Japanese immigrants Heisuke and Mitsuno Matsuda purchased a 10-acre parcel on Vashon-Maury Island in Washington with hard-earned savings in 1929, just before the October stock market crash. Due to anti-Japanese laws that prevented Japanese immigrants from land ownership, the Matsudas purchased the land in the name of an American-born Japanese friend until their son Yoneichi came of age. Their daughter Mary was born in 1926; their farmhouse was built in 1931. The Matsudas raised a variety of berries and currants with the help of hired workers and families, taking their crops to the Shawnee and Vashon Heights docks to ship to Tacoma and Seattle.
During WWII the family was removed to concentration camps in Tule Lake, California and Minidoka, Idaho. Yoneichi volunteered for the all-Japanese American 442 nd Battalion, serving honorably in Europe and was awarded a Bronze Star. Trusted Filipino caretaker Mack Garcia stayed in the farmhouse during the war and kept the farm going. After legally battling the deputy sheriff who leased the land but mismanaged finances, the Matsudas retained ownership, returned to the farm after the war, and became one of the few returning Japanese American families.
The farm was expanded into 52-acres; it became the third largest strawberry farm on the island. Together with second wife Miyoko, four daughters, and hired workers, Yoneichi worked the farm for several decades. He earned the Conservationist Farmer of the Year in 1957 for his sustainable land management practices.
Approaching retirement age and facing lowering strawberry prices. The family worked the last commercial strawberry harvest on the island. That same year Yoneichi passed away, suffering a heart attack while on a tractor cultivating strawberries.
In 2015, the Vashon-Maury Island Land Trust purchased 12 acres of the Matsuda farm in keeping with the family’s hopes of maintaining it as farmland. Goals are to restore the farmhouse, establish a farm-to-school program, and connecting the estate with a walking public trail system.
Matsuda Family 1935
Conservation Award 1957
Heisuke and Yoneichi Matsuda
Mary (Mama-san) Matsuda
Matsuda Farm
Matsuda Farm 2015
Matsuda Farm 2015