B.D. (Denichiro) Mukai was born in Osaka, Japan, in 1885. Immigrating to California in 1906, he married Sato, a picture bride from Yokohama. In 1910, they moved to Vashon Island in Washington to farm strawberries. Their son Masa was born in 1911. In 1921 when Sato died, B.D. married her sister Kuni.
From 1910 to 1926, the family leased parcels of land to farm berries. A successful grower, B.D. established the Mukai Cold Process Fruit Barreling Plant. He perfected a process of preserving berries by packing them in barrels, then “freezing” them. The berries were shipped all across the U.S.
In 1926, Masa turned 16 and the family purchased 60 acres of land in Vashon under Masa’s name. With the purchase of their farm and success of the cold-process, the family built a new plant in 1927.
The farm prospered during the Depression. Over 400 workers (of which 250 were housed there) were employed annually to help pack and ship 200 tons of berries. In 1934 B.D. retired, divorced Kuni, and then returned to Japan. Masa, educated at Washington State University and University of Washington took over the business, focusing more on the freezing process and less on cultivation.
Masa changed the name of the business to Vashon Island Packing Company (VIPCo) in 1939. The family formed deep ties in the community by processing berries from many island farms. Due to the Executive Order for the evacuation of all Japanese from the west coast, Kuni, Masa, his wife Chiyeko and their son Milton fled Vashon in 1942, moving to Oregon, where Chiyeko had family. Masa introduced row crops into what was cattle country. He raised seed for lettuce and other vegetables on 100 acres he purchased; he invented his own harvester to catch flyaway seeds, making a successful living during the war.
Due to the efforts of Maurice Dunsford in Vashon and Phillipe Baccaro, they kept the Mukai enterprises fully operational and profitable throughout the war.
The Mukais returned to Vashon after WWII. They continued to grow strawberries and operate the barreling plant. In the 1950’s, Masa opened two more plants in Washington and in Oregon. Due to the economics of the strawberry business changing, in 1969 Masa sold the packing business. He shifted his energies to another business and retired in 1979.
- courtesy of Mukaifarmandgarden.org vashonheritagemuseum.org
B.D. and Masa with Marchal Strawberry
B.D. Mukai in Seattle 1910
Japanese Garden Designed by Kuni Mukai
Mukai Home and Strawberry Barreling Plant
Vashon Festival
Mukai with bowler hat and children