Yohei and Aya Takatsuka farmed strawberries since moving from Tacoma in 1911. They raised six children on Vashon Island, including Augie, born in 1920. Incarcerated with the family during the war, he volunteered for the Army from camp. Meanwhile, the Takatsukas were transferred out of Tule Lake into Minidoka, and daughter Kimi was elected “Sweetheart of Minidoka” while Augie served in Europe. After WWII, only a third of Vashon Island’s Japanese Americans returned. Yohei and Aya returned to berry farming on Vashon in June, 1945.
Augie was a veteran of the decorated 442 nd Regimental Combat Team. Returning in December, he nursed physical and mental combat wounds; just months later, he worked with only an old crosscut saw, a hoe, a potato hook, and pitchfork. His friend, Mrs. Gorsuch, leased him property that became his farm. Augie returned to the VA Hospital, and she offered him an interest free loan—a kindness he would remember—though never took. Complications from trench foot left him with a wooden leg.
A 1947 bumper crop allowed Augie to buy the land. Through two decades he sold berries to packers and stores around Puget Sound. Producing four tons of strawberries per acre, each worker contributed a ton. Augie hired British Columbia First Nations workers--growing currants--keeping them through the lucrative end of the season. He even hired Seattle students, but finding workers made farming untenable.
Transformation to a U-cut Christmas tree farm in the 1970s involved luck. Another farmer offered extra plants, and thrifty Augie could not let them go to waste. The trees remained unsold until a Sunset Magazine article led to selling an entire acre in two weeks.
A colorful figure, Augie loved pool; his nickname was “Eight Ball,” and his passion for craps was memorialized by a pair of dice at his grave. Many island tales involved Augie—roller-skating as a boy in a decommissioned chicken coop at night; digging a well for his strawberries with help from dowser Rod Thurston; or learning the hard way that pumpkins don’t grow on a hillside (apparently they roll). Augie eventually retired and passed in 2007, but the farm still bears his name. It is owned and operated by the Karl Olsen family.
— Author Vince Schleitwiler for the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation. revisitwa.org/waypoint/takatsuka-farm/
Augie's student yearbook photo
1930s, Thurston dug Augi's well
Augie on right in the 442nd
U-Cut Christmas tree farm
Augie in later years
Takatsuka farm on Vashon Island