In 1899, Taikichi Kato arrived in Seattle, Washington from Hiroshima, Japan settling in Garden Grove. By 1910, he and Tsunekichi Neishi were farming partners in Garden Grove’s Newhope area. In the early 1920s, they grew a mixed crop of vegetables, and bought an orange grove in 1922.
Ume Kato arrived from Japan in 1914. Their 7th child was born in 1928, they moved to Talbert (Fountain Valley), and farmed chilies near Ellis and Magnolia. Between 1930 – 1932 they moved to Ward Street between Slater and Warner and farmed 40 acres. From 1932 - 1934 the crops were tomatoes and chili. 22 acres of farmland on Bushard Street were purchased in 1934. The Kato home, built in 1941 before evacuation during WWII, still stands today.
In 1938 Taikichi and Tsunekichi owned a ten acre walnut grove until after the war. The two groves were sold and the Kato-Neishi partnership folded, but the two families remain friends today.
Unfortunately, Taikichi died while he, Ume and three of their children were incarcerated at Poston. After the war, Ume and six children (one lived in New York) farmed under the name “Kato Bros.” In 1947, forty acres on Ellis and Newland were purchased. When the two groves were sold, eighty acres on Verano (Euclid) around 1948 were purchased.
The Katos grew Anaheim chilies, asparagus, bell peppers, bush beans, cabbage, cauliflower, celery, lettuce, and tomatoes. In 1949 - 1950, 53 acres were purchased on Del Obispo in San Juan Capistrano (Dana Point). Sold in 1966, the Katos retired from farming at that time.
Taikichi, Ume and their seven children in 1928
Taikichi and son Masaru 1933
1940's Celery Harvest
1948 Tractor in asparagus field
Lettuce Harvest 1950s Bushard St. Fountain Valley
Crop Dusting 1950s to Fumigate Crops
Cauliflower in San Juan Capistrano 1962
Planting celery seedlings 1940s