The Namekata Brothers, Shigeo and Kenichi, gained their farming roots from their father, Benzo Namekata. Benzo, born in Japan in 1882, was the son of a farmer and was expected to carry on the family tradition. Benzo, however, after having served in the Japanese military during the Russo-Japanese Wars, was said to have traveled to California to pursue his dream.
Benzo and Kayo Neriki (1894) married and had five children, Shigeo, Kenichi, Chiyeko Nancy, Kazuko, and Minoru. During World War II, the Namekatas’ neighbors, the Dominic Cagliero family of Covina, offered to care for the family farm while they were interned at Heart Mountain, Wyoming. Later, the family was transferred to Tule Lake Segregation Center in 1943 and it was there that Shigeo married Fujiye Moriuchi and Nancy married Sam Yamamoto in 1944. Kayo, unfortunately, passed away at Tule Lake Segregation Center in 1945. At the conclusion of the war, the remaining family members moved to West Covina and worked together on their leased land growing cauliflower and cabbage. Benzo passed away in 1948, and when the housing market began to develop, Shigeo and Kenichi moved their families to the West Riverside area. They leased some land and grew vegetables until they bought their own 56 acres of land on Mission Blvd in West Riverside. Here they grew cantaloupes, watermelons, pumpkins, Spanish onions, endive, red leaf, romaine, and the mouthwatering strawberries they were most known for. Most of the produce were shipped by Nomura Trucking to the Los Angeles Produce Market.
Shigeo and his wife, Fujiye and Kenichi and his wife, Chiyoko, along with the children all pitched in with their farming duties when the children were not attending school. The sons, Akira, Larry and George, helped take care of the produce as they were growing in the fields, and assisted Fujiye, Chiyoko and the hired braceros, with the harvesting. The daughters, Kimiko, Shirley, Janet, and Annette supervised the vegetable stand, “Kimi’s Stand”, which opened for business in 1963.
After much thought and with the children either married or off to college, Shigeo and Kenichi with their wives, decided to retire their farming business around 1976, allowing them to relax, travel, and enjoy the fruits of their labor.
The NAMEKATA family crest
Label from cantaloupe box
Shigeo and Fujiye Namekata
Chiyoko and Kenichi Namekata
"Kimi's Stand" where the daughters supervised the sale of produce.
Chiyoko and Fujiye Namekata enjoying each others company
Shigeo with first grandson, Jim Namekata, relaxing with the pumpkin harvest.