My great great great grandparents, Fuenatsu and Kinu Hazemoto, were born in Japan but were farmers in Hawaii. My great great grandparents, Suyematsu and Sami Hazemoto, were born in Japan but later on moved to Hawaii and then finally traveled to Los Angeles aboard the ship USS China. My great grandfather Sanji Kinoshita was born in Hawaii and my great grandmother Sho Kinoshita was born in Japan. They got married in 1926 and raised 6 children during the depression. Sanji Kinoshita helped start Kinoshita Farms after the war. My grandfather Bobby Kinoshita was born in California and my grandmother Hiroko Kinoshita was born in Japan. My grandfather and his brother then took over Kinoshita Farms and raised my father and his three brothers.
My great great grandparents immigrated to Hawaii in 1902. My great grandmother immigrated when she was 16 in 1921. My grandmother immigrated in 1957.
The Kinoshita family farmed in San Juan Capistrano and farmed from 1955-1995. After the war the Kinoshita’s decided to start a new life and became farmers.
In the winter Kinoshita Farms grew lettuce and cauliflower. Towards the summer time they grew cucumbers, bell peppers, tomatoes and squash. When my father and his brothers grew mature enough, they held a roadside stand to make money for themselves and sold strawberries and white corn which later on became very popular within the city.
Life on the farm was not always easy and they faced multiple challenges. They became cost prohibited and the prices of water, fertilizer, and labor became more expensive as the city was beginning to grow. The smell of agriculture and farm life became a problem for the people of the community and the community started to pressure the farm into selling. The community was starting to move into more of a city-like place and in the end the city bought the farm from the Kinoshita’s.
In 1941 when WWII began my great grandparents and the younger children were sent to Heart Mountain Wyoming relocation center. The older children were not allowed to return until the war was over. In 1947, after 8 years the family was finally reunited and decided to restart there lives as farmers in San Juan Capistrano.
After WWII the Kinoshitas started a new life in San Juan Capistrano.
After the war there goal was to start a new life and they decided to go into farming. They started Kinoshita Farms and farmed for a wonderful 40 years where my father and his two brothers were raised.