A 10-acre estate from the 1920s to early 2000s, the Hoshi Farm was most famous for its flowers.
Noboru Hoshi emigrated from Japan, arriving in Victoria, BC in 1906. In 1913 he married Sato Sato in Washington State. They had six children; Yuri, Dorothy, Henry, Margaret, Nora, and Sherman. They raised cattle, rabbits, potatoes, berries and flowers.
The Hoshi greenhouse business, Vashon Garden Company (Vashon Gardens), was known for its flowers: chrysanthemums, roses, calla lilies and zinnias. Family lore says some of the chrysanthemum heads grew as large as 8” – 10” across; these were in high demand in Seattle. Dorothy remembered installing a weekend flower stand at Pike Place Market. In 1932 Noboru expanded into Seattle, opening a shop specializing in Vashon flowers and produce on Jackson Street.
Sadly, Noboru committed suicide in 1934; Sato struggled to raise her children and manage the farm. She found companionship in Kuichi Tanaka, who traveled through 60 countries on his bicycle before settling in Vashon. By 1942 several of the Hoshi siblings left home; Sato and Kuichi registered with the remaining children as a family and were forcibly evicted to an Assembly Center in Pinedale, California and concentration camps in Tule Lake, California, and Minidoka, Idaho.
After WWII, several Hoshi children left camp, scattering to different states. The remaining Hoshis returned to a changed estate; every greenhouse pane was broken, the family’s prized plants were stolen or lost. They rarely spoke about their wartime experiences. The Hoshis survived through tragedies including a toddler grandson’s accidental death in 1953 and two house fires in 1952 and 1992. Eventually they rebuilt their flower and farm business, delivering plants to stores like Vashon Thriftway and Seattle’s Chubby and Tubby.
In the early 2000s, grandson Mark Hoshi divided the land into two roughly equal parcels and sold it in 2012. The southern part of the land where the greenhouse foundation still stands, is now Blue Moon Farm.
— Excerpts from Tamiko Nimura for the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation.
revisitwa.org/waypoint/hoshi-farm/
1936 Aerial View of Hoshi Farm
Current photo of Foundation of Greenhouse
Hoshi Farm
Vashon Island, Washington