The history of Tanita Farms, Inc. of Glendale, Arizona had its roots in Fukushima, Japan. Naomasa Tanita, the patriarch of the farming family, was born there on December 15, 1880. He married Tomo Abe and had one daughter, Taka. After his first wife passed away, he moved to the United States with Taka and second wife, Sui. After farming in Monterey Park, California for a few years, Naomasa decided to follow other Japanese farmers, the Nakatsu’s and Matsumoto’s, and seek fortune in Arizona in 1928. By then, ten of the thirteen children had been born.
Initially the family farmed in Glendale at 83rd Avenue and Camelback, but moved to different areas throughout its existence. During World War II, the Tanita family escaped internment at Poston because the farm was north of the railroad tracks. Over the years, the farm relocated throughout West Phoenix and Glendale.
After Naomasa Tanita passed away, the 12 sons and 1 daughter (Shigeru, Satoshi, Makoto, Akiko, Tadashi, Minoru, Wataru, Tamotsu, Kiyoshi, Susumu, Tsutomu, Toru, and Mitsugu) ran the family farm. The eldest son, Shig, died tragically in 1969, but left the strong legacy of Tanita Farms behind him. He had led Tanita Farms to be the largest grower and shipper of mixed vegetables in the entire state of Arizona. The family was farming over 2,000 acres of land. Their crops included broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, green onions, radishes, squash, and melons to name a few.
Almost all of the 12 sons worked on the farm with their respective areas of expertise. Shig was the president and worked in the front office. Mack was the general manager and vice president. Toru was in charge of sales. John Kimura, who married Aki, the only daughter, was in charge of planting and harvesting cabbage and leaf lettuce. Watty supervised the growing of green onions and other bunched vegetables. Sus grew cauliflower and broccoli and helped Tad with maintenance, who was the shop foreman. Mits grew and harvested radishes. Kiyo managed the growth of mixed vegetables and Tom oversaw the production of lettuce.
Tanita Farms was unique because they not only grew the crops, but packed and shipped them as well. Theirs was truly “A Family Farm.”
Tanita Farms - Dec '72
Tanita Farms, Inc. - Dec '72
Tractor on farm - Sep '72
Green onions crop - Nov '72
Radishes crop - Nov '72
Uncle Watty and green onions - circa 1954-55
Tanita Farms label
Tanita Family 1945
Tanita Family Reunion - June 2016
Tanita Family 1939