Fukuda Dairy Farm
Matasuke Fukuda was born in 1875 in Hakushima, Hiroshima, Japan. His Father Senjiro Fukuda was a ’Sea Lord’ Naval Commander for Lord Asano. Matasuke married Toki Nakamura and moved to Auburn, Washington to begin his life as a Dairy farmer in 1914. They had eighty cows on one hundred and eighty acres of land, corn crops, smokehouse for fish and a home for their eleven kids.
The kids and family worked hard everyday milking and feeding the cows. Most of the sisters did not enjoy making cheese, milking cows early in the morning but they all enjoyed ice creme. In 1929 some racist neighbors cut their fertilizer and it killed the corn. The cows had no food so Matasuke was forced to give up the dairy farm, pack up all the kids, cars and migrated to California. Some of the kids settled in San Francisco, Fresno and Los Angeles. In 1933 Matasuke returned to Japan and built twenty-eight homes for families with children. While in Japan he experienced the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. He survived the blast as his house collapsed but left a small air pocket for him to survive. His love for family and compassion for people will be his lasting legacy.
Panoramic photo of the 1926 Fukuda Farm with family, equipment and cows.
Jimmy, Sam, Louie and Lester on the family milk truck
Fukuda family with their prized cows and farm.
After leaving Washington in 1929, Fukuda family in San Francisco.
Lt. to Rt. Fukuda family: Sam, Frank, George, Louie, Lester, Mary, Alyce, Rosie, Mae.
(Florence and Jimmy died at the family Dairy).
100 Year Reunion of the Neeley Mansion for the Fukuda family. Lester, Rosie, Sam, Alyce and Mae.
In 1991, Sam Fukuda became the oldest American to climb Mt. Fuji at 94!
100 Year reunion at Neeley Manison with Fukuda kids and cousins.
Matasuke Father Senjiro Fukuda. Senjiro was a Naval Commander for Lord Asano in Hiroshima.
He was a Samurai 'Sea Lord' protecting the waterways around Hiroshima.









