the greenhouses had collapsed.
Zenhichi Harui attempted to rebuild Bainbridge Gardens, but he was getting on in age and had little savings. He was never able to get the business back to where it was before the war. Thirty years later, his son Junkoh would finally re-build Bainbridge Gardens at the same location and today it is once again a beautiful and thriving business.
—photos and history courtesy of Bainbridge Island Japanese American Community, bijac.org
Bainbridge Gardens, a community gathering spot
Children Played in the Garden
Harui and Seko's Bainbridge Gardens Nursery
Grocery store
Bainbridge Gardens Farm and Grocery store
Upon returning from the war, found ruins
Rebuilding Bainbridge Gardens