FIVE sons! Torasuke Sadakane thought that Taikichi Kato was lucky to have five sons and two daughters to work their farm. Torasuke and Hatsuyo’s family consisted of four daughters, but they helped on the farm in all ways. They planted and harvested CHILIES, TOMATOES, ONIONS, AND PICKLING CUCUMBERS.
Torasuke Sadakane was born in Hiroshima, Japan, in 1878, and at age 19 arrived in Vancouver, Canada. He then went to Montana to work on railroad construction with many other Japanese immigrants. After 16 years in America, he returned to Japan and an arranged marriage to Hatsuyo Tsunemoto.
Their daughters were Satsue, Eiko (who married Tetsuo, the third of the Kato brothers), Shizumi and Shigeko. In 1923, the family moved from Garden Grove to Talbert (now Fountain Valley), to farm on land near Bushard and what is now Yorktown Street which was just a dirt path at the time.
In 1927 the family moved to Wright Street (now Brookhurst Street) and Yorktown, then again in 1930 when they moved to Midway City, off Beach Boulevard on Sugar Street (now McFadden Avenue) where they picked their tomatoes to be sorted in the packing shed that Torasuke had built.
October was chili pepper season… The family hired other families to pick the chilies by piecework, but the daughters picked too. The chilies were then hauled to their dehydrator, which they called the Dry House, located on Beach Boulevard and Utica Street.
When the family obtained more acreage in Stanton, Torasuke rented a Caterpillar crawler tractor. Eiko disked on that crawler while her father used their other tractor.
Japan bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, and all the Japanese citizens were ordered to leave California by May 1942. Torasuke was able to sell some farm equipment, but cars, trucks, the house, and all the furnishings were left behind.
The Sadakane and Kato families had barracks next to each other in the Poston, Arizona, internment camp. After the war, the Sadakane family worked for the Katos on their farm in Fountain Valley.
Eiko Sadakane
Eiko, Shizumi, Torasuke, Hatsuyo, Shigeko, Satsue
Masuo, Eiko, Mamo, Satsue, and Yosh Sadakane
Satsue, Shigeko, Eiko, Shizumi and mother Hatsuyo
Torasuke and Hatsuyo Sadakane
Torasuke on tractor