The 27 acre S. Nagata Farm in Indio California was established in the early 1900s by Seitaro Nagata. Seitaro was born on August 6, 1889 and raised on a farm in Yamaguchi-ken, Japan. He came to the United States in 1907 when he was 18 years old. Seitaro first arrived in California where he worked in the orange orchards in Riverside, but he wished to pursue farming on his own. So Seitaro eventually found acreage in nearby Indio that he wanted to purchase. However, since non-citizens (i.e. aliens) could not own land at that time, Seitaro had the land titled in the name of his niece in order to purchase the property.
In 1917 Seitaro returned to Japan to marry Nui Igawa. Nui was born May 16, 1898 in Yamaguchi-ken, Japan. When they returned to Indio, Seitaro managed the farm and Nui managed the packing shed. Their main crop was tomatoes, but the farm also grew string beans and corn. Seitaro and Nui had three daughters and one son; Grace, Lily, Amy and George Nagata.
When World War II broke out, the entire Nagata family was relocated to an internment camp in Poston, Arizona. Throughout their absence during the years from 1942 to 1945 the farm was overseen by a wonderfully loyal worker who maintained the farm until the family returned three years later. Seitaro and Nui eventually stopped farming and the Nagata Farm was ultimately sold to developers.
Two of the Nagata daughters, Grace and Amy, married into another farming family in the area, the Musashi Brothers of Thermal, California. Amy and Grace continued the farming tradition on the Musashi Brothers Farm until their retirement.
S. Nagata Label
S. Nagata Family Portrait
Aerial view of S. Nagata Farm in Indio, CA
Daughter Amy Nagata driving a tractor
Seitaro, Nui and George with cousins on their farm
S. Nagata family at Poston Internment Camp