The Yamano Brothers Farms of Corona, California, evolved from the teachings of their father, Itaro Yamano, in the San Fernando Valley. Itaro, born in 1886 in a small village in Hiroshima, Japan and was expected to follow in his father’s farming footsteps. However, Itaro decided to head to America with his uncle, and was in San Francisco when The Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake struck.
Itaro married Kazuyo Sakamoto and upon returning home from Heart Mountain, they farmed on various leased land, finally settling in the San Fernando Valley. Before Itaro passed away in 1952, he asked his third son, Masaharu (Jim) to continue farming with his three, younger brothers, Yoshiyuki (John), Teruo (Ted) and Isao (Bill), hence the beginning of the Yamano Brothers Farms.
In 1956, the Yamano brothers purchased 50 acres of land in Corona, California and made their permanent move from the San Fernando Valley a year later. They felt the year-round mild climate was conducive for the crops they planned to grow: green onions, romaine lettuce, green and red cabbage, red leaf lettuce, and celery.
The Yamano Brothers Farms prospered to six ranches becoming the largest green onion grower in Southern California. The eldest brother, Jim, was the senior business partner and CEO. John, the junior partner, was responsible for the planting the crops, along with maintaining the eight tractors and four trucks. Ted oversaw harvesting of the crops, mainly the 100 acres of green onion always in production, and Bill, the youngest, tended the irrigation of the crops along with weed control and assisted Ted in monitoring their 80 to 130 local employees during the harvesting of the various crops.
In 1965, a filming crew from Japan’s Hiroshima Telecasting Co., LTD, under the direction of Hiroshi Ogawa, program manager, filmed the activities of the Yamano Brothers Farms to be broadcasted in Hiroshima, Japan. This was a very special connection for Kazuyo who had only been back to her native Japan twice.
The viewers in Japan were able to see the operation of the farm’s main crop, green onions, transported from the growing fields on flat-bed trucks to the enormous packing house. Here the green onion bunches were trimmed and washed as they moved along a conveyor belt designed by John Yamano. The green onions were then packed in waxed, cardboard containers topped with ice and stored in a huge, refrigerated room until shipment.
The Yamano Brothers shipped their crops to the Pacific Northwest, various areas in California and even transported wet-lock shipping cartons of green onion in an ice-pack Santa Fe train carload to Toronto, Canada. The green onions arrived in Toronto in less than a week in excellent condition!
The Yamano Brothers were actively involved in local organizations such as the Lions Club, Chamber of Commerce, Navy League, Rotary Club and were well respected and admired citizens of the community.
In 1976, the brothers and their wives, Jim and Sachiye (Izuhara), John and June (Uota), Ted and Nancy (Izuhara), Bill and Susie (Hirata) made the difficult choice to dissolve their farming interests and ventured into the world of retirement. The love and support of the families, united together, made the Yamano Brothers Farms, an integral part of the history of Corona, California.
The Yamano Family at Heart Mountain, Wyoming
Japanese Filming Crew with John, Bill, Jim and Ted
Kazuyo Yamano, mother of the Yamano brothers
Green onions in the field being harvested.
Green onion bunches on conveyor being washed.
Boxed green onions ready for shipping.
Boxes of green onions stored in huge refrigerator.
Jim Yamano, CEO, busy taking more orders of his produce.