Isosaburo Katayama immigrated to Hawai‘i, then to Washington State. He married Tome in Seattle. Their families knew each other in Mine-shi, Yamaguchi-ken, Japan. Isosaburo started where Wing Point Golf Club is today with a greenhouse (1920s) and then a small orchard. The eldest child was born in Fletcher Bay, Island Center. Most of their children were born in Port Blakely. The youngest was born in Wing Point; they were Yukiko, Yoshi, May, Toshiko, Masaharu, Mitsuo and Shiro.
After moving to Winslow, the children went to Lincoln School and played on the farmland and open areas. The Katayamas grew strawberries, and one of the children’s jobs were to pull weeds on the farm after school and on holidays. Not a large farm, but Filipino workers were hired to help.
The Katayamas were packing rhubarb when the FBI came and took Isosaburo after they found dynamite, but he returned the next day. After the family was ordered to leave the island, they asked missionaries to watch over the house. Yuki’s brother asked the Filipino workers to work the farm. It was to be the first year of a good strawberry crop.
Yuki was 24 when the family was interned at Manzanar, California. After arriving, she became a teacher and learned tailoring. Later, the family was sent to Minidoka, Idaho. Yuki studied home economics and sewing. After the war, they found their farm and home in good condition, but the family never talked about Manzanar. They were welcomed back, and Yuki didn’t have any hard feelings.
On November 1947, she married Setsuo Omoto, a long time Bainbridge Islander. They were married for 56 years before Sets’ passing in July, 2004.
Sewing was Yuki’s passion; she became a professional seamstress for many manufacturing companies in the Seattle area. She commuted from Bainbridge to Seattle until retirement at 70. Besides sewing, Yuki loved doing Bunka (Japanese embroidery), and knitting. Another great passion was working in the garden raising vegetables and flowers for the family to enjoy. She had what is called a “green thumb.”
On November 6, 2020, Bainbridge Island lost its oldest remaining survivor. Yukiko Katayama Omoto passed in Seattle, Washington, at age 102.
Story adapted from BIJAC collection and Densho Digital Repository interview of Yukiko Katayama Omoto
Isosaburo in his greenhouse
Mass removal of Japanese- Densho Digital Repository
Katayama farm in Winslow 1916
Yukiko Katayama Omoto- Densho Digital Repository