In 1910, Sahei Uchida began what would eventually become Uchida Farms. Like many of his generation his path had taken many turns. He had initially arrived in Hawaii in 1906, where he found employment as a day worker. A year later he moved to the mainland, where he worked in sawmill and later in the transportation business. He initially started by raising hogs with Tokuji Sato in Little Rock and Olympia Washington where they kept 50 pigs.
In 1912, he brought over his wife Iwaye, a picture bride who he married the day she arrived, from Japan. Around this time, he moved to northwest Tacoma in the Brown’s Point area. He recalled, “We had to travel a rough mountain road, and therefore it was very hard to collect the feed every day. Especially in winter, when I came back from Tacoma after collecting, the two horses were enough on the flatland, but on the mountain road I had to use four horses to pull the wagon up.”
Due to the inconvenience and cost he moved to flatlands along the Puyallup River. By this time, the family’s operation had grown to 200 to 300 pigs.
In December 1918, he suffered through a major flood which left his house and hog sheds flooded at high tide and inflicted heavy damage. He recalled, “Since it was unsanitary after the flood, the family moved to another location where there was no fear of high water. It was primitive forest land where big trees and bushes were growing densely, and we cleared off the trees by using dynamite and turned it into land for cultivation, planting strawberries. Of course, we built a house for the berry-pickers.”
Nature was not the only obstacle to farming, his greedy landlord informed him around that time that he was going to raise his rent which in turn caused him to move to Levee. Once again in the winter of 1933-34 he endured another flood of the Puyallup River. In 1935, he was finally able to purchase land in the names of sons Isamu and Minoru, who were 16 and 13 respectively at the time, since he was precluded from holding property in his own right because of the Immigration Act of 1924. With the purchase of this land, Uchida Farms transitioned from hogs to vegetables, such as carrots, peas, and beans. Operations continued up to 1942.
With the signing of Executive Order 9066 the family took measures to transfer care of the farm to their neighbor Marie Bingisser before reporting to Camp Harmony at the Puyallup Fairgrounds and later interment at Minidoka Internment Camp. Even during the war the family was involved in agriculture as Sahei’s sons Isamu, Minoru, and Sho were granted work releases to work on farms in the vicinity of Chinook, MT. Prior to the end of the war Isamu and Sho began farming near Vale, OR and later moved to Ontario, OR, where they raised onions, potatoes and sugar beets. After the war Sahei and Iwaye returned to Pierce County and were eventually joined by their son Minoru after he completed his enlistment in the U.S. Army. Uchida Farms continued to expand it’s operations until they came to and end in 2000.
Uchida Hog Farm circa 1921
Lettuce Harvest circa 1974
Celery Harvest
1920 Iwaye, Chiyoko, Isamu, Sahei, Kazue, and Kiyoko on their hog farm
In 1931, International Truck full of Lettuce for Uchida Farms
1922 Uchida Family, Kazue, Sahei (standing), Isamu, Iwaye, Minoru (infant), Chiyoko, Kiyoko
In 1930, Uchida hog farm
In 1906, Sahei immigrated on the SS Siberia from Japan to Hawaii with $5 in his pocket