Located 45 miles from Sacramento, Wakamatsu Farm is California Registered Historical Landmark #815 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It has 3 distinctive first honors: 1) Site of the first Japanese colony in America; 2) Birthplace of the first birthright Japanese American citizen; and 3) Resting place of the first Japanese immigrant and woman buried on American soil.
Young “Okei-san” accompanied at least 22 farmers, carpenters, samurai, and others to establish their tea and silk farm in 1869. When she died at the age of 19 in 1871, she became the first Japanese pioneer to lose her life pursuing her unique version of the American dream. Okei Ito’s life is so highly honored by people of Japanese descent that visitors have been paying their respects at her gravesite for nearly a century. Many admit they were trespassing decades ago because the 272 acre farm location was private property until relatively recently. As the culture keepers of Wakamatsu Farm, ARC (American River Conservancy) now manages the property as a pilgrimage site, working farm, and outdoor learning campus.
The ARC hosted an international sesquicentennial festival at Wakamatsu Farm in June 2019 celebrating the 150 th anniversary of the colonists’ arrival date. The event officially commemorated 150 years of Japanese American immigration. 50 years prior in 1969 the Japanese American centennial was recognized.
While the Japanese farmers succeeded for merely a few years, their immigration story holds the greatest fascination for visitors, historians, artists, educators, writers, performers, film-makers, and others. The pioneer Graner and Veerkamp families successfully farmed the land during the 1850’s for 140 years; they sold the property to ARC in 2010. Since then, ARC has developed a thriving destination farm where private and public programs entice visitors to explore the resources, history, and community of rural El Dorado County. For more visitor information, contact ARConservancy.org/events/ or email wakamatsu@ARConservancy.org
Early Japanese Colonist
Kuninosuke Masumizu, carpenter, translator
Matsugoro Ofuji and Family
Okei Ito Gravesite. Died in 1871