Suyematsu Farm is the oldest, most continuously farmed land on Bainbridge Island. It is now the largest production farm in Kitsap County, except for the period during WWII, when the Suyematsus were interned in the Manzanar and Minidoka internment camps. Like most of Bainbridge Island, Japanese immigrants raised berries and during 1930-1940 put the island on the map as the strawberry capital of the Pacific Northwest, growing the Marshall variety, known at the time as the finest tasting strawberry in the U.S.
Yasuji and Mitsuo Suyematsu, Japanese immigrants, purchased the 40 acres in 1928, after farming on rented land. The Asian Exclusion Act prevented anyone not born in the U.S. from owning land. The parents registered the land in the name of their eldest son Akio, who was 8 years old at the time. The children eventually numbered seven, although their youngest son died young.
By hand and horse, it took the Suyematsus to transition the land from forest into one of the original berry farms that made Bainbridge Island famous. Forced to leave in 1942, it was just before one of the largest bumper crops they had ever seen. Unable to afford a manager, the land was abandoned for the duration of WWII. Upon returning from 1945-1947 (Akio and brother Ish had been drafted by the U.S. Army while in camp), the Suyematsus were among a quarter of the original strawberry farmers to reclaim their land.
Eldest son Akio passed away in 2012 at 91; he had farmed since childhood and guided the farm into the 21st century. He was the last of the original berry farmers on the Island who put Bainbridge on the map. In 1958 he was named Kitsap Farmer of the Year. In the 1980’s, the farm began a formal composting operation and the first farm to turn organic.
In the 1970’s the Bentryn family purchased half of the farm to create vineyards and a winery. Akio and the Bentryns mentored the next generation of master farmers to help farm their land and their own land. In 2000, 15 acres of Suyematsu Farm and 10 acres of Bentryn Farm (2004) were purchased by the City of Bainbridge Island to be kept in perpetuity as agricultural landscape.
Early 1930's Suyematsu Homestead
1930's Akio, Ish and Tosh
1930's, Yasuji and Four Sons
1950's Suyematsus and Marshall Strawberries
1950's Akio Tilling His Farm
1980 Akio Suyematsu
4 Generations of Suyematsus and Bentryns