When their wholesale Five and Ten store failed in their home village of Koga in Fukuoka Ken Japan, the Kitasaki brothers decided to journey to America to make their fortune. Ichitaro and Zenjiro came through Seattle in 1904. My Mom, Tomoko Kitasaki Mizusawa used to tell us that her Dad, Zenjiro was a wetback. Senzaburo Kitasaki came in 1906 to San Francisco just before the big earthquake hit there. In 1916 the fourth brother, Seigoro came.
According to Mr. Nishizu, Senzaburo made a small fortune growing cantaloupe in the Imperial Valley. This allowed the brothers to start a large farming operation in Buena Park. Approximately 300 acres in size and located East of Beach Boulevard and south of the Santa Fe Railroad and as far east as the Fullerton airport. The farm was started in 1911. The brothers raised sugar beets and lima beans.
The sugar beets were harvested and topped in the fields and loaded into horse drawn wagons. The wagons were driven to large ramps next to the railroad tracks and dumped into train cars for transport to processing plants in Los Alamitos and Anaheim.
Horses were used on the Kitasaki farm until 1920. In 1920 the Best Tractor became available which was one of the first tractors with tracklayers. Best Tractor later became Caterpillar Tractor. The Kitasakis owned one of two of those tractors in Orange County at that time. Photos below show the tractor and one of the brothers working on the tractor. Wow, I hope he remembered how to put it back together. I suspect the date on the photo is not correct since the tractor didn’t come until 1920.
The Kitasaki brothers grew cabbage and tomatoes which were shipped by train to the East. Lima beans were dried and shipped to the Nelson Bean Warehouse in Buena Park.
According to Mr. Nishizu:
“The Kitasaki farm in Buena Park served as a haven for many Japanese immigrants seeking to gain a foothold in America. Numerous single Japanese laborers boarded with the Kitasakis, while many married families lived on the farm property in separate houses. Quite a few friends from Kasuya Gun in Japan worked for the Kitasakis while getting situated in this country. Even Mr. Kariya, who became one of the largest and most prestigious farmers in Buena Park, first worked for the Kitasakis.”
In 1928 the ranch where the Kitasakis farmed became the first place in the county that was subdivided for homes. The Kitasakis moved to Norwalk and farmed there for a few years until the time of the great depression. My mother used to tell me that her father was wealthy until the Stock Market crash. Apparently he had invested in the market during those times.
After 1930 large parcels of land became scarce so the Brothers started their own smaller farm operations. When my Mom and her sisters were in grade school and high school their father Zenjiro, farmed in Rattlesnake Canyon in North Irvine, leasing land from the Irvine Company. Zenjiro and Tsugi Kitasaki raised 4 daughters and a son. One child died at or near childbirth. Yuki, Chiyoko, Tomoko and Tomiko were the daughters and Utaro was the son. My Mom told me that there were rattlesnakes on their farm and that Yuki was the designated shooter.
By Steven Mizusawa, son of Tomoko Kitasaki Mizusawa, daughter of Zenjiro and Tsugi Kitasaki.
Dumping the sugar beets in the railroad car
Seigoro Kitasaki repairing Best tractor, 1918
Threshing lima beans, 1917
Picking and hauling tomatoes, 1918
Kitasaki residence in Buena Park, 1924
(l-r) Mrs. Tsugi Kitasaki, Shige Nishizu's cousin and Yoshiko Kitasaki, Seigoro Kitasaki's wife
The Kitasaki Clan in 1927. Adults from the left: Zenjiro Kitasaki, Tsugi, Senzaburo, Yoshiko Kitasaki, Seigoro
Children from the left: Utaro, Tomiko, Yuki, Chiyoko, Tomoko. Baby Michiko and Kiyoshi.
Zenjiro Kitasaki and daughters