Isojiro Oka was born in Fukuoka, Kyushu, Japan. He married Kaoru Ozeki at age 20, in an arranged marriage. In 1906, he left Japan, leaving Kaoru with her family. He and a friend went to Mexico due to immigration laws to the U.S. They left Mexico to go to Canada and stopped in Huntington Beach to work. Later he went to Fresno to work in the vineyards, and returned to Huntington Beach. He worked hard and earned enough to lease land and work it himself until 1917.
By 1915, Isojiro’s wife joined him in the U.S. He moved to a large, undeveloped farm with two other families. A long-lasting friendship with the Tamuras and Kawaguchis was established. On a four or five hundred acre farm, they raised cabbage, chili peppers, celery, tomatoes, sugar beets, and other vegetables, delivering their produce directly to stores, but later using a local trucking firm.
The two other families moved, leaving the Okas to operate the farm until 1942. After Pearl Harbor and World War II began, Isojiro was suddenly taken to jail with other Japanese-American leaders and eventually sent to Poston Concentration Camp in Arizona. He was reunited with family and many of his eight children.
In 1945 they left Poston and the elder Okas lived in Colorado with their daughter. Their sons returned to farm in Huntington Beach and the Okas joined them. In 1950 they moved to a 20 acre Santa Ana farm, and the Huntington Beach property was leased. In 1961, the sons turned this property into a housing development, forming their own construction firm.
Isojiro retired from farming after World War II, but always maintained his own vegetable garden. He was a pioneer and leader in the Japanese community. He was honored in the 1962 Nisei Week Festival in L.A., and a school in Fountain Valley was named for him in 1972.
Oka family portrait
Oka family
Oka farm horse carriage
Jiichan and Bachan Oka
Oka kids + one
Oka farm 1, 2, 3
Okas at home 4 pictures
Oka family land lease