Ken George Doi was born on December 6, 1922 in Garden Grove, CA and was a graduate of Anaheim High School. His family briefly moved to Japan in the mid-1920’s. They returned to Orange County, CA in 1929 where they lived and farmed twenty acres east of Knott Ave., until the start of WWII.
After being evacuated to the internment camp in Poston, AZ during the war, Ken joined a Japanese labor camp where he picked cherries in Layton, Utah. In 1946 Ken enlisted in the Army where he was an interrogator at Sugamo Prison, then a member of the 166th and 355th Language Detachments.
After the war, Ken returned to Southern California and held numerous jobs, one working on a chicken-fryer farm plucking feathers. He also briefly studied real estate but had to stand outside due to crowded classrooms and discrimination, so he quit.
From that time on, Ken was involved with farming in the Stanton/Anaheim area. He farmed in Anaheim near the corner of Beach Blvd. and Lincoln Ave., before developing the land for commercial use. His pride and joy was his two-acre strawberry farm on Bever Place in Stanton. There, he also harvested small crops of oranges, grapefruit, boysenberries, zucchini, cucumbers, daikon, and eggplant to share with family and friends. Some of Ken’s favorite memories were hosting class field trips or Girl/Boy Scout troops at the farm, allowing the kids to pick strawberries and teaching them first hand about farming.
Ken loved being a farmer because it allowed him to be his own boss and make his own hours. This gave him more family time with his wife Joan, daughter Vicky (Feeko) and son Steven.
Ken Doi passed away in 1997. He was very proud to be a Japanese American farmer in Orange County and left behind a legacy of hard work, perseverance, determination and dedication.
1974 Ken Doi Farm
1974 Ken Doi speaking to 3rd Grade Class (Field Trip)
Ken's beloved old farm truck
1991 Ken & Joan Doi