Our Tanaka Farm was 40 acres and located on Verano (now Euclid) between Warner and Slater. We grew lettuce, cabbage, celery, romaine, tomatoes, cucumbers, asparagus, string beans and cabbage.
Yoshitaro Tanaka was born in 1886 in Hidaka-Gun, Wakayama Ken, the second son of a farmer. With 300 yen he caught the SS Siberia to San Francisco to work in the mines in Mexico. He jumped a train bound for Mexico, was found unconscious, apprehended and sent to Mexico. In December 1906, he escaped, entered the US and ended up in Huntington Beach at a celery camp.
Yoshitaro went to Seattle in 1916 to pick up his picture bride Suye Higuchi and they married four days later. Masaru (Mutt) was born in 1917. As the eldest son of 6 children, he was destined to stay home and take over the farm. After the war; his brothers, Susumu, Hiroshi, Isamu and Yukio and sister, Kimiko all went to college or pursued other interests.
Mutt had 10 acres in his name and leased an additional 30 acres to farm. He purchased a house in Santa Ana and had it moved to the property, miraculously, not a single window was broken. He was about to be discharged from the US Army when December 7th brought chaos. Yoshitaro and Suye along with their daughter and youngest son were relocated to Poston, AZ while their other 3 sons enlisted in the Army. After the war, Yoshitaro and Suye received a personal letter from Secretary of War Stimson recognizing their four sons’ service. Mutt bought the 30 acre parcel and soon married Yoshiko Nishi in 1949. They had three children, Bobby, Ricky and Sharon. They endured the flood of 1952 when the Santa Ana River broke its banks. Mutt sold the property in 1963. It is now the site of Fountain Valley Regional Hospital and an apartment complex.
Mutt Tanaka on the farm April 1931
Cousins and Yoshitaro, April 1931
Mochitsuki 1953 -2
Mochitsuki 1953-1
Mutt and son Bobby
Suye 2nd from left April 1931
Tanaka family 1930
Tanaka Dinner